Aristotle's Psychology: In Greek and English, with Introduction and Notes by Edwin Wallace. Peri Psyches |
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Page xxviii
... supposed the existence of every object could be analyzed the material as supplying the actual elements out of which anything is made , the efficient , or agency by which it is made , the formal as giving the shape or idea which any ...
... supposed the existence of every object could be analyzed the material as supplying the actual elements out of which anything is made , the efficient , or agency by which it is made , the formal as giving the shape or idea which any ...
Page xxxviii
... supposed all Aristotle's historical investigations to be . Aristotle is not merely seeking to demolish all existing theories before pro- ceeding to develope his own views : or at any rate , he is not demolishing them merely for the ...
... supposed all Aristotle's historical investigations to be . Aristotle is not merely seeking to demolish all existing theories before pro- ceeding to develope his own views : or at any rate , he is not demolishing them merely for the ...
Page lxv
... supposed to be the organ of sense - perception . But this result is scarcely in accordance with what happens in the other senses . There , when the object is placed directly on the organ of sense , no perception whatever is possible ...
... supposed to be the organ of sense - perception . But this result is scarcely in accordance with what happens in the other senses . There , when the object is placed directly on the organ of sense , no perception whatever is possible ...
Page lxxxii
... supposed that this physical organ of per- ception would have been the brain , as Aristotle's predecessors had believed . But , Aristotle expresses himself strongly against the view which would connect sense - perception with the ...
... supposed that this physical organ of per- ception would have been the brain , as Aristotle's predecessors had believed . But , Aristotle expresses himself strongly against the view which would connect sense - perception with the ...
Page c
... supposed . Clearly then the faculties which apprehend these two aspects of phenomena cannot be sharply marked off from one another . They are in fact , Aristotle thinks , not so much different faculties as different applications of the ...
... supposed . Clearly then the faculties which apprehend these two aspects of phenomena cannot be sharply marked off from one another . They are in fact , Aristotle thinks , not so much different faculties as different applications of the ...
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