History of Modern Philosophy |
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Page iii
... opinions as much of personal and general historic interest as could be expected or desired . For these reasons his history is , perhaps , more readable than any other , and is uniformly confessed by competent critics , whether friendly ...
... opinions as much of personal and general historic interest as could be expected or desired . For these reasons his history is , perhaps , more readable than any other , and is uniformly confessed by competent critics , whether friendly ...
Page 3
... opinions , and schools , which the historian sets forth as well as the sources of information concerning permit , and as he understands those sources , or these sys- tems are regarded merely as having failed to reach the unity of true ...
... opinions , and schools , which the historian sets forth as well as the sources of information concerning permit , and as he understands those sources , or these sys- tems are regarded merely as having failed to reach the unity of true ...
Page 22
... opinion , and the art of making it accepted ; nothing but the individual man , who declared himself the measure of all things , — the theme of the Sophists ( Gorgias and Protagoras ) . The theory of the sophists forms the transition ...
... opinion , and the art of making it accepted ; nothing but the individual man , who declared himself the measure of all things , — the theme of the Sophists ( Gorgias and Protagoras ) . The theory of the sophists forms the transition ...
Page 23
... opinions was regarded by the sophists as a proof of the impossibility of knowledge . Socrates regarded the harmony produced out of the contradiction of opinions as the proof of the con- trary . He could only find truth , therefore , in ...
... opinions was regarded by the sophists as a proof of the impossibility of knowledge . Socrates regarded the harmony produced out of the contradiction of opinions as the proof of the con- trary . He could only find truth , therefore , in ...
Page 48
... opinion of the Church . In respect , therefore , to all three , only cer- tain conceptions are true ; and this brings us to the problem , What are those true conceptions ? If God is not so con- ceived that from him goes out a world ...
... opinion of the Church . In respect , therefore , to all three , only cer- tain conceptions are true ; and this brings us to the problem , What are those true conceptions ? If God is not so con- ceived that from him goes out a world ...
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