A Manual of the History of Philosophy |
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Page ix
... Method , Importance , Division , and Bibliography of the History of Philosophy 1 Preliminary Observations on the Progress of Philosophic Reason 25 PARTICULAR INTRODUCTION , .... .... Containing a rapid Review of the Religious and ...
... Method , Importance , Division , and Bibliography of the History of Philosophy 1 Preliminary Observations on the Progress of Philosophic Reason 25 PARTICULAR INTRODUCTION , .... .... Containing a rapid Review of the Religious and ...
Page 1
... method , value , and the various modes in which it may be handled . These objects , together with the history and literature of the history of philosophy , combined with some preliminary remarks on the progress of the philosophizing ...
... method , value , and the various modes in which it may be handled . These objects , together with the history and literature of the history of philosophy , combined with some preliminary remarks on the progress of the philosophizing ...
Page 2
... method , logical conse- quence , their result , and the scope and general character of their objects . The thinking reason developes itself in con- formity to its own law in these attempts , which , when they present themselves in a ...
... method , logical conse- quence , their result , and the scope and general character of their objects . The thinking reason developes itself in con- formity to its own law in these attempts , which , when they present themselves in a ...
Page 3
... Methods , and Systems , which are quite as manifold as the efforts from which they proceed . The reason obtains , through these means , continually , more genuine materials for philosophy as a science , as well as rules and principles ...
... Methods , and Systems , which are quite as manifold as the efforts from which they proceed . The reason obtains , through these means , continually , more genuine materials for philosophy as a science , as well as rules and principles ...
Page 4
... method of succeeding researches . This influence is variously modified according to the intellectual character , to the consideration and celebrity of the schools that were established , and according to writ- ings , their form and ...
... method of succeeding researches . This influence is variously modified according to the intellectual character , to the consideration and celebrity of the schools that were established , and according to writ- ings , their form and ...
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Absolute according Amst Anaxagoras ancient ARIST Aristotle Atheism Aufl Berl Berlin born character CHPH Christian cognition consequence Cyrenaics Deity Descartes died DIOG disciple Diss Dissertation Divine doctrine Dogmatism ebend edition Empedocles endeavoured Epicurus Essay existence external faculties fasc Fichte flourished Francf German Geschichte Gött Götting Greeks Hist History of Philosophy human ibid ideas Jena Kant knowledge LAERT latter laws Leibnitz Leips Leipz libb Lips Logic Lond Lugd Math MEINERS Metaph Metaphysics mind moral mystical nature notions object Opera opinions original Paris Parmenides Philos Phys Plato Platonis Plotinus PLUTARCH præs principles Pythagoras quæ Quæst rational Reason Religion Scepticism Schelling SEXT SEXTUS Sextus Empiricus sive Socrates sophy soul speculative spirit Stoics Theology theory things thought tion translated treatises truth Ueber unity universal views VIII virtue Vitâ Viteb vols XENOPH Xenophanes
Popular passages
Page 368 - Thou art, of what sort the eternal life of the saints was to be, which eye hath not seen, nor ear heard, nor hath it entered into the heart of man to conceive.
Page 159 - At the end of the fifteenth and beginning of the sixteenth centuries...
Page 490 - Théorie du Pouvoir politique et religieux dans la société civile, démontrée par le raisonnement et par l'histoire, 3 vols.
Page 484 - Faculties which perceive the relations of external objects : 27, Locality ; 28, Number ; 29, Order; 30, Eventuality ; 31, Time ; 32, Tune ; 33, Language.
Page 272 - He was born at Nola, in the kingdom of Naples, about the middle of the sixteenth century. Little is known of his early life. He professed himself a Dominican, but the year and place of his noviciate are not known. Some religious doubts, and bold strictures on the monkish orders, obliged him to quit Italy, probably in 1580. He retired to Geneva, where his love for dispute and paradox brought him into trouble with the adherents of Calvin.