A Treatise on Language: Or, The Relation which Words Bear to Things, in Four PartsHarper & brothers, 1836 - 274 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 16
Página vii
... distance is invisible , is only an enig- matical mode of relating the simple fact , that seeing cannot reveal to us a feel SECTION 11. - Whether seeing can or not inform us of an external universe , depends on the meaning which we ...
... distance is invisible , is only an enig- matical mode of relating the simple fact , that seeing cannot reveal to us a feel SECTION 11. - Whether seeing can or not inform us of an external universe , depends on the meaning which we ...
Página xxiv
... Distance names sight and a feel ; hence the dupli- city of asking whether seeing can inform us of distance SECTION 2. - When we know that the word external is restricted to the information of feeling , we shall not wonder that hear- ing ...
... Distance names sight and a feel ; hence the dupli- city of asking whether seeing can inform us of distance SECTION 2. - When we know that the word external is restricted to the information of feeling , we shall not wonder that hear- ing ...
Página 36
... distance the appearance of a star ; —that comets are hotter than red hot iron , and the sun a body of fire thirteen hundred thousand times larger than the earth ; -that tides are caused by the attraction of the moon , and weight ...
... distance the appearance of a star ; —that comets are hotter than red hot iron , and the sun a body of fire thirteen hundred thousand times larger than the earth ; -that tides are caused by the attraction of the moon , and weight ...
Página 47
... associates . The art of painting consists principally in producing sights separated from their usually attendant feels : -the sight , pro- minence , without the feel , -the sight , distance LECT . II ] 47 A TREATISE ON LANGUAGE .
... associates . The art of painting consists principally in producing sights separated from their usually attendant feels : -the sight , pro- minence , without the feel , -the sight , distance LECT . II ] 47 A TREATISE ON LANGUAGE .
Página 48
... distance , without the feel , —the sight , shape , without the feel . Perfumery consists in separating the smell , rose , jessamine , & c . , from the sights and feels with which the smells are naturally associated Ven- triloquism and ...
... distance , without the feel , —the sight , shape , without the feel . Perfumery consists in separating the smell , rose , jessamine , & c . , from the sights and feels with which the smells are naturally associated Ven- triloquism and ...
Contenido
33 | |
34 | |
39 | |
43 | |
49 | |
52 | |
64 | |
70 | |
154 | |
163 | |
169 | |
175 | |
178 | |
184 | |
189 | |
195 | |
76 | |
83 | |
88 | |
94 | |
100 | |
101 | |
107 | |
113 | |
114 | |
121 | |
124 | |
130 | |
137 | |
144 | |
150 | |
198 | |
204 | |
210 | |
212 | |
218 | |
222 | |
232 | |
238 | |
242 | |
248 | |
251 | |
257 | |
263 | |
265 | |
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Términos y frases comunes
admit agent allude anchovy answer apply the word assert atoms aurora borealis become billiard balls bodies cause colour conclusion confound constitute contrivance created deem defect Deity delusion Descartes designate discourse discover discoverable discriminate divested of signification earth employ errour exhibit external existences external universe fallacy hence impute infinite divisibility insignificant internal feelings interpret interpret language invisible knowledge language implies LECTURE light logick matter moon motion mute names a sight natural theology nature of language necessity never object particles person philosopher phrase phraseology premises proceed produced question rays minus realities of nature relation retina revelations of nature rience senses reveal sensible existences sensible experience sensible information sensible meaning sensible particulars sensible phenomena sensible realities sensible signification shape sights and feels significant smells sound speculations suppose taste teach theory thing tion tortoise unit universal proposition verbal meaning verbal signification verbal thoughts words refer
Pasajes populares
Página 7 - THE HISTORY OF ARABIA, Ancient and Modern. Containing a Description of the Country— An account of its Inhabitants, Antiquities, Political Condition, and early Commerce — The Life and Religion of Mohammed— The Conquests, Arts, and Literature...
Página 8 - The Principles of Physiology, applied to the Preservation of Health, and to the Improvement of Physical and Mental Education.
Página 6 - A Popular Guide to the Observation of Nature ; or, Hints of Inducement to the Study of Natural Productions and Appearances, in their Connexions and Relations.
Página 4 - Turner's Sacred History of the World, attempted to be Philosophically considered, in a Series of Letters to a Son.
Página 2 - IN AFRICA. From the Earliest Ages to the Present Time With Illustrations of its Geology, Mineralogy, and Zoology.
Página 170 - ... shall be greater than the base of the other. Let ABC, DEF be two triangles, which have the two sides AB, AC, equal to the two DE, DF, each to each, viz.
Página 170 - For, if the triangle ABC be applied to DEF, so that the point A may be on D, and the straight line AB upon DE ; the point B shall coincide with the point E...
Página 3 - LIVES AND VOYAGES OF DRAKE, CAVENDISH, AND DAMPIER; Including "an Introductory View of the Earlier Discoveries in the South Sea, and the History of the Bucaniers.
Página 88 - But another man, who never took the pains to observe the demonstration, hearing a mathematician, a man of credit, affirm the three angles of a triangle to be equal to two right ones, assents to it, ie receives it for true.
Página 171 - B coinciding with E, and C with F, if the base BC does not coincide with the base EF, two straight lines would inclose a space, which is impossible».
Referencias a este libro
The Journal of Social Psychology, Volúmenes43-44 John Dewey,Carl Murchison Sin vista previa disponible - 1956 |