| George Berkeley, Alexander Campbell Fraser - 1871 - 712 páginas
...letters to Johnson, 'to trouble the world with large volumes. What I have done was rather with the view of giving hints to thinking men, who have leisure...bottom of things, and pursue them in their own minds.' Perhaps what some may feel to be least satisfying in Berkeley's Theism is, its too exclusive reference... | |
| Alexander Campbell Fraser - 1871 - 702 páginas
...letters to Johnson, 'to trouble the world with large volumes. What I have done was rather with the view of giving hints to thinking men, who have leisure...bottom of things, and pursue them in their own minds.'. Perhaps what some may feel to be least satisfying in Berkeley's Theism is, its too exclusive reference... | |
| Alexander Campbell Fraser - 1871 - 708 páginas
...letters to Johnson, 'to trouble the world with large volumes. What I have done was rather with the view of giving hints to thinking men, who have leisure...bottom of things, and pursue them in their own minds.' Perhaps what some may feel to be least satisfying in Berkeley's Theism is, its too exclusive reference... | |
| George Berkeley, Alexander Campbell Fraser - 1884 - 448 páginas
...into a philosophy by Berkeley himself. What he attempted was done, he modestly says, ' with a view to giving hints to thinking men who have leisure and...bottom of things, and pursue them in their own minds.' The final result of his new conception of Matter was the substitution of GOD for the unintelligible... | |
| Samuel Medary Dick - 1898 - 102 páginas
...hypothesis, and this was Berkeley's position. "What he attempted was done, he modestly says, with a view to giving hints to thinking men who have leisure and...the bottom of things, and pursue them in their own minds."2 That is, Berkeley concerned himself with the production of hypotheses rather than the defining... | |
| George Berkeley, Alexander Campbell Fraser - 1901 - 634 páginas
...'I had no inclination to trouble the world with large volumes. What I have done was rather with the view of giving hints to thinking men, who have leisure...minds. Two or three times reading these small tracts (Essay on Vision, Principles, Dialogues, De Motu), and making what is read the occasion of thinking,... | |
| George Berkeley - 1904 - 158 páginas
...characteristic remark, "to trouble the world with large volumes. What I have done was rather with the view.jof giving hints to thinking men, who have leisure and curiosity to go to Th"e~Dottom of things, and pursue them in their own minds, Two or three times reading these small tracts,... | |
| George Berkeley - 1928 - 168 páginas
...characteristic remark, "to trouble the world with large volumes. What I have done was rather with the view of giving hints to thinking men, who have leisure...times reading these small tracts, and making what it read the occasion of thinking, would, I believe, render the whole familiar and easy to the mind,... | |
| Peter Walmsley - 1990 - 236 páginas
...with Johnson of 1729, where Berkeley still defends immaterialism, but with a new note of deference: 'I had no inclination to trouble the world with large...bottom of things, and pursue them in their own minds' (11.281). medical terminology. In particular, Roy Porter's study of medical articles in The Gentleman's... | |
| Samuel Kotz, Norman L. Johnson - 1993 - 232 páginas
...aim in writing this monograph was 'to provide hints to thinking men' and women who have determination 'and curiosity to go to the bottom of things and pursue them in their own minds'. January 1993 Samuel Kotz Norman L. Johnson University of Maryland University of North Carolina College... | |
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