The Sources and Development of Kant's Teleology ...University Press of Chicago, 1892 - 48 páginas |
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Página 7
... necessary . On the other hand , when he speaks of the laws of the mechanism as based on final causes he does not usually give as the ground for this that they are the laws of the monads , but rather that they are chosen freely by God in ...
... necessary . On the other hand , when he speaks of the laws of the mechanism as based on final causes he does not usually give as the ground for this that they are the laws of the monads , but rather that they are chosen freely by God in ...
Página 9
... necessary Being outside the world.3 is the cosmological argument , not the physico - theological on which he places chief reliance , but in his Physik , whose charac- ter is better indicated by its secondary titles , Von den Absichten 1 ...
... necessary Being outside the world.3 is the cosmological argument , not the physico - theological on which he places chief reliance , but in his Physik , whose charac- ter is better indicated by its secondary titles , Von den Absichten 1 ...
Página 11
... necessary conse- quences of the nature of matter , and that it is irrational to attribute to Providence what is only the effect of necessity , it may be answered that this very thing proves the perfection of the Supreme Being . " C'est ...
... necessary conse- quences of the nature of matter , and that it is irrational to attribute to Providence what is only the effect of necessity , it may be answered that this very thing proves the perfection of the Supreme Being . " C'est ...
Página 14
... necessary determina- tions of things , the general laws which are set into a harmonious plan with reference to one another , without any forced union , adapt themselves , as it were , spontaneously to the maintenance of perfect ends ...
... necessary determina- tions of things , the general laws which are set into a harmonious plan with reference to one another , without any forced union , adapt themselves , as it were , spontaneously to the maintenance of perfect ends ...
Página 15
... necessary in themselves and inde- pendently , what an astonishing coincidence , or rather what an im- possibility that they should fit together with their natural impulses precisely as a wise and considered choice could have united them ...
... necessary in themselves and inde- pendently , what an astonishing coincidence , or rather what an im- possibility that they should fit together with their natural impulses precisely as a wise and considered choice could have united them ...
Términos y frases comunes
Absichten according to ends æsthetic judgments ALBERT-LUDWIGS-UNIVERSITÄT Amphiboly analogy animal answer aspect assume beautiful choice conception connected criticises criticism Critique of Judgment Critique of Pure Critique of Taste demand Descartes Deus ex Machina DEVELOPMENT OF KANT'S Dissertation divine Erdmann essay existence experience explain faculties final causes final purpose force formal purposiveness Ghost Seer ground Hylozoism Idea Intellect JAMES HAYDEN TUFTS Kant KANT'S TELEOLOGY knowledge last Critique laws of motion Leibniz Leibnizian Lose Blätter matter maxim mechanical explanation metaphysical Metaphysik method mind monads moral teleology necessary necessity Newton noumenon objects organic Paulsen perfect phenomena physico-theological argument physico-theology Pölitz posiveness possible pre-established harmony principle priori Pure Reason Reflexionen regard relation Riehl scientific seems shows Sole Proof speculative reason Spinoza substances systematic teleological judgments Theil theology things thought tion transcendental treatise understanding unity in nature universal laws Ursache Verstand wise Zweck
Pasajes populares
Página 17 - It is only when two species of objects are found to be constantly conjoined that we can infer the one from the other; and were an effect presented which was entirely singular and could not be comprehended under any known species, I do not see that we could form any conjecture or inference at all concerning its cause.
Página 12 - This unity of reason always presupposes an idea, namely, that of a whole of our knowledge, preceding the definite knowledge of its parts, and containing the conditions according to which we are to determine a priori the place of every part and its relation to the rest. Such an idea accordingly demands the complete unity of the knowledge of our understanding, by which that knowledge becomes not only a mere aggregate
Página 17 - I much doubt whether it be possible for a cause to be known only by its effect (as you have all along supposed) or to be of so singular and particular a nature as to have no parallel and no similarity with any other cause or object, that has ever fallen under our observation.