| George Stuart Fullerton - 1904 - 652 páginas
...as one simple idea, which indeed is a complication of many ideas together : because, as I have said, not imagining how these simple ideas can subsist by...some substratum wherein they do subsist, and from which they do result, and which therefore we call substance." l It is thus that we come to have the... | |
| John Locke - 1905 - 382 páginas
...as one simple idea, which indeed is a complication of many ideas together: because, as I have said, not imagining how these simple ideas can subsist by...some substratum wherein they do subsist, and from which they do result ; which therefore we call " substance." 2. Our idea of substance in general. —... | |
| John Locke - 1905 - 424 páginas
...as one simple idea, which indeed is a complication of many ideas together: because, as I have said, not imagining how these simple ideas can subsist by...themselves, we accustom ourselves to suppose some substratum y wherein they do subsist, and from which they do result; which therefore we call " substance." 2.... | |
| Oliver Joseph Thatcher - 1907 - 484 páginas
...as one simple idea, which indeed is a complication of many ideas together ; because, as I have said, not imagining how these simple ideas can subsist by...some substratum wherein they do subsist, and from which they do result ; which therefore we call substance. 2. Our Idea of Substance in general. —... | |
| 1908 - 768 páginas
...as one simple idea, which indeed is a complication of many ideas together: because, as I have said, not imagining how these simple, ideas can subsist...some substratum wherein they do subsist, and from which they do result; which therefore we call substance. 2. Our idea of substance in general. — So... | |
| Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel - 1912 - 324 páginas
...dialectic of the fact, and the necessity of an advance from it. ' Not imagining', says Locke, 1 'how those simple ideas can subsist by themselves, we accustom...some substratum wherein they do subsist, and from which they do result; which therefore we call substance.' Here we have completely, as far as its essential... | |
| James Seth - 1912 - 404 páginas
...which being presumed to belong to one thing, . . . are called, so united in one subject, by one name ; because, . . . not imagining how these simple ideas...can subsist by themselves, we accustom ourselves to i II. viii. 15. " II. viii. 17. suppose some substratum wherein they do subsist, and from which they... | |
| Trinity College (Dublin, Ireland) - 1913 - 752 páginas
...suspend the prosecution of this or that desire. . . . This seems to me the source of all liberty.' (ff) ' Not imagining how these simple ideas can subsist by...suppose some substratum wherein they do subsist.' (A) '"Where there is no property, there is no injustice" is a proposition as certain as any demonstration... | |
| James Hastings, John Alexander Selbie, Louis Herbert Gray - 1916 - 940 páginas
...its simple ideas go constantly together in groups (the qualities that make up a single thing), and, 'not imagining how these simple ideas can subsist...some substratum wherein they do subsist, and from which they do result ; which therefore we call substance. So that if any one will examine himself concerning... | |
| Raymond Gregory - 1919 - 114 páginas
...as one simple idea, which is indeed a complication of many ideas toether: because, as I have said, not imagining how these simple ideas can subsist by...some substratum wherein they do subsist, and from which they do result, and which, therefore, we call substance."* The substance, then, of any constant... | |
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