HamiltonW. Blackwood and sons, 1882 - 268 ページ |
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absolute actual Airdrie alleged apprehended belief Brown Cadder causality cause ceive cognition conceive conception contradiction contradictory criticism Descartes distinction ditioned Edinburgh Review elements ence existence experience extension external facts of consciousness faculty feeling Fichte finite generalisation ground Hamil Hamilton Hamilton's doctrine Hegel holds incognisable inference infinite infinite regress intelligence intuition intuitive knowledge irrelative JOHN VEITCH Kant known lative laws Lectures ledge limited logical matter means mental Metaphysics method Mill Mill's mind mode modifications necessarily necessary necessity negation ness non-Ego notion organism perceived perception percipient permanent phænomena phænomenon philosophy philosophy of Perception positive possible primary qualities principle psychological question realised reality reason regarded Reid Reid's relation relative representation Representationalism represented Robert Hamilton sciousness sensation simply space sphere subject and object substance supposed theory thing tion transcendent truth ultimate uncon unconditioned unity universal University of Glasgow unknown wholly
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152 ページ - That is to say, the consciousness of my own existence is at the same time an immediate consciousness of the existence of other things without me.
133 ページ - ... sensations, and that these sensations, (which have no more resemblance to the qualities of matter than the words of a language have to the things they denote,) are followed by a perception of the existence and qualities of the bodies by which the impressions are made...
210 ページ - This is, that we only know anything, by knowing it as distinguished from something else; that all consciousness is of difference; that two objects are the smallest number required to constitute consciousness ; that a thing is only seen to be what it is, by contrast with what it is not.
155 ページ - ... however, to stop short of the negation of an external world, the reality of which, and the knowledge of whose reality, it seeks by various hypotheses to establish and explain.