| Samantha Frost - 2008 - 240 ページ
...words. 32. Hobbes lays out this process quite explicitly in L 5:110. 33. According to Hobbes, since " truth consisteth in the right ordering of names in...precise truth, had need to remember what every name he uses stands for; and to place it accordingly" (L 4:105). 34. Hobbes contends that the affective response... | |
| Basil Lanneau Gildersleeve, Charles William Emil Miller, Benjamin Dean Meritt, Tenney Frank, Harold Fredrik Cherniss, Henry Thompson Rowell - 1881 - 606 ページ
...-sorke hard." Rev. George Hughes, Tht' Saints Ij)sse and Lamentation (1632), pp. 53, 54. " Seeing, then, that truth consisteth in the right ordering of names...precise truth had need to remember what every name he uses stands for," etc. Hobbes, Leviathan, p. 15 (ed. 1651). " When I have most freedom, I shall most... | |
| Peter Curzon - 1998 - 360 ページ
...(see 3.4) writes in Leviathan in terms which are applicable to the task to which Hohfeld set his hand: 'A man that seeketh precise truth had need to remember what every name he uses stands for and to place it accordingly, or else he will find himself entangled in words as a bird... | |
| 542 ページ
...find equally conspicuous, and perhaps even more dangerous examples of this fallacy. *As Uobbcs says: "A man that seeketh precise truth had need to remember what every nnme he uses stands for, and to place it accordingly, or else he will flnd himself entangled In words... | |
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