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" The object of all knowledge, whatever it may be, is always something more than what is naturally or usually regarded as the object. It always is, and must be, the object with the addition of oneself — object plus subject — thing, or thought, mecum.... "
Scottish Metaphysics: Reconstructed in Accordance with the Principles of ... - Page 50
by E. Edmond - 1887 - 244 pages
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Institutes of Metaphysic: The Theory of Knowing the Mind

James Frederick Ferrier - 1854 - 514 pages
...be, the object with the addition of oneself, — object plus subject, — thing, or thought, mecum. Self is an integral and essential part of every object of cognition. DEMONSTRATION. IT has been already established as the condition of all knowledge, that a thing can...
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Eclectic and Congregational Review

1855 - 946 pages
...be, the object with the addition of oneself — object plus subject — thing or thought, mecum ;' so that ' self is an integral and essential part of every object of cognition.' If the view above thrown out be correct, and the knowledge of self be not the necessary condition,...
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Brownson's Quarterly Review

Orestes Augustus Brownson - 1855 - 570 pages
...the object with the addition of one's self, — object plus subject, — thing, or thought, mecum. Self is an integral and essential part of every object of cognition." This is further explained by the following illustration : — " The change which the condition of knowledge...
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The British and Foreign Evangelical Review and Quarterly Record of Christian ...

1855 - 748 pages
...be, the object with the addition of oneself, — object plus subject, — thing, or thought, mecum. Self is an integral and essential part of every object of cognition. " Demonstration. " It has been already established as the condition of all knowledge, that a thing...
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Brownson's Quarterly Review

Orestes Augustus Brownson - 1855 - 572 pages
...the object with the addition of one's self, — object plus subject, — thing, or thought, mecum. Self is an integral and essential part of every object of cognition." This is further explained by the following illustration : — " The change which the condition of knowledge...
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An Inquiry Into the Constitution, Powers, and Processes of the Human Mind ...

William Robinson Pirie - 1858 - 668 pages
...be, the object with the addition "of oneself — object plus subject — thing, or thought, " mecum. Self is an integral and essential part of " every object of cognition ;"" and the third, which completes it, runs in these words — " The objective " part of the object...
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Y Traethodydd: am y fleyddyn ..., Volume 15

1859 - 522 pages
...weithredu trwy y synwyrau corfforol. Fel yr engraifft olaf, ni a gawn yn yr ail osodiad, tu dalen 97, " Self is an integral and essential part of every object of cognition." Os ' cognition ' yw yr hyn a wybyddir, beth all yr ' object of cognition ' fod ? Ond os ' cognition...
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Y Traethodydd yn America, Volume 3

1859 - 598 pages
...weithredii trwy y synwyrau corfforol. Fei yr engraifft olaf, ni à gawn yn yr ail osodiad, tu dalen 97, " Self is an integral and essential part of every object of cognition." Os 'cognition ' yw yr hyn a wybyddir, both all yr ' object of cognition ' fod ? Ond os ' cognition...
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Instinct and Reason; Or, The First Principles of Human Knowledge

George Ramsay - 1862 - 160 pages
...object, but only the slightest reflection, or rather none at all, is required to distinguish them. To say that " Self is an integral and essential part of every object of cognition," is a monstrous paradox, a contradiction in terms, a contradiction to the meaning of the word object....
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The British Controversialist and Literary Magazine

1867 - 972 pages
...be the object with the addition of one's self, —object plia subject ; thing or thought тестя. Self is an integral and essential part of every object of cognition." (8) " The objective part of the object of knowledge, though distinguishable, is not separable in cognition...
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