| George Berkeley - 1820 - 514 pages
...abstract one from another, or conceive separately, those qualities which it is impossible should exist so separated ; or that I can frame a general notion by...aforesaid. Which two last are the proper acceptations of abstraction. And there are grounds to think most men will acknowledge themselves to be in my case.... | |
| George Berkeley - 1820 - 506 pages
...abstract one from another, or conceive separately, those qualities which it is impossible should exist so separated ; or that I can frame a general notion by...aforesaid. Which two last are the proper acceptations of abstraction. And there are grounds to think most men will acknowledge themselves to be in my case.... | |
| Johann Eduard Erdmann - 1842 - 720 pages
...abstract one from another or conceive separatly those qualities which it is impossible schould exist so separated, or that I can frame a general notion by abstracting from particulars. . . . And there are grounds to think most men will acknowledge themselves to be in my case. Ibid. p.... | |
| George Berkeley - 1843 - 542 pages
...abstract one from another, or conceive separately, those qualities which it is impossible should exist so separated ; or that I can frame a general notion by...aforesaid. Which two last are the proper acceptations of abstraction.] And there are grounds to think most men will acknowledge themselves to be in my case.... | |
| George Berkeley - 1843 - 548 pages
...abstract one from another, or conceive separately, those qualities which it is impossible should exist so separated ; or that I can frame a general notion by...aforesaid. Which two last are the proper acceptations of abstraction.^ And there are grounds to think most men will acknowledge themselves to be in my case.... | |
| George Berkeley - 1843 - 556 pages
...abstract one from another, or conceive separately, those qualities which it is impossible should exist so separated; or that I can frame a general notion by...aforesaid. Which two last are the proper acceptations of abstraction,] And there are grounds to think most men will acknowledge themselves to be in my case.... | |
| Robert Blakey - 1848 - 584 pages
...abstract one from another, or conceive separately, those qualities which it is impossible should exist so separated ; or that I can frame a general notion by...aforesaid. Which two last are the proper acceptations of abstraction. And there are grounds to think most men will acknowledge themselves to be in my case.... | |
| Henry Longueville Mansel - 1851 - 350 pages
...abstract one from another, or conceive separately, those qualities which it is impossible should exist so separated ; or that I can frame a general notion by...abstracting from particulars in the manner aforesaid V " It is, I know," continues the Bishop, " a point much insisted on, that all knowledge and demonstration... | |
| Charles Richardson - 1854 - 280 pages
...abstract one from another, or conceive separately, those qualities which it is impossible should exist so separated, or that I can frame a general notion by...aforesaid. Which two last are the proper acceptations of abstraction?"* Locke advances it to be his opinion, that the faculties of brutes cannot attain to abstraction,... | |
| Samuel Bailey - 1855 - 278 pages
...abstract one from another, or conceive separately those qualities which it is impossible should exist so separated ; or that I can frame a general notion by...abstracting from particulars in the manner aforesaid." * What has been here said of general and abstract terms applies in substance to words of a complex... | |
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