Philosophic Classics From Plato to Derrida
530 JOHNLOCKE St. Paul’s Cathedral,London, facade, built 1675–1710. Like Locke, Sir Christopher Wren (1632–1723) was interested ...
122 PLATO b c d e 518a b c back in, and if this period of adjustment was not very short, wouldn’t he make a laugh- ingstock of h ...
ANESSAYCONCERNINGHUMANUNDERSTANDING(II, 1) 531 furnished with them: and though the ideas of obvious and familiar qualities thems ...
REPUBLIC(BOOKVII) 123 d e 519a b c d e 520a that’s not able to turn away from darkness toward the light in any other way than al ...
532 JOHNLOCKE CHAPTER2. OFSIMPLEIDEAS Uncompounded appearances.—The better to understand the nature, manner, and extent of our ...
124 PLATO b c d e 521a b the benefit with which each sort is capable of improving the community; the law doesn’t produce men of ...
ANESSAYCONCERNINGHUMANUNDERSTANDING(II, 3) 533 think, that in other mansions of it there may be other and different intelligible ...
125 Aristotle was born in Stagira, on the border of Macedonia. His mother, Phaestis, was from a family of doctors, and his fathe ...
534 JOHNLOCKE CHAPTER4. OFSOLIDITY We receive this idea from touch.—The idea of solidity we receive by our touch; and it arises ...
126 ARISTOTLE upon by the great Arab philosophers. He dominated later medieval philosophy to such an extent that St. Thomas Aqui ...
ANESSAYCONCERNINGHUMANUNDERSTANDING(II, 4) 535 And I think this no one will deny: if so, then the place it deserted gives us the ...
INTRODUCTION 127 According to some scholars, these are not even Aristotle’s notes, but the notes of students collected by editor ...
536 JOHNLOCKE space without anything in it that resists or is protruded by body. This is the idea of pure space, which they thin ...
128 ARISTOTLE and Christopher Shields,Aristotle(London: Routledge, 2006) also provide helpful overviews of Aristotle’s life and ...
ANESSAYCONCERNINGHUMANUNDERSTANDING(II, 7) 537 Mix with almost all our other ideas.—Delight or uneasiness, one or other of them ...
PHYSICS 129 PHYSICS (in part) BOOKII Of the things that are, some are by nature, others through other causes: by nature are ani ...
538 JOHNLOCKE on what is observable there, we shall find our ideas always, whilst we are awake or have any thought, passing in t ...
130 ARISTOTLE arrangement according to convention and art, while the thinghood of it is that which remains continuously even whi ...
ANESSAYCONCERNINGHUMANUNDERSTANDING(II, 8) 539 divide it again, and it retains still the same qualities: and so divide it on, ti ...
PHYSICS 131 belong to them because they pertain to natural bodies. On account of this also he sepa- rates them. For in his think ...
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