Philosophic Classics From Plato to Derrida
METAPHYSICS(BOOKXII) 151 knowledge of all things, of the sort that some people say there is, he could not start out already know ...
ANESSAYCONCERNINGHUMANUNDERSTANDING(III, 3) 561 leaving out the shape, and some other properties signified by the name man, and ...
152 ARISTOTLE And yet there is an impasse: for it seems that, while everything that is at work is capable of it, not everything ...
562 JOHNLOCKE I have, in explaining the term man, followed here the ordinary definition of the schools; which, though perhaps no ...
METAPHYSICS(BOOKXII) 153 power of thinking is set in motion by the action of the thing thought, and what is thought in its own r ...
ANESSAYCONCERNINGHUMANUNDERSTANDING(III, 3) 563 They are the workmanship of the understanding, but have their foundation in the ...
154 ARISTOTLE demonstrated that this independent thing can have no magnitude, but is without parts and indivisible (for it cause ...
564 JOHNLOCKE Several significations of the word “essence.”—But since the essences of things are thought by some (and not witho ...
METAPHYSICS(BOOKXII) 155 the zodiac (but with that along which the moon is carried inclined to a greater width than that along w ...
ANESSAYCONCERNINGHUMANUNDERSTANDING(IV, 1) 565 reduce it all to these four sorts: (1) Identity,or diversity. (2) Relation. (3) C ...
156 ARISTOTLE Therefore the first motionless being that causes motion is one both in articulation and in number; and therefore w ...
566 JOHNLOCKE impressions,” is of coexistence. “God is,” is of real existence. Though identity and coexistence are truly nothing ...
ON THESOUL(BOOKII) 157 everything that has no material is indivisible? So the condition the human intellect, or that of any comp ...
ANESSAYCONCERNINGHUMANUNDERSTANDING(IV, 2) 567 that perception. He remembers, i.e., he knows (for remembrance is but the revivin ...
158 ARISTOTLE putting it to work. But in the same person it is knowledge that is first in coming into being; for this reason the ...
568 JOHNLOCKE the clearest and most certain that human frailty is capable of. This part of knowledge is irresistible, and like b ...
ON THESOUL(BOOKII) 159 For the defining statement not only needs to make clear what something is, as most definitions do, but al ...
ANESSAYCONCERNINGHUMANUNDERSTANDING(IV, 2) 569 Not so clear as intuitive knowledge.—It is true, the perception produced by demo ...
160 ARISTOTLE And seeing that the means by which we live and perceive is meant two ways, as is the means by which we know (by wh ...
570 JOHNLOCKE the variation of some or all of those causes; which since it cannot be observed by us in particles of matter where ...
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