Philosophic Classics From Plato to Derrida
MEDITATIONS, SYNOPSIS 383 15 this way, but is a pure substance. For even if all the accidents of the mind change, so that it has ...
PROLEGOMENA TOANYFUTUREMETAPHYSICS 789 indeed many propositions, demonstrably certain and never questioned; but these are all an ...
384 RENÉDESCARTES 18 19 FIRSTMEDITATION What can be called into doubt Some years ago I was struck by the large number of falseho ...
790 IMMANUELKANT 276 277 it is possible, in order that we may deduce from the principle which makes the given knowledge possible ...
FIRSTMEDITATION 385 20 which being awake can be distinguished from being asleep. The result is that I begin to feel dazed, and t ...
PROLEGOMENA TOANYFUTUREMETAPHYSICS 791 such pretensions? An appeal to the consent of the common sense of mankind cannot be allow ...
386 RENÉDESCARTES 22 23 24 conclusion, but is based on powerful and well thought-out reasons. So in future I must withhold my as ...
792 IMMANUELKANT 280 so as they renounce the title of metaphysicians. For the latter profess to be speculative philosophers; and ...
SECONDMEDITATION 387 25 nothing else, until I at least recognize for certain that there is no certainty. Archimedes used to dema ...
PROLEGOMENA TOANYFUTUREMETAPHYSICS 793 FIRSTPART OF THEMAINTRANSCENDENTALPROBLEM HOWISPUREMATHEMATICSPOSSIBLE? § 6. Here is a gr ...
388 RENÉDESCARTES 27 28 sensation or of thought, was quite foreign to the nature of a body; indeed, it was a source of wonder to ...
794 IMMANUELKANT 283 284 empirical. For I can only know what is contained in the object in itself if it is present and given to ...
SECONDMEDITATION 389 to know more, is unwilling to be deceived, imagines many things even involuntarily, and 29 is aware of many ...
PROLEGOMENA TOANYFUTUREMETAPHYSICS 795 objects count merely as phenomena; for then the form of the phenomenon, that is, pure int ...
390 RENÉDESCARTES 32 33 for I can grasp that the wax is capable of countless changes of this kind, yet I am unable to run throug ...
796 IMMANUELKANT 287 understanding could determine by thinking alone. Yet the differences are internal as the senses teach, for, ...
SECONDMEDITATION 391 34 two), it is simply not possible that I who am now thinking am not something. By the same token, if I jud ...
PROLEGOMENA TOANYFUTUREMETAPHYSICS 797 It will always remain a remarkable phenomenon in the history of philosophy that there was ...
392 RENÉDESCARTES 35 36 THIRDMEDITATION The existence of God I will now shut my eyes, stop my ears, and withdraw all my senses. ...
798 IMMANUELKANT say that things as objects of our senses existing outside us are given, but we know nothing of what they may be ...
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