Philosophic Classics From Plato to Derrida
idea, and the principle of decline of the whole order of society—is Christiandynamite. “Humanitarian” blessings of Christianity! ...
652 GEORGEBERKELEY PHILONOUS: And, has it not been made evident that no such substance can possibly exist? And, though it should ...
1061 The major twentieth-century philosophical traditions are notoriously difficult to characterize in a nutshell. Generalizatio ...
THREEDIALOGUES(2) 653 HYLAS: I do not pretend to have any notion of it. PHILONOUS: And what reason have you to think this unknow ...
1062 TWENTIETH-CENTURYPHILOSOPHY and phenomena that Phenomenologists have sought to describe are highly varied, including, for i ...
654 GEORGEBERKELEY HYLAS: I will no longer maintain that matter is an instrument. However, I would not be understood to give up ...
INTRODUCTION 1063 masculine, the sacred, the literal, or the objective, and so on, entails the exclusion, suppression, or margin ...
THREEDIALOGUES(2) 655 PHILONOUS: Those things which you say are present to God, without doubt he perceives. HYLAS: Certainly; ot ...
1064 TWENTIETH-CENTURYPHILOSOPHY this narrower meaning. In fact, it is not clear that this is true under any but the widest mean ...
656 GEORGEBERKELEY HYLAS: We have already argued on those points. I have no more to say to them. But, to prevent any farther que ...
Edmund Husserl was born in Proste ̄jov (Prossnitz), Moravia, in what is now the Czech Republic; at that time, it was part of the ...
THREEDIALOGUES(2) 657 the most inadequate or faint idea pretended to—I will not indeed thence conclude against the reality of an ...
1066 EDMUNDHUSSERL Husserl’s shorthand notes as the Husserliana series.The Archive has also hosted congresses on, and published ...
658 GEORGEBERKELEY PHILONOUS: I deny it to be possible; and have, if I mistake not, evidently proved, from your own concessions, ...
INTRODUCTION 1067 nexus of exotic experiences of perception and pleasure valuation.” Of this nexus of intending tree-experiences ...
THREEDIALOGUES(3) 659 THETHIRDDIALOGUE PHILONOUS: Tell me, Hylas, what are the fruits of yesterday’s meditation? Has it confirme ...
1068 EDMUNDHUSSERL “Phenomenology” by Edmund Husserl. Reprinted with permission from Encyclopaedia Britannica,14th edition. © 19 ...
660 GEORGEBERKELEY HYLAS: That is the very top and perfection of human knowledge. PHILONOUS: But are you all this while in earne ...
PHENOMENOLOGY 1069 Instead of the matters themselves, the values, goals, utilities, etc., we regard the subjec- tive experiences ...
THREEDIALOGUES(3) 661 to me a plain contradiction; since I cannot prescind or abstract, even in thought, the existence of a sens ...
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