The North American Review, Volume 29Jared Sparks, Edward Everett, James Russell Lowell, Henry Cabot Lodge O. Everett, 1829 Vols. 227-230, no. 2 include: Stuff and nonsense, v. 5-6, no. 8, Jan. 1929-Aug. 1930. |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 82
Page 93
... object acted on , that is , in this case , of the material world , is obviously not less direct and incontrovertible ... object , or only of an organic change in our own bodies . In the one case , the act of perception proves the ex ...
... object acted on , that is , in this case , of the material world , is obviously not less direct and incontrovertible ... object , or only of an organic change in our own bodies . In the one case , the act of perception proves the ex ...
Page 105
... object of his inquiries . Fichte however goes still farther than his master in the same track . According to Kant , our notions of external objects are modified by the laws of our own mind , which regulate the per- ception of them ...
... object of his inquiries . Fichte however goes still farther than his master in the same track . According to Kant , our notions of external objects are modified by the laws of our own mind , which regulate the per- ception of them ...
Page 113
... object reflected ; while the epithet innate or original supposes that the object is not , and never has been , present to the mind . An innate idea is , therefore , an image without an object , a copy without a model , a translation ...
... object reflected ; while the epithet innate or original supposes that the object is not , and never has been , present to the mind . An innate idea is , therefore , an image without an object , a copy without a model , a translation ...
Contents
PRINCIPLES OF ELOCUTION | 38 |
HISTORY of IntellectuAL PHILOSOPHY | 67 |
DE BÉRANngers Life and WRITINGS | 123 |
20 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
American ancient appears army beautiful Béranger Boston canal Canova Captain Hall character constitution course Crocker & Brewster Demetrius Ypsilanti Descartes dynasty Egypt Egyptian eloquence England English Europe executed exhibit existence expression fact favor feel fire-ships France French genius German give Grecian Greece Greek Herodotus honor hundred ideas interest Junius king labors language letters letters of Junius Locke Lord Manetho means ment mind Missolonghi modern monuments moral Morea nature object observation opinion Ouvrard party Pashaw passed period philosophy Plato poet poetry political possessed present principles produced Prussia Psammeticus reader reign remarks respect revolution Sackville schools sculpture seems Sir Philip Sir Philip Francis Spain speak spirit style supposed taste things thought thousand tion truth Turkish Turks whole writers XXIX.-No York εἰς καὶ τὰ τὴν