Physical Realism: Being an Analytical Philosophy from the Physical Objects of Science to the Physical Data of Sense |
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Page 3
... laws by which they act upon one another . ' < This quotation from Professor Tait's Recent Ad- vances in Physical Science ' is a recognition of the reality of the insensible , and of its knowledge by the natural philosopher , as facts ...
... laws by which they act upon one another . ' < This quotation from Professor Tait's Recent Ad- vances in Physical Science ' is a recognition of the reality of the insensible , and of its knowledge by the natural philosopher , as facts ...
Page 12
... law of nature , until , setting out from such statement , and making it a foundation of reasoning , we can show , by strict argument , that the facts observed must follow from it as necessary logical consequences , and this not vaguely ...
... law of nature , until , setting out from such statement , and making it a foundation of reasoning , we can show , by strict argument , that the facts observed must follow from it as necessary logical consequences , and this not vaguely ...
Page 13
... laws , there would be no science ; and without essences , or fundamental similarities of those natural classes on which other similarities depend , we could not have the mathematics of the triangle referring its propositions back to its ...
... laws , there would be no science ; and without essences , or fundamental similarities of those natural classes on which other similarities depend , we could not have the mathematics of the triangle referring its propositions back to its ...
Page 18
... laws , there would be no science ; and without essences , or fundamental similarities of those natural classes on which other similarities depend , we could not have the mathematics of the triangle referring its propositions back to its ...
... laws , there would be no science ; and without essences , or fundamental similarities of those natural classes on which other similarities depend , we could not have the mathematics of the triangle referring its propositions back to its ...
Page 68
... may be inhabited : -these inductions , deductions , and analogical inferences are nothing but inferences from similar to similar . They are founded also on the reality and knowledge of classes and laws 68 PART I. PHYSICAL REALISM.
... may be inhabited : -these inductions , deductions , and analogical inferences are nothing but inferences from similar to similar . They are founded also on the reality and knowledge of classes and laws 68 PART I. PHYSICAL REALISM.
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Common terms and phrases
æther analogy analytical judgments apprehend Aristotle axiom Berkeley body colour conception conclusion confusion consciousness corpuscles cosmothetic Crown 8vo data of sense deduction Descartes distance distinct Edition efferent nerves Essay evidence existence experience extended external object external world facts false Hence Hume Hume's hypothesis idealists imperceptible impressions induction infer insensible intuitive realism Kant known laws Leibnitz Locke Locke's logical matter mind motion natural philosophy natural theology nerves nervous system object of sense objects of knowledge objects of science operation optic optic nerve particles particular perceive perception phænomena physical objects physical realism posteriori premises primary qualities principles produce prove psychical data psychical sensation psychological idealism R. A. PROCTOR reality reasoning relations retina says scientific secondary qualities Secondly self-evident sensible data sensible effect sensible ideas sensible object similar simple soul substance supposed syllogism synthetic sense tangible theory things thinking subject thought tion Treatise truth visible vision vols whole Woodcuts
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