The Family Library (Harper)., Volume 144 |
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Page 175
... feelings , and a feeling of the relation of our different feelings to a permanent subject . This notion of the mind as the permanent subject of the all various feelings that come and go within us , is expressed in the words self , or ...
... feelings , and a feeling of the relation of our different feelings to a permanent subject . This notion of the mind as the permanent subject of the all various feelings that come and go within us , is expressed in the words self , or ...
Page 177
... Feeling : Cheerfulness & Melancholy ; Wonder ; Languor ; Beauty and its Opposite ; Sublimity ; The Ludicrous . SPECIES II . Immediate emotions involving some Moral Feeling : Feelings distinctive of Virtue and Vice : Love and Hate ...
... Feeling : Cheerfulness & Melancholy ; Wonder ; Languor ; Beauty and its Opposite ; Sublimity ; The Ludicrous . SPECIES II . Immediate emotions involving some Moral Feeling : Feelings distinctive of Virtue and Vice : Love and Hate ...
Page 182
... feeling of their resem- blance ; 3. The expression of this feeling of their relation by a word comprehending all the objects be- tween which this relation exists . The general term expresses a state of mind entirely distinct from the ...
... feeling of their resem- blance ; 3. The expression of this feeling of their relation by a word comprehending all the objects be- tween which this relation exists . The general term expresses a state of mind entirely distinct from the ...
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Common terms and phrases
absolute absolute substance according actions activity affections Aristotle attributes Bacon beautiful Bentham bodies born Brown cause Christian Thomasius ciples CLASS conceived conception Condillac connexion consciousness consequences constitution contained denies Descartes died distinct divine doctrine Dugald Stewart elements emotion evil existence external fact faculty feeling Fichte finite flourished fundamental German Emperors Hegel Hobbes human mind Hume ideas implies infinite instinctive intellectual intelligence judgments Kant knowledge Leibnitz Locke logical Malebranche matter mechanical philosophy ment modifications monads moral sense motive nature necessary Nominalists notion objects observation ontology organization original pantheism Paracelsus particular perception perfect phenomena physical Plato pleasure ples Plotinus princi principle produce rational reality reason Reid relation relative resolved Royer-Collard Schelling selfish system sensation sensibility sensualism sentiment simple skepticism sole soul SPECIES II speculative spirit Stewart substance term theory things Thomas Campanella thought tion truth unity universe virtue writings