| John Stuart Mill - 1867 - 664 strani
...Mind, the Mind is only known to itself phsenomenally, as the series of its feelings or consciousnesses. We are forced to apprehend every part of the series...it except the states of consciousness themselves. The feelings or consciousnesses which belong or have belonged to it, and its possibilities of having... | |
| Edward Royall Tyler, William Lathrop Kingsley, George Park Fisher, Timothy Dwight - 1874 - 852 strani
...Mind, the mind is only known to itself phenomenally, as the series of its feelings or consciousnesses. We are forced to apprehend every part of the series...fourth, and so on, must be the same in the first and iu the fiftieth, this common element is a permanent element But beyond this we can affirm nothing of... | |
| William James - 1890 - 716 strani
...thought without any fact corresponding to it, I hold to be indubitable. . . . This original element, ... to which we cannot give any name but its own peculiar...it except the states of consciousness themselves. The feelings or consciousnesses which belong or have belonged to it, and its possibilities of having... | |
| William James - 1890 - 716 strani
...thought without any fact corresponding to it, I hold to be indubitable. . . . This original element, ... to which we cannot give any name but its own peculiar...it except the states of consciousness themselves. The feelings or consciousnesses which belong or have belonged to it, and its possibilities of having... | |
| William James - 1890 - 720 strani
...implying some false or ungrounded theory, is the Ego, or Self. As such I ascribe a reality to the>Ego — to my own mind— different from that real existence...it except the states of consciousness themselves. The feelings or consciousnesses which belong or have belonged to it, and its possibilities of having... | |
| William James - 1890 - 720 strani
...forced to apprehend every part of the series as linked with the other parts by somethiuy in ctnnmon which is not the feelings themselves, any more than...it except the states of consciousness themselves. The feelings or consciousnesses which belong or have belonged to it, and its possibilities of having... | |
| James Seth - 1912 - 404 strani
...experiential inference from that one Ego, I ascribe the same reality to other Egoes, or Minds. . . . We are forced to apprehend every part of the series...in the fiftieth, this common element is a permanent element.'1 The posthumously published volume of Essays on Religion contains three essays — on Nature,... | |
| Hans Ruin - 1921 - 324 strani
...gehen bereit war, kommt vielleicht in folgendem Zitat am deutlichsten zum Ausdruck: »We are f orced to apprehend every part of the series as linked with...fiftieth, this common element is a permanent element». (P. 263). sersten Tatsachen nähert. Dass er hier indes seinem Empirismus den Garaus machte, entging... | |
| William James - 2007 - 709 strani
...corresponding to it, I hold to be indubitable. . . . This original element, , , , to which we oannot give any name but its own peculiar one, without implying...it except the states of consciousness themselves. The feelings or consciousnesses which belong or have belonged to it, and its possibilities of having... | |
| Edward Royall Tyler, William Lathrop Kingsley, George Park Fisher, Timothy Dwight - 1874 - 820 strani
...Mind, the mind is only known to itself phenomenally, as the series of its feelings or consciousnesses. We are forced to apprehend every part of the series...it except the states of consciousness themselves. The feelings or consciousnesses which belong or have belonged to it, and its possibilities of having... | |
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