An Introduction to MetaphysicsPutnam's, 1912 - 92 pagine |
Dall'interno del libro
Risultati 1-5 di 19
Pagina 1
... nor relies on any symbol . The first kind of knowledge may be said to stop at the relative ; the second , in those cases | where it is possible , to attain the absolute . I Consider , for example , the movement of an object I.
... nor relies on any symbol . The first kind of knowledge may be said to stop at the relative ; the second , in those cases | where it is possible , to attain the absolute . I Consider , for example , the movement of an object I.
Pagina 24
... knowledge of the duration of the self by the self is possible . But if metaphysics here demands and can obtain an intuition , science has none the less need of an analysis . Now it is a confusion between the function of analysis and ...
... knowledge of the duration of the self by the self is possible . But if metaphysics here demands and can obtain an intuition , science has none the less need of an analysis . Now it is a confusion between the function of analysis and ...
Pagina 40
... practical equivalent of the reality is obtained . But it must be remem- bered that the normal work of the intellect is far from being disinterested . We do not aim generally at knowledge for the sake of knowledge , 40 An Introduction to.
... practical equivalent of the reality is obtained . But it must be remem- bered that the normal work of the intellect is far from being disinterested . We do not aim generally at knowledge for the sake of knowledge , 40 An Introduction to.
Pagina 41
Henri Bergson. aim generally at knowledge for the sake of knowledge , but in order to take sides , to draw profit - in short , to satisfy an inter- est . We inquire up to what point the object we seek to know is this or that , to what ...
Henri Bergson. aim generally at knowledge for the sake of knowledge , but in order to take sides , to draw profit - in short , to satisfy an inter- est . We inquire up to what point the object we seek to know is this or that , to what ...
Pagina 42
... knowledge of the object ; the object is then brought not under one single concept , but under several in which it is supposed to " participate . " How does it participate in all these concepts at the same time ? This is a question which ...
... knowledge of the object ; the object is then brought not under one single concept , but under several in which it is supposed to " participate . " How does it participate in all these concepts at the same time ? This is a question which ...
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absolute analysis antinomies Aristotle aspect believe Bergson cepts concrete reality consciousness consider duration continuity contrary definite number detached direction dura effort of intuition elements empiricism empiricists eternity express fact feeling fixed flux G. P. Putnam's Sons grasp homogeneous ideas immobile indefinitely indivisible infinite intellectual Introduction to Metaphysics intu ition knowledge means memory ment meta metaphysicians method mind mobility modern science movement moving body multi nature never number of minutes object obtain once operation original ourselves passes perceptions personality philoso philosophy physics places oneself Platonism plicity poem points of view positive science possible present psychical psychologist pure ready-made concepts reconstitute reconstruct relative representation Rudolf Eucken seek sensation shades simple sketches stationary stationary points stoppages supposed symbols T. E. HULME tain thing thought tion translation true understanding unity and multiplicity universal mathematics UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN whilst whole word Paris
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Pagina 7 - By intuition is meant the kind of intellectual sympathy by which one places oneself within an object in order to coincide with what is unique in it and consequently inexpressible.
Pagina 16 - No image can replace the intuition of duration, [but many diverse images, borrowed from very different orders of things, may, by the convergence of their action, direct consciousness to the precise point where there is a certain intuition to be seized.
Pagina 9 - If there exists any means of possessing a reality absolutely instead of knowing it relatively, of placing oneself within it instead of looking at it from outside points of view, of having the intuition instead of making the analysis: in short, of seizing it without any expression, translation, or symbolic representation— metaphysics is that means. Metaphysics, then, is the science which claims to dispense with symbols.
Pagina 17 - ... disposition — that precisely which it must adopt in order to appear to itself as it really is, without any veil. But, then, consciousness must at least consent to make the effort. For it will have been shown nothing: it will simply have been placed in the attitude it must take up in order to make the desired effort, and so come by itself to the intuition.
Pagina 90 - Any one of us, for instance, who has attempted literary composition knows that when the subject has been studied at length, the materials all collected, and the notes all made, something more is needed in order to set about the work of composition itself, and that is an often very painful effort to place ourselves directly at the heart of the subject, and to seek as deeply as possible an impulse, after which we need only let ourselves go. This impulse, once received, starts the mind on a path where...
Pagina 44 - ... there is no consciousness without memory, and no continuation of a state without the addition, to the present feeling, of the memory of past moments. It is this which constitutes duration. Inner duration is the continuous life of a memory which prolongs the past into the present...
Pagina 12 - This inner life may be compared to the unrolling of a coil, for there is no living being who does not feel himself coming gradually to the end of his role ; and to live is to grow old. But it may just as well be compared to a continual rolling up, like that of a thread on a ball, for our past follows us, it swells incessantly with the present that it picks up on its way; and consciousness means memory.
Pagina 1 - ... two profoundly different ways of knowing a thing. The first implies that we move round the object; the second that we enter into it. The first depends on the point of view at which we are placed and on the symbols by which we express ourselves. The second neither depends on a point of view nor relies on any symbol. The first kind of knowledge may be said to stop at the relative; the second, in those cases where it is possible, to attain the absolute.
Pagina 88 - ... obtained, of manipulating the concept profitably. At its origin, more than one of these concepts must have appeared obscure, not easily reconcilable with the concepts already admitted into science, and indeed very near the borderline of absurdity. This means that science does not proceed by an orderly dovetailing together of concepts predestined to fit each other exactly. True and fruitful ideas are so many close contacts with currents of reality, which do not necessarily converge on the same...
Pagina 8 - In its eternally unsatisfied desire to embrace the object around which it is compelled to turn, analysis multiplies without end the number of its points of view in order to complete its always incomplete representation, and ceaselessly varies its symbols that .it may perfect the always imperfect translation. It goes on, therefore, to infinity.