Recent Discussions in Science, Philosophy, and MoralsD. Appleton, 1882 - 349 |
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Strona 10
... given in Prof. Bain's " Mental and Moral Science , " it is stated that they are 66 as yet nowhere fully expressed . They form part of the more gen- eral doctrine of Evolution which he is engaged in working out ; and they are at present ...
... given in Prof. Bain's " Mental and Moral Science , " it is stated that they are 66 as yet nowhere fully expressed . They form part of the more gen- eral doctrine of Evolution which he is engaged in working out ; and they are at present ...
Strona 13
... given . Let me quote a passage from that chapter : " Not only are those emotions which form the immediate stimuli to actions thus explicable , but the like explanation applies to the emotions that leave the subject of them comparatively ...
... given . Let me quote a passage from that chapter : " Not only are those emotions which form the immediate stimuli to actions thus explicable , but the like explanation applies to the emotions that leave the subject of them comparatively ...
Strona 16
... given to self - analysis are aware that the cawing of rooks is agreeable to them because it has been connected with countless of their greatest gratifications- with the gathering of wild - flowers in childhood ; with Saturday ...
... given to self - analysis are aware that the cawing of rooks is agreeable to them because it has been connected with countless of their greatest gratifications- with the gathering of wild - flowers in childhood ; with Saturday ...
Strona 17
... given by the sounds of a rookery ; but which , nevertheless , have arisen in the course of daily converse with things , and serve as incentives or de- terrents . In the paragraph which Mr. Hutton has extracted from my letter to Mr. Mill ...
... given by the sounds of a rookery ; but which , nevertheless , have arisen in the course of daily converse with things , and serve as incentives or de- terrents . In the paragraph which Mr. Hutton has extracted from my letter to Mr. Mill ...
Strona 18
... given an abstract of my own description of the process , instead of substituting what he supposes my description must be ? Any one who turns to the " Principles of Psy- chology " ( first edition , pp . 218-245 ) , and reads the two ...
... given an abstract of my own description of the process , instead of substituting what he supposes my description must be ? Any one who turns to the " Principles of Psy- chology " ( first edition , pp . 218-245 ) , and reads the two ...
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Strona 11 - These good and bad results cannot be accidental, but must be necessary consequences of the constitution of things ; and I conceive it to be the business of Moral Science to deduce, from the laws of life and the conditions of existence, what kinds of action necessarily tend to produce happiness, and what kinds to produce unhappiness. Having done this, its deductions are to be recognized as laws of conduct ; and are to be conformed to irrespective of a direct estimation of happiness or misery.
Strona 182 - ... which is M. Comte's definition of "the most simple phenomena." Does it not indeed follow from the familiarly admitted fact, that mental advance is from the concrete to the abstract, from the particular to the general, that the universal and therefore most simple truths are the last to be discovered?
Strona 333 - Like changes are known to occur in some gaseous, non-metallic elements, as oxygen; and also in metallic elements, as antimony. These total changes of properties, brought about without any changes to be called chemical, are interpretable only as due to molecular rearrangements; and, by showing that difference of property is producible by difference of arrangement, they support the inference otherwise to be drawn, that the properties of different elements result from differences of arrangement arising...
Strona 125 - All social phenomena are produced by the totality of human emotions and beliefs : of which the emotions are mainly pre-determined, while the beliefs are mainly post-determined. Men's desires are chiefly inherited ; but their beliefs are chiefly acquired, and depend on surrounding conditions ; and the most important surrounding conditions depend on the social state which the prevalent desires have produced. The social state at any time existing, is the resultant of all the ambitions, self-interests,...
Strona 306 - ... that it is hardly possible not to be impressed with the idea of a luminous medium intermixed, but not confounded, with a transparent and non-luminous atmosphere, either floating as clouds in our air, or pervading it in vast sheets and columns like flame, or the streamers of our northern lights, directed in lines perpendicular to the surface.
Strona 168 - The highest mathematical idea, or the fundamental principle of all mathematics is the zero = 0." * * * " Zero is in itself nothing. Mathematics is based upon nothing, and, consequently, arises out of nothing.
Strona 11 - I conceive it to be the business of moral science to deduce from the laws of life and the conditions of existence what kinds of action necessarily tend to produce happiness and what kinds to produce unhappiness. Having done this, its deductions are to be recognised as laws of conduct; and are to be conformed to, irrespective of a direct estimation of happiness or misery' Perhaps an analogy will most clearly show my meaning.
Strona 331 - ... in order to start the world on its chemical career, you must enlarge its capital, and present it with an outfit of heterogeneous constituents. Try, therefore, the effect of such a gift ; fling into the preexisting caldron the whole list of recognized elementary substances, and give leave to their affinities to work.
Strona 202 - ... have been ventured, on discovering that all measures of extension and force originated from the lengths and weights of organic bodies; and all measures of time from the periodic phenomena of either organic or inorganic bodies. Thus, among linear measures, the cubit of the Hebrews was the length of the forearm from the elbow to the end of the middle finger; and the smaller scriptural dimensions are expressed in hand-breadths and spans.