| Henry Theodore Tuckerman - 1857 - 492 str.
...but the things we perceive by sense. and what do we perceive beside our own ideas and sensations ? All those bodies which compose the mighty frame of...the world have not any subsistence without a mind." The germ of this philosophy appears in Berkeley's "Theory of Vision," which has been aptly described... | |
| John Shertzer Hittell - 1857 - 360 str.
...existence, it is as the idea represents it to be. " All the choir of heaven, and furniture of earth, all those bodies which compose the mighty frame of...the world, have not any subsistence without a mind," and subsists ouly while it conceives them. All things, as conceived by ns, may be classed under two... | |
| Edward Royall Tyler, William Lathrop Kingsley, George Park Fisher, Timothy Dwight - 1858 - 972 str.
...besides our own ideas and sensations f" "In a word, all the choir of heaven and furniture of earth — all those bodies which compose the mighty frame of...world — have not any subsistence without a mind ; their esse is to be perceived or known, and consequently, so long as they are not actually perceived... | |
| Thomas Collyns Simon - 1862 - 334 str.
...can see or feel. In his " Treatise on the Principles of Human Knowledge," he has these words — " All the choir of heaven and furniture of the earth...the world, have not any subsistence without a mind ;" and these words are represented by the Materialists to mean that there are no such things whatever... | |
| Hugh Miller - 1862 - 532 str.
...word, all those bodies which compose the mighty framework of the world, — have not any substance •without a mind ; that their being is to be perceived or known : to be convinced of which, the reader need only reflect and try to separate in his own thoughts the... | |
| Thomas Pearson - 1863 - 344 str.
...matter is not a reality but an inference; that "all the choir of heaven and furniture of earth — all those bodies which compose the mighty frame of...world — have not any subsistence without a mind." Hume, too acute not to see the inference, and too sceptical not to draw it, showed that the existence... | |
| Hugh Miller - 1865 - 516 str.
...a word, all those bodies which compose the mighty framework of the world — have not any substance without a mind ; that their being is to be perceived or known : to be convinced of which, the reader need only reflect and try to separate in his own thoughts the... | |
| 1869 - 1062 str.
...them. Such I take this important one to be — to wit, that all the choir of heaven and furniture of earth — in a word, all those bodies which compose the mighty frame of the world, have not any existence without a mind, that their being (ease) is to be perceived and known ; that, 'consequently,... | |
| 1869 - 796 str.
...them. Such I take this important one to be — to wit, that all the choir of heaven and furniture of earth — in a word, all those bodies which compose the mighty frame of the world, have not any existence without a mind, that their being (esse) is to be perceived and known ; that, consequently,... | |
| Hugh Miller - 1869 - 602 str.
...word, all those bodies which compose the mighty framework of the world, — have not any substance without a mind ; that their being is to be perceived or known : to be convinced of which, the reader need only reflect and try to separate in his own thoughts the... | |
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