... for wit lying most in the assemblage of ideas, and putting those together with quickness and variety, wherein can be found any resemblance or congruity, thereby to make up pleasant pictures and agreeable visions in the fancy; judgment, on the contrary,... Laconics: Or, The Best Words of the Best Authors - Strana 18autor/autoři: John Timbs - 1829 - 360 str.Úplné zobrazení - Podrobnosti o knize
| Steven Blakemore - 1997 - 268 str.
...eighteenth-century sense of the mental faculty associated with quickness and variety, producing resemblances, "thereby to make up pleasant pictures and agreeable visions in the fancy," as Locke puts it in An Essay Concerning Human Understanding. 5 Wit of course had its principal semantic... | |
| John Locke - 1997
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| Manfred Kugelstadt - 1998 - 360 str.
...putting those together with quickness and variety, wherein can be found any resemblance or congruity, thereby to make up pleasant Pictures, and agreeable...by affinity to take one thing for another" (Locke 156). In diesem letzteren Sinn ist jede Amphibolic ein Fehler der Urteilskraft oder ein beabsichtigtes... | |
| Ignatius Sancho - 1998 - 388 str.
...putting those together with quickness and variety, wherein can be found any resemblance or congruity, thereby to make up pleasant Pictures, and agreeable...Similitude, and by affinity to take one thing for another." 2 Basket: another reference to the "hamper of prog." LETTER LI 1 This correspondent is not identified... | |
| Peter C. Myers - 1998 - 298 str.
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| Sarah Fielding - 1998 - 446 str.
...lying most in the assemblage of Ideas, and putting those together with quickness and variety . . . Judgment, on the contrary, lies quite on the other side, in separating carefully, one from another." 46. Ie, made to mope, be thoroughly depressed. 47. See Jean de La Bruyere, Les Caracteres ou les moeurs... | |
| Susan Haack - 2000 - 246 str.
..."assemblage of ideas . . . with quickness . . . wherein can be found any resemblance or congruity, thereby to make up pleasant pictures and agreeable visions in the fancy," from judgement, the operation of discerning ideas, "thereby to avoid being misled by similitude, and... | |
| Stanley Corngold - 1998 - 268 str.
...putting those together with quickness and variety, wherein can be found any resemblance or congruity, thereby to make up pleasant pictures and agreeable visions in the fancy." 40 Locke's argument confirms the general picture described by Foucault as follows: "From the seventeenth... | |
| Ian Campbell Ross - 1998 - 216 str.
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| Ronald Paulson - 1998 - 292 str.
...Both involve the loose association of ideas and seek the discovery of "any resemblance or congruity, thereby to make up pleasant Pictures, and agreeable Visions in the Fancy." If the first carried for Locke (as it did for Hobbes) associations of religious enthusiasm, the mysticism... | |
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