| David Summers - 1990 - 384 str.
...and observe them."48 Children are not guided in judgments that seem to be inferences by reasoning, "neither are the generality of mankind in their ordinary...conclusions; neither are the philosophers themselves, who, in all the active parts of life, are in the main the same with the vulgar, and governed by the... | |
| David Hume, Eric Steinberg - 1993 - 170 str.
...may well employ the utmost care and attention of a philosophic genius to discover and observe them. Animals, therefore, are not guided in these inferences...their ordinary actions and conclusions: Neither are philosophers themselves, who, in all the active parts of life, are, in the main, the same with the... | |
| Anna-Teresa Tymieniecka - 1993 - 472 str.
...Hume discovers, I think very much to his dismay, is the primacy of what is lived over what is thought. Animals, therefore, are not guided in these inferences...their ordinary actions and conclusions: Neither are philosophers themselves, who, in all the active parts of life, are, in the main, the same with the... | |
| Margaret Dauler Wilson - 1999 - 550 str.
..."reasoning," and "abstruse" reasoning or "argumentation," Hume writes in the Inquiry: Animals . . . are not guided in these inferences by reasoning; neither...their ordinary actions and conclusions; neither are philosophers themselves, who, in all the active parts of life, are in the main the same with the vulgar,... | |
| Various - 2002 - 596 str.
...may well employ the utmost care and attention of a philosophic genius to discover and observe them. Animals, therefore, are not guided in these inferences...their ordinary actions and conclusions; neither are philosophers themselves, who, in all the active parts of life, are in the main the same with the vulgar... | |
| David Hume - 2004 - 116 str.
...attention of a philosophic genius to discover and observe them. Animals, therefore are not guided in thcse inferences by reasoning: neither are children; neither...their ordinary actions and conclusions: neither are philosophers themselves, who. in all the active parts of life, are, in the main, the same with the... | |
| Alan Bailey, Dan O'Brien - 2006 - 180 str.
...such exactness, the art of incubation, and the whole oeconomy and order of its nursery. (9.6 / 108) Animals, therefore, are not guided in these inferences...their ordinary actions and conclusions: Neither are philosophers themselves . . . Nature must have provided some other principle ... It is custom alone,... | |
| Margaret Schabas - 2009 - 208 str.
...may well employ the utmost care and attention of a philosophic genius to discover and observe them. Animals, therefore, are not guided in these inferences...mankind, in their ordinary actions and conclusions. (Hume 1748/2000, 80) Not only has Hume reduced most human thought to the level of that of sheep, but... | |
| Stephen Buckle - 2007 - 223 str.
...may well employ the utmost care and attention of a philosophic genius to discover and observe them. Animals, therefore, are not guided in these inferences...their ordinary actions and conclusions: Neither are philosophers themselves, who, in all the active parts of life, are, in the main, the same with the... | |
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