| Reinhard Brandt - 1981 - 248 sivua
...of our mind. For this reflection alone provides us with "the idea of the beginning of motion." "... We find by experience that, barely by willing it,...move the parts of our bodies, which were before at rest." This power which "we find in ourselves" is the Will;28 the Will is, according to Locke, the... | |
| Vere Claiborne Chappell - 1994 - 354 sivua
.... . The Idea of the beginning of motion, we have only from reflection on what passes in our selves, where we find by Experience, that barely by willing...move the parts of our Bodies, which were before at rest. (E II.xxi.4: 235; but see the conflicting story in E II.vii.8: Unlike Descartes and his followers,... | |
| Stephen L. Darwall - 1995 - 376 sivua
...ourselves: 'The Idea of the beginning of motion, we have only from reflection on what passes in our selves, where we find by Experience, that barely by willing...move the parts of our Bodies, which were before at rest" (235). This idea of our own active power is actually a composite, made up of our idea of the... | |
| Paul Russell - 2002 - 218 sivua
..... The Idea of the beginning of motion, we have only from reflection on what passes in our selves, where we find by Experience, that barely by willing...move the parts of our Bodies, which were before at rest. (Essay, 235 [H, xxi, 4]) This suggestion of Locke's was first expressly considered by Hume in... | |
| Jose Luis Bermudez, Naomi Eilan, Anthony Marcel - 1998 - 388 sivua
...reflection on what passes in our selves, where we find by Experience, that barely by willing it, ... we can move the parts of our Bodies, which were before at rest.10 It is, of course, Hume who provides a classic formulation of the negative component of this... | |
| Frederick Ferre, Frederick Ferré - 1998 - 416 sivua
...willing. The idea of the beginning of motion we have only from reflection on what passes in ourselves, where we find by experience, that, barely by willing...move the parts of our bodies which were before at rest (Locke 1956: 138). Locke is not a dogmatist, however, and he wants to hold the door open for those... | |
| M. Hulswit - 2002 - 278 sivua
...[...] The Idea of the beginning of motion, we have only from reflection on what passes in our selves, where we find by Experience, that barely by willing...move the parts of our Bodies, which were before at rest. (Locke [1690] 1975, Il.xxii, 11) Locke viewed causes as substantial powers put to work: Power... | |
| Kenneth Winkler - 2005 - 474 sivua
...account of our idea of active power, which, he claimed, "we have only from what passes in ourselves, where we find by Experience, that barely by willing...thought of the Mind, we can move the parts of our Bodies.44 Here, perhaps, it would be appropriate to return to the issue of Berkeley's alleged innatism,... | |
| Ellwood Johnson - 2005 - 300 sivua
...accepted version of spirit moving matter. Man is a material being driven by a "thinkingsubstance." "Barely by willing it, barely by a thought of the...move the parts of our bodies, which were before at rest" (II: 313). Active power is a power originally ascribed to God, or divine substance, who we will... | |
| Mark Blitz - 2005 - 194 sivua
...power is the idea of beginning a motion. We have this idea from reflection on ourselves, where we find that barely by willing it, barely by a thought of...mind, we can move the parts of our bodies which were at rest before.35 The mind is made up of a number of powers, among them will. "That which we call the... | |
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