... produced in us only by different degrees and modes of motion in our animal spirits, variously agitated by external objects, the abatement of any former motion must as necessarily produce a new sensation as the variation or increase of it; and so introduce... An Essay Concerning Human Understanding - Sivu 106tekijä(t) John Locke - 1805 - 510 sivuaKoko teos - Tietoja tästä kirjasta
| John Locke - 1879 - 722 sivua
...in some cases at least, produce a positive idea, viz., that all sensation being produced in us only by different degrees and modes of motion in our animal...different motion of the animal spirits in that organ. 5. But whether this be so or no I will not here determine, but appeal to every one's own experience,... | |
| John Locke - 1894 - 604 sivua
...in some cases at least, produce a positive idea; viz., that all sensation being produced in us only by different degrees and modes of motion in our animal...necessarily produce a new sensation as the variation oil increase of it, and so introduce a new idea, which depends only on a different motion of the animal... | |
| John Locke - 1905 - 424 sivua
...in some cases at least, produce a positive idea, viz v that all sensation being produced in us only by different degrees and modes of motion in our animal...different motion of the animal spirits in that organ. 5. But whether this be so or not I will not here determine, but appeal to every one's own experience,... | |
| John Locke - 1905 - 382 sivua
...in some cases at least, produce a positive idea, viz., that all sensation being produced in us only by different degrees and modes of motion in our animal...different motion of the animal spirits in that organ. 5. But whether this be so or not I will not here determine, but appeal to every one's own experience,... | |
| Nikolaĭ Onufrievich Losskiĭ - 1919 - 460 sivua
...not-self upon the self. He asserts, for instance, that " all sensation being produced in us only by the different degrees and modes of motion in our animal spirits variously agitated by external objects," even the absence or the disappearance of some properties in the objects may be the source of a new... | |
| John W. Yolton - 1977 - 364 sivua
...in some cases at least, produce a positive idea, viz. that all sensation being produced in us only by different degrees and modes of motion in our animal...different motion of the animal spirits in that organ. 43. Essay, 2.10.5 Thus many of those ideas, which were produced in the minds of children, in the beginning... | |
| Thomas Reid, William Hamilton, Harry M. Bracken, Thomas Reid, Sir William Hamilton - 1094 sivua
...its own ideas. With regard to our sensations, the mind is passive, " they being produced in us, only by different degrees and modes of motion in our animal...spirits, variously agitated by external objects." These, however, cease to be as soon as they cease to be perceived ; but, by the faculties of memory... | |
| Peter Alexander - 1985 - 362 sivua
...by Descartes in his talk of the pineal gland. Locke talks of sensations being produced in us 'only by different degrees and modes of Motion in our animal spirits, variously agitated by external Objects' but he shies away from detailed discussion of the idea, perhaps because he was aware of, and baffled... | |
| Graham Alan John Rogers - 1996 - 276 sivua
...this volume. '* Essay, n. xxxii. 14, p. 288. since simple ideas of sensation are 'produced in us, only by different degrees and modes of Motion in our animal...Objects, the abatement of any former motion, must as neressarily [my italics] produce a new sensation, as the variation or increase of it; and so introduce... | |
| Wiep Van Bunge, W. N. A. Klever - 1996 - 406 sivua
...not, as Descartes would have it, "a substance that always thinks" (2.1.19), but a set of ideas of "the different degrees and modes of motion in our animal spirits, variously agitated by external objects" (2.8.4). Cf. E II, prop. 14-15. (12.2) - Perception is correlated with bodily aptitudes and has, therefore,... | |
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