 | August De Fries - 1879 - 92 pages
...extended solid substance, capable of communieating motion by impulse. — Ibid. § 3 : — we come to bave the ideas of particular sorts of substances, by collecting such combinations of simple ideas, as by experience and observation of men's senses taken notice of to exist together — Ibid. § 6: —... | |
 | Andrew Seth Pringle-Pattison - 1885 - 268 pages
...contained in the account of substance and cause given by his predecessors. "We come," says Locke, " to have the ideas of particular sorts of substances...of men's senses, taken notice of to exist together. . . . [Such] simple ideas . . . carry with them in their own nature no visible necessary connection... | |
 | David Hume - 1890 - 598 pages
...such an idea — ' an obscure and relative idea of substance in general — being thus made, we come to have the ideas of particular sorts of substances...men's senses, taken notice of to exist together.' Thus a general idea of i Upon a reference fo the chapter on referred to it, he opposes it to the 'eomplex... | |
 | John Locke - 1894 - 604 pages
...Sorts of Substances. — An obscure and relative idea of substance in general being thus made, we come to have the ideas of particular sorts of substances,...come to have the ideas of a man, horse, gold, water, &a, of which substances, whether any one has any other clear idea, further than of certain simple ideas... | |
 | John Locke - 1894 - 692 pages
...' repugnant to our CHAP. XXIII. ideas as are, by experience and observation of men's senses, BOOK n taken notice of to exist together ; and are therefore...particular internal constitution, or unknown essence J of that substance. Thus we come to have the ideas of a man, horse, gold, water, &c. ; of which substances,... | |
 | John Locke - 1905 - 382 pages
...sorts of substances. — An obscure and relative idea of substance in general being thus made, we come to have the ideas of particular sorts of substances,...of that substance. Thus we come to have the ideas o'fa man, horse, gold, water, &c., of which substances, whether any one has any other clear idea, farther... | |
 | John Locke, Mary Whiton Calkins - 1905 - 424 pages
...sorts of substances.— An obscure and relative idea of substance in general being thus made, we come to have the ideas of particular sorts of substances, by collecting such combinations of simple y ideas as are by experience and observation of men's senses taken notice of to exist together, and... | |
 | Oliver Joseph Thatcher - 1907 - 484 pages
...Sorts of Substances. — An obscure and relative idea of substance in general being thus made, we come to have the ideas of particular sorts of substances,...come to have the ideas of a man, horse, gold, water, etc., of which substances, whether any one has any other clear idea, further than of simple ideas coexistent... | |
 | Arthur Joseph de Sopper - 1907 - 230 pages
...behandeling van de „ideas of particular sorts „spiritnal". ... of substances". We verkrijgen die „by collecting such combinations of simple ideas...constitution, or unknown essence of that substance" 4). „Besides the complex ideas we have of material sensible substances, of which I have last spoken,... | |
 | 1908 - 768 pages
...sorts of substances. — An obscure and relative idea of substance in general being thus made, we come to have the ideas of particular sorts of substances,...substances, whether any one has any other clear idea, farther than of certain simple ideas co-existing together, I appeal to every one's own experience.... | |
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