The Meaning of Words: Analysed Into Words and Unverbal Things, and Unverbal Things Classified Into Intellections, Sensations, and EmotionsD. Appleton, 1854 - 256 páginas |
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Página 19
... understand the difference that exists between words and unverbal things . We can eat unverbal things without thinking of their names , and we can drink , see , smell , and handle them ; but to talk about them , so as to discriminate ...
... understand the difference that exists between words and unverbal things . We can eat unverbal things without thinking of their names , and we can drink , see , smell , and handle them ; but to talk about them , so as to discriminate ...
Página 21
... the only meaning of the word will be intellectual . I labour this point unnecessarily perhaps , but it is essential to a proper understanding of the use which I shall constantly make INTRODUCTORY AND EXPLANATORY . 21.
... the only meaning of the word will be intellectual . I labour this point unnecessarily perhaps , but it is essential to a proper understanding of the use which I shall constantly make INTRODUCTORY AND EXPLANATORY . 21.
Página 22
... understanding of the use which I shall constantly make of the words physical and intellectual . But I have not yet shown what intellectual things are unverbally - the unverbal things which I have thus far re- ferred to , being either ...
... understanding of the use which I shall constantly make of the words physical and intellectual . But I have not yet shown what intellectual things are unverbally - the unverbal things which I have thus far re- ferred to , being either ...
Página 32
... understand the threefold unverbal char- acter of nearly every word ; and to be able to untwist into its respective unverbal strands the three - stranded cord which nearly every word may be called . Nor is the pro- cess difficult . When ...
... understand the threefold unverbal char- acter of nearly every word ; and to be able to untwist into its respective unverbal strands the three - stranded cord which nearly every word may be called . Nor is the pro- cess difficult . When ...
Página 35
... understanding the exact unverbal appearance of a pin , except by presenting to his eyes what will produce a sight that in every respect is a pin . On the organic limitation of our visual perceptions , to which we are thus adverting ...
... understanding the exact unverbal appearance of a pin , except by presenting to his eyes what will produce a sight that in every respect is a pin . On the organic limitation of our visual perceptions , to which we are thus adverting ...
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Términos y frases comunes
alluded analogous appulses assimilate bally body cause and effect ceived ceptions colours conceived unit contagiousness deem defect delusion designate discover discriminate divisibility earth emotional endeavour evince exhibit exists external eyes fallacious foregoing globe hence heterogeneous impulse instance intel intellectual organism intellectual unit intellectually conceived words internal feelings interpretation knowledge lect lectual lecture light logical pro look man's manifest meaning of words modus operandi moon mysterious never nominal identity nominal units numerous objective meaning objective things person physical things physical unit present proceed proposition relation retina seek senses sensible diversities sensible experience sensible facts sensible perceptions sensible things sensibly perceived sight smell sound speak speculations subjective suppose taste tellectual theories thereto thickness tion truth uneducated deaf mute unverbal differences unverbal diversity unverbal meaning unverbal signification unverbal things utterance verbal conceptions verbal homogeneity verbal identity verbal thoughts visual perceptions visual thought wholly words refer
Pasajes populares
Página 200 - And when he was demanded of the Pharisees, when the kingdom of God should come, he answered them and said, The kingdom of God cometh not with observation: 21 Neither shall they say, Lo here! or, lo there! for, behold, the kingdom of God is within you.
Página 249 - I am all that has been, that shall be, and none among mortals has hitherto taken off my veil.
Página 171 - ... directions, and prevail equally during the time of high and low water. But the most remarkable circumstance is, the uniformity of the time of high and low water. During the year, whatever be the age or situation of the moon, the water is lowest at six in the morning, and the same hour in the evening, and highest at noon and midnight. This is so well established, that the time of night is marked by the ebbing and flowing of the tide ; and, in all the islands, the term for high water and for midnight...
Página 191 - The children of Holland take pleasure in making, what the children of England take pleasure in breaking.
Página 251 - The consideration then of ideas and words, as the great instruments of knowledge, makes no despicable part of their contemplation, who would take a view of human knowledge in the whole extent of it. And perhaps if they were distinctly weighed, and duly considered, they would afford us another sort of logic and critic, than what we have been hitherto acquainted with.
Página 62 - It is stated- in the table of the planets, that the distance of Neptune from the Sun, is 2,850 millions of millions of miles. On this subject, a curious calculator says, " Had Adam and Eve started on a railway, to go from Neptune to the Sun, at the rate of fifty miles an hour, they would not yet have arrived there, for this planet, at the above rate, is more than 6000 years from the center of our system.
Página 214 - Every one that has any idea of any stated lengths of space, as a foot, finds that he can repeat that idea; and joining it to the former, make the idea of two feet...
Página 234 - ... orders of phenomena are identical; which is the point from which the question set out. Again, M. Fourier, in his fine series of researches on Heat, has given us all the most important and precise laws of the phenomena of heat, and many large and new truths, without once inquiring into its nature, as his predecessors had done when they disputed about calorific matter and the action of an universal ether.
Página 180 - To compel all men to employ the same collocation of words, is impracticable. The attempt has filled the world with controversy, and not brought us to the desired uniformity. I am so confident that nearly every general proposition is true, in the manner intended by the speaker, that I never contradict : — Cullen asserts, " that when an external cause produces in us a morbid action, Nature exerts an opposite process to counteract the evil.
Página 90 - The whole zest of the proposition consists in the sensible duality of each of the nominal units table and diminution. That the sight...
Referencias a este libro
Foundations of Reading Instruction: With Emphasis on Differentiated Guidance Emmett Albert Betts Vista de fragmentos - 1957 |