Toward a New Sensibililty: Essays of O.K. BouwsmaUniversity of Nebraska Press, 1982 - 277 páginas |
Dentro del libro
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Página 23
... telling us something . It is as though Ryle took his reader by the lapel and said , " Let me tell you something . " Presumably the reader does not know what Ryle is intent on telling him . The reader may in fact hold a certain theory ...
... telling us something . It is as though Ryle took his reader by the lapel and said , " Let me tell you something . " Presumably the reader does not know what Ryle is intent on telling him . The reader may in fact hold a certain theory ...
Página 28
... tell him something he does not know , but to intensify the discomfort be already has and then to help him to think himselt out of trouble Frequently one cannot tell who in the dialogue is speaking , whether the writer or the reader 28.
... tell him something he does not know , but to intensify the discomfort be already has and then to help him to think himselt out of trouble Frequently one cannot tell who in the dialogue is speaking , whether the writer or the reader 28.
Página 273
... telling him what you tell him has consequences , and I don't mean , I guess , that he will say , " I agree with you , " as an underling might say to his commissar . But I am not the commissar and I do not presume to know what the conse ...
... telling him what you tell him has consequences , and I don't mean , I guess , that he will say , " I agree with you , " as an underling might say to his commissar . But I am not the commissar and I do not presume to know what the conse ...
Contenido
Conceptual vs Factual Investigations | 5 |
A Difference between Ryle and Wittgenstein | 17 |
What Is Meaning? | 33 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Términos y frases comunes
Achaeans Achilles aesthetician Allaire analogy Anaximenes answer apple believe Berkeley Berkeley's bird Bouwsma certainly confusion connection convinced course dead dog lying deceiver Descartes Diotima discover Don Quixote doubt Dreams are illusions exist explain expression eyes feel foot fractions goes golden bowl grammar hand hear heard ideas imprinted imagine interest intuitive knowledge Johnson kick a stone language language-game lawn mower look meaning mind mistake mouse never noise notice nursery rhymes odor one's ostensive definition overtake the tortoise paper Patroclus perhaps philosophical Plato poet poetry ptarmigan question read a poem refutation remember remind Ryle Samuel Johnson seems sensations sense sensible sentence smell Socrates someone sort speak statement strange street suggest suppose talk tell theory things thought I saw tion true truth understand whale Wishes are horses wishes were horses Wittgenstein word izba write
Referencias a este libro
Grammar of the Unconscious: The Conceptual Foundations of Psychoanalysis Charles R. Elder Vista previa limitada - 2010 |
Grammar of the Unconscious: The Conceptual Foundations of Psychoanalysis Charles R. Elder Vista previa limitada - 2010 |