| Plato - 1848 - 564 páginas
...through beholding things with the eyes, and endeavouring to grasp them by means of the several senses. It seemed to me, therefore, that I ought to have recourse to reasons, and to consider in them the truth of things. Perhaps, however, this similitude of mine may in some respect... | |
| Devonshire Association for the Advancement of Science, Literature and Art - 1863 - 608 páginas
...despair of finding truth in external phenomena. "It seems to me, therefore," he says in the Phaedo, "that I ought to have recourse to reasons, and in...strongest, I pronounce that to be true which appears to me to accord with it: those which do not accord with it, I deny to be true I cannot conceive that any... | |
| Devonshire Association for the Advancement of Science, Literature and Art - 1863 - 602 páginas
...despair of finding truth in external phenomena. "It seems to me, therefore," he says in the PhiEdo, "that I ought to have recourse to reasons, and in...strongest, I pronounce that to be true which appears to me to accord with it: those which do not accord with it, I deny to be true I cannot conceive that any... | |
| George Henry Lewes - 1864 - 438 páginas
...at its image reflected in the water, lest they should become blind by gazing directly at the sun. " It seemed to me, therefore, that I ought to have recourse...adducing the reason which I judge to be strongest, I pronouce that to be true which appears to me to accord with it ; those which do not accord with it... | |
| John Fiske - 1874 - 496 páginas
...terminology: " Since the Whole is ideally in the Mind, the I has only to yield itself to its I-hood, in order to see the Absolute in itself as there immediately...strongest, I pronounce that to be true which appears to me to accord with it; those which do not accord with it, I deny to be true." And in the Republic, he tells... | |
| John Fiske - 1874 - 522 páginas
...: " Since the Whole is ideally in the Mind, the I has only to yield itself to its I-hood, in order to see the Absolute in itself as there immediately given." To the same effect says Plato, in the Phsedo : " It seemed to me, therefore, that I ought to have recourse to reasons, and in them to contemplate... | |
| 1875 - 822 páginas
...according to the order of my thoitght."\ Again Mr. Fiske quotes from Plato the following: "It seems to me, therefore, that I ought to have recourse to...adducing the reason which I judge to be strongest, * Vol. i, p. 98. f Preface to Meditations. l pronounce that to be true which appears to me to accord... | |
| Edward Royall Tyler, William Lathrop Kingsley, George Park Fisher, Timothy Dwight - 1875 - 820 páginas
...according to the order of my thought."^ Again Mr. Fiske quotes from Plato the following: "It seems to me, therefore, that I ought to have recourse to...adducing the reason which I judge to be strongest, * Vol. i, p. 98. f Preface to Meditations. 1 pronounce that to be true which appears to me to accord... | |
| Plato, Henry Cary - 1877 - 566 páginas
...through beholding things with the eyes, and endeavoring to grasp them by means of the several senses. It seemed to me, therefore, that I ought to have recourse to reasons, and to consider in them the truth of things. Perhaps, however, this similitude of mine may in some respect... | |
| Plato - 1881 - 546 páginas
...through beholding things with the eyes, and endeavouring to grasp them by means of the several senses. It seemed to me. therefore, that I ought to have recourse to reasons, and to consider in them the truth of things. Perhaps, however, this similitude of mine may in some respect... | |
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