| David Hume - 1990 - 164 페이지
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| David Hume - 1991 - 226 페이지
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| Michael Anthony Corey - 1993 - 356 페이지
...the foundation of our judgment concerning the origin of the whole (which never can be admitted), yet why select so minute, so weak, so bounded a principle as the reason and design of animals [that are] found to be upon this planet. What peculiar privilege has this little agitation of the brain... | |
| Wayne Waxman - 2003 - 368 페이지
...to " transfer the determination of the thought to external objects" (7168; see £VII/ii.60n.) ; for "What peculiar privilege has this little agitation...'thought,' that we must thus make it the model of the whole universe?" (£>H. 19). Before truths regarding relations of ideas can be believed to apply to... | |
| Daniel C. Dennett - 1996 - 596 페이지
...From observing the growth of a hair, can we learn any thing concerning the generation of a man? . . /What peculiar privilege has this little agitation...thought, that we must thus make it the model of the whole universe? . . . Admirable conclusion! Stone, wood, brick, iron, brass have not, at this time,... | |
| Lewis S. Feuer - 524 페이지
...reason when he denies that its imaginations can be in any way analogous to a divine creative reason: 'why select so minute, so weak, so bounded a principle as the reason and design of animals' as 'the foundation of our judgment concerning the origin of the whole . . .?', asks Hume; '[w]hat peculiar... | |
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