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Kitaplar THE word REASON in the English language has different significations: sometimes it... ile ilgili
" THE word REASON in the English language has different significations: sometimes it is taken for true and clear principles: sometimes for clear and fair deductions from those principles: and sometimes for the cause, and particularly the final cause. But... "
The Works of John Locke - Sayfa 111
John Locke tarafından - 1823
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Machiavelli to Marx: Modern Western Political Thought

Dante Germino - 1979 - 416 sayfa
...reason in the English language has different significations: sometimes it is taken for true and clear principles; sometimes for clear and fair deductions...distinguished from beasts, and wherein it is evident that he much surpasses them." Reason and Ideas. Reason's role, we are told in the Essay, consists in...
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The Mind of John Locke: A Study of Political Theory in Its Intellectual Setting

Ian Harris - 1998 - 460 sayfa
...conclusions, from the first. Its denomination as a faculty continued in An Essay, where Locke described it as 'that Faculty, whereby Man is supposed to be distinguished...and wherein it is evident he much surpasses them'. He emphasised especially the functions of the faculty. Both of these were active. The first was to...
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Leibniz: New Essays on Human Understanding

Gottfried Wilhelm Freiherr von Leibniz - 1996 - 528 sayfa
...shall deal with reason. 'Sometimes it is taken for true, and clear principles: sometimes for . . . deductions from those principles : and sometimes for...the cause, and particularly the final cause. [But here it is to be considered as] that faculty, whereby man is supposed to be distinguished from beasts,...
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Warranted Christian Belief

Alvin Plantinga - 2000 - 528 sayfa
...that we must be guided, in the formation of opinion, by reason. Well, what is reason? First, it is "a faculty in man, that faculty whereby man is supposed...and wherein it is evident he much surpasses them" (IV, xvii, 1, p. 386). Second, reason is the power whereby we can discern broadly logical relations...
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Locke's Essay and the Rhetoric of Science

Peter Walmsley - 2003 - 208 sayfa
...(2.9.14). But ultimately, when he comes to speak of reason itself, he is much more cautious: it is "That Faculty, whereby Man is supposed to be distinguished...Beasts, and wherein it is evident he much surpasses" (4.17.1). Here Locke implies that our mental powers, however superior, seem to differ from those of...
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The Philosophy of John Locke: New Perspectives

Peter R. Anstey - 2003 - 232 sayfa
...Principles'. Locke proposes to understand it in another way, as the name of 'a Faculty in Man' — a faculty 'whereby Man is supposed to be distinguished...and wherein it is evident he much surpasses them' (TV. xvii. 1, p. 668). (Locke also distinguishes a fourth sense - reason as the cause (particularly...
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The Biblical Politics of John Locke, 30. cilt

Kim Ian Parker, Canadian Corporation for Studies in Religion - 2004 - 217 sayfa
...Reason in the English Language has different Significations: sometimes it is taken for true, and clear Principles: Sometimes for clear, and fair deductions...all these; and that is, as it stands for a Faculty of Man, That Faculty, whereby Man is supposed to be distinguished from Beast, and wherein it is evident...
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Gramsci's Politics of Language: Engaging the Bakhtin Circle and the ...

Peter Ives - 2004 - 260 sayfa
...'reason,' in the English language, has different significations: sometimes it is taken for true and clear principles; sometimes for clear and fair deductions from those principles; and sometimes for the causes, and particularly the final cause. John Locke3 'Reason' and 'rationality' are not concepts that...
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The Cambridge History of Eighteenth-century Philosophy, 1-2. ciltler

Knud Haakonssen - 2006 - 668 sayfa
...reason were one and the same. Locke, for example, defined 'reason' (in one of its several senses) as 'That Faculty, whereby Man is supposed to be distinguished...and wherein it is evident he much surpasses them' (Essay, IV.xvii.i). It therefore coincided with the understanding, whose scope and limits were the...
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Media and Communication

Paddy Scannell - 2009 - 314 sayfa
...reason in the English language has different significations; sometimes it is taken for true and clear principles; sometimes for clear and fair deductions...for the cause, and particularly the final cause'. He appended four degrees of reason: discovering truths, regularly and methodically ordering them, perceiving...
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