Process and Reality: An Essay in CosmologyMacmillan, 1960 - 546 páginas |
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Página 93
... question . Thus the constitution is ' real ' because it assigns its status in the real world to the actual entity . In other words the actual entity , in virtue of being what it is , is also where it is . It is somewhere because it is ...
... question . Thus the constitution is ' real ' because it assigns its status in the real world to the actual entity . In other words the actual entity , in virtue of being what it is , is also where it is . It is somewhere because it is ...
Página 129
... question . The ' formal ' reality of the actuality in question belongs to its process of concrescence and not to its ' satisfaction . ' This is the sense in which the philosophy of organism interprets Plato's phrase ' and never really ...
... question . The ' formal ' reality of the actuality in question belongs to its process of concrescence and not to its ' satisfaction . ' This is the sense in which the philosophy of organism interprets Plato's phrase ' and never really ...
Página 308
... question . To sum up : The method of sampling professes to overcome , ( i ) the difficulty arising from the infinity of the ground ; and ( ii ) that arising from the novelty of the case in question , whereby it does not belong to the ...
... question . To sum up : The method of sampling professes to overcome , ( i ) the difficulty arising from the infinity of the ground ; and ( ii ) that arising from the novelty of the case in question , whereby it does not belong to the ...
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Términos y frases comunes
abstractive set actual entity actual occasions actual world antecedent arises body causal efficacy cerned character complex components conceptual feeling concrescence consciousness constitution contemporary contrast coordinate division cosmic epoch creative defined definite derived Descartes determinate diverse doctrine duration emotional enduring object environment eternal objects experience expresses extensive continuum extensive quantity fact final function geometrical element Hume Hume's Hume's principle ideas immediate includes individual integration intensity intuition involved judgment Locke Locke's locus logical subjects meaning mental pole metaphysical mode nature nexus notion novelty objectification objective datum origination ovate class particular perception percipient phase philosophy of organism physical purpose Plato points potentiality predicate presentational immediacy presupposed primordial principle propositional feeling realization reason reference region relations relevance satisfaction scheme Scholium SECTION sensa sense simple physical feelings sion society straight lines strain-locus subject-superject subjective aim subjective form systematic term theory things Timaeus tion tive transmutation ultimate unity universe valuation