The Problem of Certainty in English Thought 1630–1690Springer, 2013 M12 1 - 159 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 46
Página vii
... possible . Our senses and our reason are inadequate to measure and know the real nature of things . So , per non sequitur , Sanchez advocated that one should collect information about the particular items of sense experience instead of ...
... possible . Our senses and our reason are inadequate to measure and know the real nature of things . So , per non sequitur , Sanchez advocated that one should collect information about the particular items of sense experience instead of ...
Página viii
... possible , least of all that of Aristotle . The only conclusion is that nothing can be known . Later on , Gassendi tempered his epistemological scepticism by joining to it the constructive conclusion of his friend , Mersenne . In the ...
... possible , least of all that of Aristotle . The only conclusion is that nothing can be known . Later on , Gassendi tempered his epistemological scepticism by joining to it the constructive conclusion of his friend , Mersenne . In the ...
Página x
... possible to eliminate the doubts posed about the bases of religious knowledge , but that there was a way to arrive at a type of assurance that was sufficient for man's purposes , and which was the amount of certainty that the case ...
... possible to eliminate the doubts posed about the bases of religious knowledge , but that there was a way to arrive at a type of assurance that was sufficient for man's purposes , and which was the amount of certainty that the case ...
Página 6
... possible , make an attempt to learn what is open to human scrutiny . Analogues of these three views turn up in other writers we shall consider later , William Chillingworth and John Tillotson , for example , but for them the path of ...
... possible , make an attempt to learn what is open to human scrutiny . Analogues of these three views turn up in other writers we shall consider later , William Chillingworth and John Tillotson , for example , but for them the path of ...
Página 12
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Contenido
The Theory of Certainty Secularized | 49 |
The Theory of Certainty in its Scientific Context | 90 |
John Locke and the Philosophical Exposition of the Theory | 121 |
Conclusion | 143 |
Bibliography | 153 |
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
The Problem of Certainty in English Thought 1630–1690 Henry G. van Leeuwen Vista previa limitada - 2012 |
The Problem of Certainty in English Thought 1630–1690 Henry G. van Leeuwen Vista previa limitada - 1970 |
Términos y frases comunes
absolute certainty accepted admits argues arguments Aristotelian assent assurance atheism Bacon belief causes Chillingworth and Tillotson Christian Church claims concerning conclusions controversy degree of certainty demonstration Descartes developed doctrine doubt error Essay existence experience faculties Francis Bacon Glanvill's human Hume hypothesis Ibid ideas idols infallible certainty intuition John Locke John Tillotson John Wilkins Joseph Glanvill judgment justified kind of certainty kind of evidence kind of proof known levels of certainty Locke's London man's mathematical matters of fact metaphysical mind moral certainty Natural Philosophy Natural Religion Newton Novum Organum object observed occurs Opticks Oxford physical possible present Principia principles probability problem of certainty propositions reason relation religious Robert Boyle Robert Hooke Royal Society Rule of Faith Sadducismus Triumphatus says Scholium scripture sense perception Seventeenth Century skepticism structure of nature testimony theological theory of certainty true truth understanding Vanity of Dogmatizing views William Chillingworth witches writings