Critique of Pure ReasonHenry G. Bohn, 1887 - 517 pages |
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... quantity in nature can neither be increased nor diminished . Our apprehension of the manifold in a phænomenon is always successive , is consequently always changing . By it alone we could , therefore , never determine whether this mani ...
... quantity in nature can neither be increased nor diminished . Our apprehension of the manifold in a phænomenon is always successive , is consequently always changing . By it alone we could , therefore , never determine whether this mani ...
Page 10
... quantity , but is merely qualitative . The conception of the shortest is therefore wholly an addition , and by no analysis can it be ex- tracted from our conception of a straight line . Intuition must therefore here lend its aid , by ...
... quantity , but is merely qualitative . The conception of the shortest is therefore wholly an addition , and by no analysis can it be ex- tracted from our conception of a straight line . Intuition must therefore here lend its aid , by ...
Page 11
... quantity of matter remains unchanged ; " or , that , " in all communication of motion , action and re - action must always be equal . " In both of these , not only is the necessity , and therefore their origin à priori clear , but also ...
... quantity of matter remains unchanged ; " or , that , " in all communication of motion , action and re - action must always be equal . " In both of these , not only is the necessity , and therefore their origin à priori clear , but also ...
Page 13
... quantity of matter , the vis inertia , the equality of action and reaction , & c . - to be soon convinced that they form a science of pure physics ( physica pura , or rationalis ) , which well deserves to be separately exposed as a ...
... quantity of matter , the vis inertia , the equality of action and reaction , & c . - to be soon convinced that they form a science of pure physics ( physica pura , or rationalis ) , which well deserves to be separately exposed as a ...
Page 24
... quantity . Now every conception must indeed be considered as a representa- tion which is contained in an infinite multitude of different possible representations , which , therefore , comprises these under itself ; but no conception ...
... quantity . Now every conception must indeed be considered as a representa- tion which is contained in an infinite multitude of different possible representations , which , therefore , comprises these under itself ; but no conception ...
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Common terms and phrases
à priori absolute totality according analytical analytical proposition antinomy apperception applied argument belong causality cause ception complete connection consciousness consequently constitution contains contingent cosmological cosmological argument deduced determined dialectical discover dition dogmatical empirical conditions empirical intuition employed existence extensive quantity external follows former given ground Hence impossible inasmuch infer infinite intelligible internal sense judgment knowledge lative latter laws limits logical manifold mathematics means merely metaphysics mode moral nature necessity never nihil negativum noumena noumenon ourselves perception phæno phænomena phænomenon philosophy Portrait possess possible experience predicate present presuppose priori laws proof pure conceptions pure reason pure understanding quantity question rational psychology regard regress relation representation rience rule schema sensation sensibility sensuous intuition series of conditions space speculative reason sphere substance supreme synthesis synthetical propositions synthetical unity systematic unity term things thought tion Trans transcendental ideas truth uncon unconditioned vols world of sense
Popular passages
Page 120 - Men suffer all their life long under the foolish superstition that they can be cheated. But it is as impossible for a man to be cheated by any one but himself, as for a thing to be and not to be at the same time.