As little as we can say how it happens that anything is or occurs, so little can we explain how it comes about that a truth has Validity ; the latter conception has to be regarded as much as the former as ultimate and underivable, a conLOGIC, VOL. Some Problems of Lotze's Theory of Knowledge - Page 56by Edwin Proctor Robins - 1900 - 108 pagesFull view - About this book
| Hermann Lotze - Logic - 1888 - 392 pages
...the valid assertion from the reality of actual being and implies its independence of human thought. As little as we can say how it happens that anything...much as the former as ultimate and underivable, a conLOGIC, VOL. II. P ception of which everyone may know what he means by it, but which cannot be constructed... | |
| Hermann Lotze - Logic - 1888 - 374 pages
...has to be regarded as much as the former as ultimate and underivable, a conLOGIC, VOL. II. p ception of which everyone may know what he means by it, but...constituent elements which do not already contain it. 317. From this point of view some light I think is thrown on a surprising statement which is handed... | |
| Wayne Martin - Philosophy - 2006 - 203 pages
...to a difference in kind of entity. "As little as we can explain how it happens that anything at all is or occurs, so little can we explain how it comes...constituent elements which do not already contain it": Lotze 1874: II: 209-10. In his later writings he would mercilessly criticize the leading antipsychologizers... | |
| Michael Friedman, Richard Creath - Philosophy - 2007 - 27 pages
...the meaning which the word clearly conveys to us can be deduced from some different conception . . . As little as we can say how it happens that anything...cannot be constructed out of any constituent elements that do not already contain it." signifies more generally any possible domain of knowledge that can... | |
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