| George Berkeley - 1820 - 514 pages
...of similitude or relation, either with distance, or things placed at a distance. But by a connexion taught us by experience, they come to signify and...be without his mind, or at any distance from him. See sect. xli. of the forementioned treatise. XLIV. The ideas of sight and touch make two species,... | |
| Samuel Bailey - 1842 - 252 pages
...visual sensations) come to signify and suggest them (viz. distance and things placed at a distance) to us, after the same manner that words of any language...to be without his mind, or at any distance from him *." To complete this summary exposition of his own theory on this point, Berkeley should have added... | |
| George Berkeley - 1843 - 552 pages
...after the same manner that words of any language suggest the ideas they are made to stand for. Ijg" Insomuch that a man born blind, and afterwards made...be without his mind, or at any distance from him. See Sect. xI.I. of the forementioned treatise. XLIV. The ideas of sight and touch make two species,... | |
| George Berkeley - 1843 - 548 pages
...after the same manner that words of any language suggest the ideas they are made to stand for. Ijgf Insomuch that a man born blind, and afterwards made...be without his mind, or at any distance from him. See Sect. XLI. of the forementioned treatise. XLIV. The ideas of sight and touch make two species,... | |
| George Berkeley - 1843 - 556 pages
...that words of any language suggest the ideas they are made to stand for. ^g° Insomuch that a man lorn blind, and afterwards made to see, would not, at first...be without his mind, or at any distance from him. See Sect. XLL of the forementioned treatise. XLIV. The ideas of sight and touch make two species, entirely... | |
| George Berkeley - 1843 - 542 pages
...wards of any language suggest the ideas they are made to j stand for. 83T Insomuch that a man barn blind, and afterwards made to see, would not, at first sight, think the things he saw to I be without his mind, or at any distance from him. See Sect. T XLI. of the forementioned treatise.... | |
| 1871 - 880 pages
...have no manner of similitude or relation either with distance, or' with things place] at ad ¡stance ; but by a connection taught us by experience, they...first sight, think the things he saw to be without Ыа mind or at any distance from him." The key-note of the Essay to which Berkeley refers in this... | |
| 1871 - 528 pages
...should in truth see external space and bodies actually existing in it, some nearer, others further on, seems to carry with it some opposition to what hath...italicized paragraph of section 127. " The extensions, figures, and matlont perceived by sight are specifically distinct from the ideai of touch called by... | |
| Sir George Grove, David Masson, John Morley, Mowbray Morris - 1871 - 542 pages
...itself perceived by sight, nor yet apprehended or judged of by lmes and angles or anything that nath any necessary connection with it ; but that it is...found in an italicized paragraph of section 127. " The exttnsiaiu, figures, and motion* perteind by right are tpecifically distinct from the ideai of touch... | |
| George Berkeley - 1871 - 478 pages
...similitude or relation either with distance or things placed at a distance «0; but, by a connexion taught us by experience, they come to signify and...be without his mind, or at any distance from him. See sect. 41 of the forementioned treatise. 44. The ideas of sight and touch make two species entirely... | |
| |