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" I go into another room, and though I have ceased to see it, I am persuaded that the paper is still there. I no longer have the sensations which it gave me ; but I believe that when I again place myself in the circumstances in which I had those sensations,... "
A Study of Religion, Its Sources and Contents - Page 94
by James Martineau - 1888 - 410 pages
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An Examination of Sir William Hamilton's Philosophy and of the Principal ...

John Stuart Mill - 1865 - 578 pages
...believe that when I again place myself in the circumstances in which I had those sensations, that is, when I go again into the room, I shall again have...moment at which this would not have been the case. Owing to this law of my mind, my conception of the world at any given instant consists, in only a small...
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An Examination of Sir William Hamilton's Philosophy and of the Principal ...

John Stuart Mill - 1865 - 332 pages
...believe that when I again place myself in the circumstances in which I had those sensations, that is, when I go again into the room, I shall again have...moment at which this would not have been the case. Owing to this law of my mind, my conception of the world at any given instant consists, in only a small...
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An Examination of Sir William Hamilton's Philosophy and of the Principal ...

John Stuart Mill - 1865 - 342 pages
...believe that when I again place myself in the circumstances in which I had those sensations, that is, when I go again into the room, I shall again have...moment at which this would not have been the case. Owing to this law of my mind, my conception of the world at any given instant consists, in only a small...
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An Examination of Sir William Hamilton's Philosophy and of the Principal ...

John Stuart Mill - 1865 - 578 pages
...believe that when I again place myself in the circumstances in which I had those sensations, that is, when I go again into the room, I shall again have them ; and further, that there lias been no intervening moment at which this would not have been the case. Owing to this law of my...
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The Edinburgh Review: Or Critical Journal, Volume 124

1866 - 622 pages
...believe that when I again place myself in the circumstances in which I had these sensations, that is when I go again into the room I shall again have them,...moment at which this would not have been the case.' Xow what is meant by ' the laws to which we have learned ' by experience that our sensations are subject,'...
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An Examination of Mr. J.S. Mill's Philosophy: Being a Defence of Fundamental ...

James McCosh - 1866 - 424 pages
...when I again " place myself in the circumstances in which I had " those sensations, that is, when I go into the room, I " shall again have them ; and further,...moment at which this would not " have been the case. Owing to this law of my mind, " my conception of the world at any given instant con" sists, in only...
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The British and Foreign Evangelical Review and Quarterly Record of Christian ...

1866 - 904 pages
...believe that when I again place myself in the circumstances in which I had those sensations, that is, when I go again into the room, I shall again have...; and further, that there has been no intervening movement at which this would not have been the case" (p. 192). This example, it will be seen refers...
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The Edinburgh Review, Volume 124

1866 - 618 pages
...believe that when I again place myself in the circumstances in which I had these sensations, that is when I go again into the room I shall again have them, and further that 'here has been no intervening moment at which this would not have ti-en the case.' Now what is meant...
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The British Quarterly Review, Volume 40; Volume 48

Henry Allon - 1868 - 728 pages
...believe that when I again place myself in the circumstances in which I had those sensations, that is, when I go again into the room, I shall again have them; and further, that there has been no intervemng moment at which this would not have been the case. Owing to this law of my mind my conception...
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Analysis of the Phenomena of the Human Mind, Volume 1

James Mill - 1869 - 492 pages
...believe that when I again place myself in the circumstances in which I had those sensations, that is, when I go again into the room, I shall again have...moment at which this would not have been the case. Owing to this property of my mind, my conception of the world at any given instant consists, in only...
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