| American Association for the Advancement of Science - 1898 - 764 pages
...Motion propagated from the Object, and in the Sensoriuni 'tis a Sense of that Motion under the form of Sound; so Colours in the Object are nothing but a Disposition to reflect this or that sort of Hays more copiously than the rest ; in the Rays they are nothing but their dispositions to propagate... | |
| American Association for the Advancement of Science - 1898 - 772 pages
...Motion propagated from the Object, and in the Sensorium 'tis a Sense of that Motion under the form of Sound ; so Colours in the Object are nothing but a Disposition to reflect this or that sort of Hays more copiously than the rest ; in the Rays they are nothing but their dispositions to propagate... | |
| Charles Kay Ogden - 1928 - 468 pages
...nothing else than a certain power or disposition to stir up a sensation of this or that colour .... So colours in the object are nothing but a disposition...or that sort of rays more copiously than the rest." Moreover, it is to be noted that in the original theory of Thomas Young it was the physiological difficulty... | |
| Mario BUNGE - 1977 - 404 pages
...been kept by modern science - a fact suppressed by the positivist philosophy of science. Thus Newton: "Colours in the Object are nothing but a Disposition...or that sort of Rays more copiously than the rest" (Newton, 1782, Vol. IV). Other physical properties can be described with paraphrases of the latter... | |
| Rolf Gruner - 1977 - 252 pages
...String, or other sounding Body,1 Newton wrote in his Opticks, 'is nothing but a trembling motion ... so Colours in the object are nothing but a Disposition...or that sort of Rays more copiously than the rest.' What is the purpose of these 'nothing buts' if it is not to indicate the belief, first, that people... | |
| Michael Baxandall - 1985 - 200 pages
...exist in the light that brings us visual knowledge of them and is the immediate object of vision: . . . Colours in the Object are nothing but a Disposition...Rays more copiously than the rest, in the Rays they arc nothing but [a] Disposition to propagate this or that Motion in the Sensorium, and in the Sensorium... | |
| Paul Feyerabend - 1985 - 272 pages
...be a heterogenous aggregate, such as light is supposed to be . . .' (Cohen, 57). 'Colours of objects are nothing but a disposition to reflect this or that sort of ray more copiously than the rest; in the rays they are nothing but their dispositions to propagate... | |
| Laurence Goldstein - 1999 - 260 pages
...would know what the perceptual experiences of a normal observer are like. Newton advanced the view that 'colours in the object are nothing but a disposition...or that sort of rays more copiously than the rest' (Newton, 1952, p. 125). However, to say that colours are dispositions (John Locke and many subsequent... | |
| Frederick Copleston - 1999 - 452 pages
...in this world of the scientist there are only primary qualities. In things, colours, for instance, are 'nothing but a disposition to reflect this or that sort of rays more copiously than the rest, (while) in the rays they are nothing but their dispositions to propagate this or that motion into the... | |
| Jozef Cohen - 2001 - 256 pages
...is nothing else than a certain power and disposition to stir up a sensation of this or that Colour Colours in the Object are nothing but a disposition...copiously than the rest; in the rays they are nothing but a disposition to propagate this or that Motion into the Sensorium, and in the Sensorium they are Sensations... | |
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