The Bucknell ReviewBucknell University Press, 1961 |
搜尋書籍內容
第 1 到 3 筆結果,共 47 筆
第 308 頁
... philosophical ideas artistically ( by casting a sea - change upon the ideas ) and when they evaluate , from the vantage point of their philosophical posi- tions , the intellectual and moral vision of these writers . Philosophy adds a ...
... philosophical ideas artistically ( by casting a sea - change upon the ideas ) and when they evaluate , from the vantage point of their philosophical posi- tions , the intellectual and moral vision of these writers . Philosophy adds a ...
第 95 頁
... philosophical arguments are cogent . Philosophical arguments can have the same appearance of formal necessity as mathematical arguments . Many cogent phil- osophical arguments , for example , resemble cases of reductio ad absurdum in ...
... philosophical arguments are cogent . Philosophical arguments can have the same appearance of formal necessity as mathematical arguments . Many cogent phil- osophical arguments , for example , resemble cases of reductio ad absurdum in ...
第 98 頁
... philosophical arguments lack , because they do not have a coercive force at all . No one can be made to accept a mathematical theorem against his will . For coercion of this kind , we must rely on the hypnotist , not the mathematician ...
... philosophical arguments lack , because they do not have a coercive force at all . No one can be made to accept a mathematical theorem against his will . For coercion of this kind , we must rely on the hypnotist , not the mathematician ...
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