It is the final product of that process which begins with' a mere colligation of crude observations, goes on establishing propositions that are broader and more separated from particular cases, and ends in universal propositions. Or to bring the definition... Appletons' Popular Science Monthly - עמוד 439נערך על ידי - 1897תצוגה מלאה - מידע על ספר זה
| 1904 - 746 דפים
...philosophy comprehend and consolidate the widest generalisations of science." Philosophy thus represents " the final product of that process which begins with...particular cases, and ends in universal propositions." tion and backbone of his entire body of thought. Of the relation of this law to those universal truths... | |
| Frederick Percy Long - 1905 - 108 דפים
...of a very different writer, the late Mr. Herbert Spencer. ' Knowledge of the lowest kind/ he says, ' is ununified knowledge ; science is partially unified...knowledge ; philosophy is completely unified knowledge V Should we ask what are the wider Ibeai which thus 1 First Principles, 2. 1. 37. have proximate contact... | |
| 1908 - 768 דפים
...therefore a knowledge the extreme opposite in kind to that which experience first accumulates. It is the final product of that process which begins with...the lowest kind is un-unified knowledge ; Science is partially-unified knowledge ; Philosophy is completdyunified knowledge. CHAPTERS XIV-XVII. THE LAW... | |
| Archibald Browning Drysdale Alexander - 1908 - 644 דפים
...generalizations. We begin with mere crude observations, and go on to more complete propositions. " Knowledge of the lowest kind is un-unified knowledge;...knowledge; philosophy is completely unified knowledge." The data of philosophy are those organized components of our knowledge without which thought could... | |
| 1908 - 768 דפים
...therefore , a knowledge the extreme. opposite in kind to that which experience first accumulates. It is the final product of that process which begins with a mere colligation of crude observations, goes_ on establishing propositions that are broader and_more separated from particular cases, and ends... | |
| Herbert Spencer - 1910 - 280 דפים
...therefore a knowledge the extreme opposite in kind to that which experience first accumulates. It is the final product of that process which begins with...clearest form : — Knowledge of the lowest kind is wn-iwified knowledge ; Science is partially-unified knowledge ; Philosophy is completely-unified knowledge.... | |
| Thomas Miller Forsyth - 1910 - 252 דפים
...unification to completion by organizing the various branches of science. In the words of his definition : " Knowledge of the lowest kind is un-unified knowledge...knowledge ; philosophy is completely unified knowledge." *But if the sciences are to be systematized and knowledge made coherent, it must be according to some... | |
| James Ward, Olwen Ward Campbell - 1927 - 400 דפים
...maintains that philosophy is constituted by "the fusion" of all the sciences into a whole, is nothing but "the final product of that process which begins with...particular cases and ends in universal propositions. . . . Science is partially unified knowledge, Philosophy is completelyunified knowledge." This is positivism... | |
| 1921 - 710 דפים
...is, therefore, a knowledge of extreme opposite in kind to which experience first accumulates. It is the final product of that process which begins with...universal propositions. Or, to bring the definition to the simplest and clearest form, knowledge of the lowest kind is un-unified knowledge; science is partially... | |
| 402 דפים
...maintains that philosophy is constituted by "the fusion" of all the sciences into a whole, is nothing but "the final product of that process which begins with...particular cases and ends in universal propositions. . . . Science is partially unified knowledge, Philosophy is completelyunified knowledge." This is positivism... | |
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