The Problem of Life: An Essay in the Origins of Biological ThoughtMacmillan, 1976 - 343 Seiten |
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Seite 8
... experience remains as it was for the ancients : purposeful , goal - seeking . The book thus ends by drawing attention once more to this deep dichotomy.in our understanding of things . The world we treat as if it were a mechanism drawing ...
... experience remains as it was for the ancients : purposeful , goal - seeking . The book thus ends by drawing attention once more to this deep dichotomy.in our understanding of things . The world we treat as if it were a mechanism drawing ...
Seite 286
... experience of perceptions and sensations . But when we set out to describe the phenomenon of perception in others , the case is different . It is self- contradictory to suppose that we can experience another's aching tooth or perception ...
... experience of perceptions and sensations . But when we set out to describe the phenomenon of perception in others , the case is different . It is self- contradictory to suppose that we can experience another's aching tooth or perception ...
Seite 306
... experience , in particular of our experience of doing science . We saw how the apparently creative activity of the mind allows us to order our experience in different ways , according , perhaps , to different paradigms . We have ended ...
... experience , in particular of our experience of doing science . We saw how the apparently creative activity of the mind allows us to order our experience in different ways , according , perhaps , to different paradigms . We have ended ...
Inhalt
Preface | 8 |
The act of imagination | 8 |
The palaeontology of some key words | 17 |
Urheberrecht | |
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activity analogy analysis anatomy Anaximenes ancient animal Animalium Aristotelian Aristotle Aristotle's arteries atomic theory behaviour believed biologists biology blood body body's brain Cartesian cause cells cerebral chapter chemistry classical concept contemporary Cuvier Darwin Democritean Democritus Descartes Diogenes Laertius dissection eighteenth century embryology Empedocles Epicurus Erasistratus evolution example exist experience fact force Galen Galileo Goethe Greek Harvey heart Herophilus human Ibid ideas Kant Lamarck Leonardo living London matter mechanism mechanistic metaphysics microcosm mind modern motion movement muscle nature Naturphilosophie nerves nervous system neurophysiology nineteenth century nowadays objects observed organism origin pangenesis paradigm Parmenides particles perception perhaps Peripatetic phenomena philosophy physical physiology Plato pneuma principle psychological recognise reflex says scientific seems seen sensation sense seventeenth century Socrates soul species spinal spirits Stagirite's Stoics substance T H Huxley teleological things thinkers thought Timaeus trans understanding University Press ventricle Vesalius writes