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A NEW ESSAY |
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concerning the |
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ORIGIN OF IDEAS |
Appendix Contents
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Value of ancient philosophy |
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Reid and ideas |
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Delgerando and Galluppi on judgment |
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Applying names in ancient times |
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Common and proper names; abstraction |
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Applying names |
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Ideas and reality |
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Nominalism |
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Stewart’s opinion about Reid’s concept of universal ideas |
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Conceptualists and universals |
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Stewart’s understanding of general ideas |
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Bossuet and truth and falsity |
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Wolff and notions |
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Truth within us; Plato’s observation |
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Plato and innate knowledge |
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Aristotle and judgment |
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Aristotle’s common sense |
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Sensible perception and abstraction |
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Aristotle, St. Thomas Aquinas and universality |
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Intellect, soul and sense |
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Aristotle and innate universals |
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Leibniz confuses reality and possibility |
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Leibniz and sensation |
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Leibniz and virtual knowledge |
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Internal judgment and external object |
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Leibniz and presentiment |
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Kant and the foundation of all knowledge |
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Locke and abstraction |
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Hume and a priori knowledge |
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Reid on principles and ideas |
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Reid criticised in Germany and Italy |
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Lessons from the history of human wisdom |
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Kant’s system of innate forms |
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Kant’s categories and his concept of truth |
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Preamble to the Ideological Works 5th Edition, Turin, 1851–1853 |