A NEW ESSAY
concerning the
ORIGIN OF IDEAS

 

Appendix Contents

Appendix 01

Value of ancient philosophy

Appendix 02

Reid and ideas

Appendix 03

Delgerando and Galluppi on judgment

Appendix 04

Applying names in ancient times

Appendix 05

Common and proper names; abstraction

Appendix 06

Applying names

Appendix 07

Ideas and reality

Appendix 08

Nominalism

Appendix 09

Stewart’s opinion about Reid’s concept of universal ideas

Appendix 10

Conceptualists and universals

Appendix 11

Stewart’s understanding of general ideas

Appendix 12

Bossuet and truth and falsity

Appendix 13

Wolff and notions

Appendix 14

Truth within us; Plato’s observation

Appendix 15

Plato and innate knowledge

Appendix 16

Aristotle and judgment

Appendix 17

Aristotle’s common sense

Appendix 18

Sensible perception and abstraction

Appendix 19

Aristotle, St. Thomas Aquinas and universality

Appendix 20

Intellect, soul and sense

Appendix 21

Aristotle and innate universals

Appendix 22

Leibniz confuses reality and possibility

Appendix 23

Leibniz and sensation

Appendix 24

Leibniz and virtual knowledge

Appendix 25

Internal judgment and external object

Appendix 26

Leibniz and presentiment

Appendix 27

Kant and the foundation of all knowledge

Appendix 28

Locke and abstraction

Appendix 29

Hume and a priori knowledge

Appendix 30

Reid on principles and ideas

Appendix 31

Reid criticised in Germany and Italy

Appendix 32

Lessons from the history of human wisdom

Appendix 33

Kant’s system of innate forms

Appendix 34

Kant’s categories and his concept of truth

Appendix 35

Preamble to the Ideological Works 5th Edition, Turin, 1851–1853


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