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" I am bold to think might easily be brought to an end by the sole consideration of one passage in the incomparable Mr. Locke's Treatise of Humane Understanding, b. 2. ch. 17, sec. 7, where that authour, handling the subject of infinity with that judgment... "
Hermathena - Page 180
1901
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The Works of George Berkeley ...: Philosophical works, 1734-52: The analyst ...

George Berkeley, Alexander Campbell Fraser - 1901 - 430 pages
...non-omniscient knowledge like the human, which inevitably merges in mysterious incompleteness at last. OF INFINITES Tho' some mathematicians of this last...in the above mentioned methods, I am bold to think might easily be brought to an end by the sole consideration of one passage in the incomparable Mr....
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The Works of George Berkeley ...: Philosophical works, 1734-52: The analyst ...

George Berkeley, Alexander Campbell Fraser - 1901 - 448 pages
...non-omniscient knowledge like the human, which inevitably merges in mysterious incompleteness at last. OF INFINITES Tho' some mathematicians of this last...in the above mentioned methods, I am bold to think might easily be brought to an end by the sole consideration of one passage in the incomparable Mr....
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The Works of George Berkeley ...: Philosophical works, 1734-52: The analyst ...

George Berkeley, Alexander Campbell Fraser - 1901 - 466 pages
...investigation unknown to the ancients, yet something there is in their principles which occasionsmuch controversy and dispute, to the great scandal of the...in the above mentioned methods, I am bold to think might easily be brought to an end by the sole consideration of one passage in the incomparable Mr....
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The Works of George Berkeley, D.D., Formerly Bishop of Cloyne: Philosophical ...

George Berkeley - 1901 - 428 pages
...unknown to the ancients, yet something there is in their principles which occasionsmuch controversyand dispute, to the great scandal of the so much celebrated...in the above mentioned methods, I am bold to think might easily be brought to an end by the sole consideration of one passage in the incomparable Mr....
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Berkeley's Philosophy of Mathematics

Douglas M. Jesseph - 1993 - 344 pages
...Berkeley's second claim of "Of Infinities" is that acceptance of the infinitesimal has produced disputes "to the great scandal of the so much celebrated evidence of Geometry." He cites the controversy between Nieuwentijt and Leibniz over the foundations of the calculus, and...
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From Kant to Hilbert Volume 1: A Source Book in the Foundations of Mathematics

William Bragg Ewald - 2005 - 696 pages
...unknown to the ancients, yet something there is in their principles which occasions much controversy & dispute, to the great scandal of the so much celebrated...incomparable Mr. Locke's treatise of Humane Understanding, b.2. ch. 17, sec. 7, where that authour, handling the subject of infinity with that judgement & clearness...
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