Southern Quarterly Review, Volume 28, Issue 2Daniel Kimball Whitaker, Milton Clapp, William Gilmore Simms, James Henley Thornwell Wiley & Putnam, 1967 |
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Page 481
... mind as a distinct faculty , but also another distinct faculty of the mind , called consciousness ; and the French agree with the latter . Now , all that can be said of man truly , is , that he is a being of motion primarily , and ...
... mind as a distinct faculty , but also another distinct faculty of the mind , called consciousness ; and the French agree with the latter . Now , all that can be said of man truly , is , that he is a being of motion primarily , and ...
Page 495
... mind , cannot rationally be said to exist , and therefore should not be credited by rational men . The intellect is regarded as a construc- tive faculty , and what appears to us to be an external world is merely the constructions of ...
... mind , cannot rationally be said to exist , and therefore should not be credited by rational men . The intellect is regarded as a construc- tive faculty , and what appears to us to be an external world is merely the constructions of ...
Page 496
... mind and there arising , and arising , too , not from any direct contact with the external world , but disconnected from it by organs of sense , that have no power of reason . What does the mind know of the external world ? Nothing , it ...
... mind and there arising , and arising , too , not from any direct contact with the external world , but disconnected from it by organs of sense , that have no power of reason . What does the mind know of the external world ? Nothing , it ...
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Abbott allegiance Austria battle battle of Castiglione body Bonaparte Catholic character Christianity church citizen civil common law company of Jesus conduct constitution court Cromwell dependent despotism distinct faculty doctrine Edinburg emigration England English evil exhibit existence external faith feeling France freedom Harper & Brothers heart honor Hugh Miller human ideas important independent influence institutions intelligence interest Jansenists Jesuits judge justice king knowledge Koszta labor liberty Lord Martin Koszta mental mind moral Napoleon nation natural theology nature never non-slaveholding obedience object opinion oppressive party passion peace philosophy Plato political population present principles probabilism Provincial Letters Puritans question reason regard religion religious sacred sense slave slaveholding Society of Jesus soul spirit square miles suffrage Sydney Sydney Smith territory thing thought throne tion true truth Virginia virtue whole writer