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" What gives us so much as the idea that living beings, things, can feel? Is it that my education has led me to it by drawing my attention to feelings in myself, and now I transfer the idea to objects outside myself? That I recognize that there is something... "
Ecofeminism: Women, Culture, Nature - Page 412
edited by - 1997 - 472 pages
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Twentieth-Century Philosophy

Morris Weitz - 1966 - 404 pages
...might say that the game did not make the same sense to them as to us. ) 283. What gives us so muck as the idea that living beings, things, can feel?...outside myself? That I recognize that there is something there (in me) which I can call "pain" without getting into conflict with the way other people use this...
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Images of the Human: The Philosophy of the Human Person in a Religious Context

Hunter Brown, Leonard A. Kennedy - 1995 - 660 pages
...has sensations; it sees; is blind; hears; is deaf; is conscious or unconscious. 283. What gives us so much as the idea that living beings, things, can feel?...outside myself? That I recognize that there is something there (in me) which I can call "pain" without getting into conflict with the way other people use this...
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Conceiving the Embryo: Ethics, Law, and Practice in Human Embryology

Donald Evans, Neil Pickering - 1996 - 384 pages
...on the notion of such reactions where he discusses the contrast between living and inanimate things: Is it that my education has led me to it by drawing my attention to feelings in myself? ... - I do not transfer my idea to stones, plants, etc.21 Such reactions are not learned and are not...
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Leading a Human Life: Wittgenstein, Intentionality, and Romanticism

Richard Eldridge - 1997 - 320 pages
...human-expression-independent experience of things. It is part of the grammar of "person." What gives us so much as the idea that living beings, things can feel?...outside myself? That I recognize that there is something there (in me) which I can call "pain" without getting into conflict with the way other people use this...
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Appropriating Heidegger

James E. Faulconer, Mark A. Wrathall - 2000 - 238 pages
...fundamental? How can we locate it? Compare this with Wittgenstein's Investigations: What gives us so much as the idea that living beings, things, can feel?...now I transfer the idea to objects outside myself? . . . I do not transfer \ubertrage] my idea to stones, plants, etc. . . . And now look at a wriggling...
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Perspectives in the Philosophy of Language: A Concise Anthology

Robert J. Stainton - 2000 - 372 pages
...the idea that living beings, things, can feel? fis it that my education has led me to it by dtawing my attention to feelings in myself, and now I transfer...outside myself? That I recognize that there is something there (in me) which 1 can call "pain" without getting into conflict with the way other people use this...
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Panpsychism: Past and Recent Selected Readings

D. S. Clarke - 196 pages
...anything. One might say that the game did not make the same sense to them as to us.) 283. What gives us so much as the idea that living beings, things, can feel?...outside myself? That I recognize that there is something there (in me) "which I can call "pain" "without getting into conflict with the way other people use...
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The Literary Wittgenstein

John Gibson, Wolfgang Huemer - 2004 - 376 pages
...is undeniable, primitive, that we have a life of thought with other human subjects: What gives us so much as the idea that living beings, things, can feel?...transfer the idea to objects outside myself? That I can recognize that there is something there (in me) which I can call "pain" without getting into conflict...
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The Literary Wittgenstein

John Gibson, Wolfgang Huemer - 2004 - 372 pages
...is undeniable, primitive, that we have a life of thought with other human subjects: What gives us m much as the idea that living beings, things, can feel?...it that my education has led me to it by drawing my anention to feelings in myself. and now I transfer the idea to objects outside myself? That I can recognize...
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