| John Locke - Knowledge, Theory of - 1928 - 428 pages
...or disagreement of any ideas. Secondly, judgment, which is the putting ideas together, or separating them from one another in the mind, when their certain...imports, taken to be so before it certainly appears. And if it so unites, or separates them, as in reality things are, it is right judgment. As demonstration... | |
| Alfred North Whitehead - Philosophy - 2010 - 452 pages
...or disagreement of any ideas. Secondly, Judgment, which is the putting ideas together, or separating them from one another in the mind, when their certain...imports, taken to be so before it certainly appears. And if it so unites or separates them as in reality things are, it is right judgment. What Locke calls... | |
| Thomas Reid, William Hamilton, Harry M. Bracken, Thomas Reid, Sir William Hamilton - Knowledge, Theory of - 1094 pages
...or disagreement of any ideas. Secondly, Judgment, which is the putting ideas together, or separating them from one another in the mind, when their certain...disagreement is not perceived, but presumed to be so" [533] Knowledge, I think, sometimes signifies things known ; sometimes that act of the mind by which... | |
| Michael Ayers - Philosophy - 1993 - 708 pages
...or Disagreement of any Ideas. Secondly, Judgement, which is the putting Ideas together or separating them from one another in the Mind, when their certain...Disagreement is not perceived, but presumed to be so ... And if [the mind] so unites, or separates them, as in Reality Things are, it is right judgement.™... | |
| Nicholas Wolterstorff - Philosophy - 1996 - 276 pages
...called assent or dissent" (iv,xiv,3). In short, judgment "is the putting ideas together, or separating them from one another in the mind, when their certain...disagreement is not perceived, but presumed to be so"(iv,xiv,4). In these passages Locke speaks of judgment as a faculty - which suggests that he thought... | |
| Jan Schröder - Philosophy - 1998 - 240 pages
...Dissent". - Ebd. 4; 653, 28-33: "Secondly, Judgment, which is the putting Ideas together, or separating them from one another in the Mind, when their certain Agreement or Disagreement is not perceived, butpresumed to be so; which is, as the Word imports, taken to be so before it certainly appears. And... | |
| Frederick Copleston - Philosophy - 1999 - 452 pages
...Locke calls another 'faculty', namely, judgment, which is 'the putting ideas together or separating them from one another in the mind when their certain...disagreement is not perceived but presumed to be so. ... And if it so unites or separates them as in reality things are, it is right judgment.'4 Judgment... | |
| Richard A. Barney - Literary Criticism - 1999 - 442 pages
...instrument of judgment, whose operation Locke defines as "the putting Ideas together, or separating them from one another in the Mind, when their certain...Disagreement is not perceived, but presumed to be so" (4.14.4). Metaphor, by contrast, is the agent of wit or fancy, and Locke declaims its inferiority when... | |
| Samuel Fleischacker - Philosophy - 1999 - 351 pages
...connections between ideas — while judgment puts ideas together when their agreement or disagreement is, "as the word imports, taken to be so before it certainly appears" (IV.xiv.4). The notions that judgment is informed by perception and reason but identical with neither,... | |
| Beat Affentranger - Literary Criticism - 2000 - 194 pages
...or disagreement of any ideas. Secondly, JUDGMENT, which is the putting ideas together, or separating them from one another in the mind, when their certain...disagreement is not perceived, but presumed to be so.... 141 The certainty of the findings of the faculty of knowledge is "intuitive" and amenable to demonstration,... | |
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