| Francis Herbert Bradley - 1876 - عدد الصفحات: 338
...social organism ; that if you make abstraction of all this, which is the same in him and in others, what you have left is not an Englishman, nor a man,...we suppose the world of relations, in which he was bom and bred, never to have been, then we suppose the very essence of him not to be ; if we take that... | |
| Francis Herbert Bradley - 1927 - عدد الصفحات: 368
...social organism ; that if you make abstraction of all this, which is the same in him and in others, what you have left is not an Englishman, nor a man,...then we suppose the very essence of him not to be ; if we take that away, we have taken him away ; and hence he now is not an individual, in the sense... | |
| David L. Norton - 1976 - عدد الصفحات: 420
...and behavior, and "if you make an abstraction of all this, which is the same in him and in others, what you have left is not an Englishman, nor a man, but some I know not what residuum, which has never existed by itself and does not so exist." 7 It is "above" him both in the sense that as a... | |
| Peter P. Nicholson, Nicholson Peter P - 1990 - عدد الصفحات: 384
...social organism; that if you make abstraction of all this, which is the same in him and in others, what you have left is not an Englishman, nor a man,...then we suppose the very essence of him not to be; if we take that away, we have taken him away; ... he is what he is, in brief, so far as he is what... | |
| Peter A. French - 1997 - عدد الصفحات: 192
...social organism; . . . if you make abstraction of all this, which is the same in him and in others, what you have left is not an Englishman, nor a man, but some I know not what residuum, which never existed by itself, and does not so exist. If we suppose the world of relations, in which he was born... | |
| A. John Simmons - 2001 - عدد الصفحات: 294
...really is an agent in the gestapo, someone who can't intelligibly deny the obligations attached by the world of relations, in which he was born and bred,...then we suppose the very essence of him not to be; if we take that away, we have taken him away. . . . The state . . . gives him the life that he does... | |
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