Citations:phænomenally

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English citations of phænomenally

1866 1879 1882
ME « 15th c. 16th c. 17th c. 18th c. 19th c. 20th c. 21st c.
  • 1866, David Masson, Recent British Philosophy[1], page 137:
    The Cosmos, in the scheme of the Constructive Idealists, grapples the Absolute, if we may so say, by one available anchor (Mind seeking its cause), and would grapple it by another if it knew where to find that other (the unknown external cause of sensation, for which also, were it realized, a cause would have to be sought) ; the Cosmos, in the scheme of the Natural Realist, grapples the Absolute by two anchors, considered equally available—Mind, and that Material Nature which Mind knows face to face as phænomenally existing out of itself.
  • 1879, René Descartes, John Veitch, Lectures on Metaphysics[2], page 101:
    Extension and Thought are thus said to be two fundamental attributes of the same substance, therefore really the same, differing only in appearance or phænomenally.
  • 1882, William Hamilton, Lectures on Metaphysics[3], page 282:
    If, on your doctrine, consciousness can split what you hold to be one and indivisible into two, not only different but opposed, existences,— what absurdity is there, on mine, that consciousness should exhibit as phænomenally one, what we both hold to be really manifold ?