| William James - 1890 - 718 páginas
...analogous way? It is a patent fact of consciousness that a transmission like this actually occurs. Each pulse of cognitive consciousness, each Thought,...knows its own predecessor, and finding it 'warm,' in the way we have described, greets it, saying: "Thou art mine, and part of the same self with me."... | |
| William James - 1890 - 716 páginas
...analogous way? It is a patent fact of consciousness that a transmission like this actually occurs. Each pulse of cognitive consciousness, each Thought,...knows its own predecessor, and finding it 'warm,' in the way we have described, greets it, saying : " Thou art mine, and part of the same self with me."... | |
| William James - 1892 - 508 páginas
...our waking hours, though each pulse of consciousness dies away and is replaced by another, yet that other, among the things it knows, knows its own predecessor, and finding it 'warm,' in the way we have described, greets it, saying : " Thou art mine, and part of the same self with me."... | |
| Wilfrid Richmond - 1900 - 280 páginas
...192, on " Consciousness and Self-consciousness." t Cp. James, " Principles of Psychology," i. 339 : " Each pulse of cognitive consciousness, each thought,...another. The other, among the things it knows, knows its predecessor ; " and at the conclusion of the passage in which this idea is elaborated, " It is impossible... | |
| Walter Taylor Marvin - 1903 - 598 páginas
...our waking hours, though each pulse of consciousness dies away and is replaced by another, yet that other, among the things it knows, knows its own predecessor, and finding it 'warm,' in the way we have described, greets it, saying: 'Thou art mine, and part of the same self with me.... | |
| John Summerfield Engle - 1904 - 336 páginas
...analogous way ? " It is a patent fact of Consciousness that a transmission like this actually occurs. Each pulse of Cognitive Consciousness, each Thought, dies away and is replaced by another. It is, as Kant says, as if electric balls were to have not only motion but knowledge of it, and a first... | |
| Frank Byron Jevons - 1913 - 220 páginas
...— what common-sense thus demands ? The explanation is very simple. " Each thought," James says, " dies away and is replaced by another. The other, among...the things it knows, knows its own predecessor, and greets it, saying, Thou art mine, and part of the same self with me. Each later thought, knowing and... | |
| Johnston Estep Walter - 1915 - 202 páginas
...its experience and mnemonic stores; the rising thought receives them. "Each pulse," it is affirmed, "of cognitive consciousness, each Thought, dies away...among the things it knows, knows its own predecessor. . . . Each Thought is thus born an owner, and dies owned, transmitting whatever it realized as its... | |
| Jacob Gould Schurman, James Edwin Creighton, Frank Thilly, Gustavus Watts Cunningham - 1918 - 704 páginas
...both agent and patient, both subject and object. William James explains self-consciousness as follows: "Each pulse of cognitive consciousness, each Thought,...is replaced by another. The other, among the things that it knows, knows its own predecessor and . . . greets it, saying: 'Thou art mine, and part of the... | |
| Norman Kemp Smith - 1918 - 716 páginas
...even speaks as if it were the source of the synthetic processes. That cannot, however, be 1 ip 339: "Each pulse of cognitive consciousness, each Thought, dies away and is replaced by another. . . . Each later Thought, knowing and including thus the Thoughts which went before, is the final receptacle... | |
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