| William James - 1896 - 374 стор.
...we grant it honestly, and really risk the game. " Who chooses me must give and forfeit all he hath." Any other word permits of quibbling, and lets us,...leg to make sure it does not get beyond our sight. But now you will bring up your final doubt. Does not the admission of such an unguaranteed chance or... | |
| William James - 1896 - 364 стор.
...we grant it honestly, and really risk the game. " Who chooses me must give and forfeit all he hath." Any other word permits of quibbling, and lets us,...leg to make sure it does not get beyond our sight. But now you will bring up your final doubt. Does not the admission of such an unguaranteed chance or... | |
| Martin Kellogg Schermerhorn - 1898 - 452 стор.
...things. . . . Any other words permit of quibbling and let us, after the fashion of the soft-detenninists, make a pretence of restoring the caged bird to liberty...leg to make sure it does not get beyond our sight." — [Prof. JAMES in " The Will to Believe."] " 'T is an un weeded garden That grows to seed ; things... | |
| Henry Cecil Sturt - 1902 - 416 стор.
...clearly defining our relations with Indeterminism, or, as it is sometimes called, Libertarianism. § I o. Now the present writer must frankly confess that of...entitled The Will to Believe and Other Essays, p. 158. 2 Ibid. surely too desperate. Though under the magical touch of the great psychologist it puts on the... | |
| Henry Cecil Sturt - 1902 - 416 стор.
...clearly defining our relations with Indeterminism, or, as it is sometimes called, Libertarianism. § I o. Now the present writer must frankly confess that of...refreshing similes as these, but the word " chance " is surely too desperate. Though under the magical touch of the great psychologist it puts on the beautiful... | |
| Henry Cecil Sturt - 1902 - 418 стор.
...denies the ambiguity of future volitions, because it affirms that nothing future can be ambiguous." l Indeterminism on the other hand affirms this ambiguity...entitled The Will to Believe and Other Essays, p. 158. 2 IHd. surely too desperate. Though under the magical touch of the great psychologist it puts on the... | |
| Henry Sturt - 1902 - 418 стор.
...denies the ambiguity of future volitions, because it affirms that nothing future can be ambiguous." * Indeterminism on the other hand affirms this ambiguity...refreshing similes as these, but the word "chance" is surely too desperate. Though under the magical touch of the great psychologist it puts on the beautiful... | |
| William Ralph Boyce Gibson - 1909 - 258 стор.
...true unequivocal name, ' Chance.' ' Whoever uses the word " chance " instead of freedom,' we read, ' squarely and resolutely gives up all pretence to control...leg, to make sure it does not get beyond our sight.' I do not myself care for this word ' chance.' It is too desperate. Besides, if Pragmatism is to have... | |
| Wayne P. Pomerleau - 1997 - 566 стор.
...first bad one which comes along, provided it be unequivocal. He wants to avoid the hypocrisy that would "make a pretence of restoring the caged bird to liberty...to its leg to make sure it does not get beyond our sight."75 There is no "string" to assure that our chances will not fly away; we must try our best to... | |
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