| John Dewey - 1910 - 328 pages
...knowledge for two thousand years, the conceptions that had become the familiar furniture of the mind, rested on the assumption of the superiority of the...been regarded as types of fixity and perfection as 1 A lecture in a course of public lectures on " Charles Darwin and His Influence on Science," given... | |
| John Dewey - 1910 - 332 pages
...knowledge for two thousand years, the conceptions that had become the familiar furniture of the mind, rested on the assumption of the superiority of the...been regarded as types of fixity and perfection as 1 A lecture in a course of public lectures on " Charles Darwin and His Influence on Science," given... | |
| Kansas Academy of Science - 1911 - 680 pages
...philosophy of nature and knowledge, the conceptions that had become the familiar furniture of the mind, rested on the assumption of the superiority of the fixed and final. In laying hands upon the sacred ark of absolute permanency, in treating forms of life as originating... | |
| Kansas Academy of Science - 1911 - 690 pages
...philosophy of nature and knowledge, the conceptions that had become the familiar furniture of the mind, rested on the assumption of the superiority of the fixed and final. In laying hands upon the sacred ark of absolute permanency, in treating forms of life as originating... | |
| James Harvey Robinson - 1912 - 442 pages
...it as a natural corollary "the assumption of the superiority of the fixed and final," and regarded "change and origin as signs of defect and unreality."...hands upon the sacred ark of absolute permanency," Professor Dewey continues, "in treating the forms that had been regarded as types of fixity and perfection... | |
| James Harvey Robinson - 1912 - 286 pages
...it as a natural corollary "the assumption of the superiority of the fixed and final," and regarded "change and origin as signs of defect and unreality."...hands upon the sacred ark of absolute permanency," Professor Dewey continues, "in treating the forms that had been regarded as types of fixity and perfection... | |
| James Harvey Robinson - 1912 - 340 pages
...it as a natural corollary "the assumption of the superiority of the fixed and final," and regarded "change and origin as signs of defect and unreality."...hands upon the sacred ark of absolute permanency," Professor Dewey continues, "in treating the forms that had been regarded as types of fixity and perfection... | |
| JAMES HARVEY ROBINSON - 1913 - 284 pages
...as a natural corollary “the assumption of the superiority of the fixed and final,” and regarded “change and origin as signs of defect and unreality.”...hands upon the sacred ark of absolute permanency,” Professor Dewey continues, “in treating the forms that had been regarded as types of fixity and perfection... | |
| James Harvey Robinson - 1912 - 312 pages
...it as a natural corollary "the assumption of the superiority of the fixed and final," and regarded "change and origin as signs of defect and unreality."...hands upon the sacred ark of absolute permanency," Professor Dewey continues, "in treating the forms that had been regarded as types of fixity and perfection... | |
| Woodbridge Riley - 1915 - 460 pages
...activities of an empirical agent. To uphold this view of his Dewey has final recourse to Darwinism. In laying hands upon the sacred ark of absolute permanency,...originating and passing away, the Origin of Species, he tells us, introduced a mode of thinking that in the end was bound to transform the logic of knowledge... | |
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