IV.—PHILOSOPHICAL TERMINOLOGY
(III. Conclusion)
By DR. Famimsun Tiimuns. Y _`»*—
(Translated by Mss. B. Bosauqunr.) n c0NTEN·rs or ARTICLE 111. I
V " ,·’*\‘ it ``:· ‘ 82-84. Additional causes·—liindrances. 85. Philosophy Z tion and in public life. . _· IQ . III. Prospects ufrevnedies. il i»k ·` 86~9l. International character of science—tendenciss towards `_ 96. Idea of an international academy. V I at 82. (5) Terminology is a production of human thought and knowledge itself is also activity expresses itself. If au energetic and homogeneous; < V uniform aim were given to psychological and t knowledge, then unanimity of thought would soon shape in unanimity in naming. Why is not given? This question leads us to certain of the pathological phenomenon which we are oonsideriijgggg; These subsidiary causes delay and check the the difficulties, even when they are recognised There is, in the first place (A), (and this refers to the ' sphere of Psychology,) the nature of the objects, cannot be copied, do not construct themselves as unities, and can only be indirectly measured and In announcing and describing psychical reality even more than elsewhere have recourse to ’ But because this is easy to every one, especially imaginative man, and particularly the description of which do not vary much in nature between figurative expressions understood by every one the language and elementary natural events, often held that psychological thought is eas . demands indeed fancy, but a fancy which has liecoine there is all the more reason why it should wander b°°¤·¤S¢. the T‘¤J¤<>*¤¤", (es Qliifvrd cells them) w be
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