| 1966 - 248 pagina’s
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| Alan Hart - 1983 - 194 pagina’s
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| Lucia Lermond - 1988 - 108 pagina’s
...the intellect of God (corol. prop. 1 1 , II). All ideas are true in God (prop. 32, II). All ideas in God in so far as He constitutes the essence of the human mind are in us true (dem. prop. 34, II). Man's power to understand truly is, then, the unimpeded agency... | |
| Steven M. Cahn - 1995 - 1288 pagina’s
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| James M. Byrne - 1997 - 272 pagina’s
...so far as he is infinite, but in so far as he is explained through the nature of the human mind, or in so far as he constitutes the essence of the human mind, has this or that idea.4 The rejection of Cartesian dualism in the first quotation is immediately evident,... | |
| Louis P. Pojman - 1998 - 822 pagina’s
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| David M. Rosenthal - 2000 - 336 pagina’s
...the body are in the human mind (Prop. 12, pt. 2), that is to say, in God (Corol. Prop. 11, pt. 2), in so far as He constitutes the essence of the human mind; therefore, the ideas of these ideas will be in God in so far as He has the knowledge or idea of the... | |
| John Leslie - 2003 - 252 pagina’s
...has this or that idea'. Spinoza, Wilson comments, distinguishes the knowledge of objects available to God 'in so far as he constitutes the essence of the human mind' (or, as I prefer to put it, in those regions of the divine mind that themselves are human minds) from... | |
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