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" A painter, a horseman, and a zoologist will probably connect different ideas with the name 'Bucephalus'. This constitutes an essential distinction between the idea and the sign's sense, which may be the common property of many and therefore is not a part... "
Sextus Empiricus: The Transmission and Recovery of Pyrrhonism - Page vii
de Luciano Floridi - 2002 - 172 pages
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Why Does Language Matter to Philosophy?, Volume 121

Ian Hacking - 1975 - 216 pages
...which may be the common property of many and therefore is not a part of a mode of the individual mind. For one can hardly deny that mankind has a common...thoughts which is transmitted from one generation to another.4 Henceforth I shall use the phrase 'theory of meaning' to mean something that at least includes...
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Analytic Philosophy and Phenomenology

H.A. Durfee - 1976 - 292 pages
...However, It is quite otherwise for thoughts; one and the same thought can be grasped by many men.19 For one can hardly deny that mankind has a common...thoughts which is transmitted from one generation to another.20 With "thought," therefore, we can say that many men "think" the same "thought," or that...
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Husserl and Intentionality: A Study of Mind, Meaning, and Language

D.W Smith, R. McIntyre - 1982 - 452 pages
...which may be the common property of many and therefore is not a part or a mode of the individual mind. For one can hardly deny that mankind has a common store of thoughts [Gedanken] which is transmitted from one generation to another.55 In his essay, 'The Thought: A Logical...
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Psychology and Its Allied Disciplines, Volume 1

Marc H. Bornstein - 1984 - 356 pages
...sign's sense, which may be the common property of many and therefore is not part of the individual mind. For one can hardly deny that mankind has a common...which is transmitted from one generation to another [Frege, 1892/ 1952 p. 59]. This doctrine, that there is the real sense of a sign, distinct from an...
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From Hegel to Existentialism

Robert C. Solomon - 1987 - 338 pages
...is quite otherwise for thoughts; one and the same thought can be grasped by many men (Frege, BG 79). For one can hardly deny that mankind has a common...which is transmitted from one generation to another (Frege. BG 59). With "thought," therefore, we can say that many men "think" the same "thought," or...
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Reading After Foucault: Institutions, Disciplines, and Technologies of the ...

Robert Scott Leventhal - 1994 - 302 pages
...word "is not a part or a mode of the individual mind." Frege found this obvious even from the fact that "mankind has a common store of thoughts which is transmitted from one generation to another."10 HEGEL Frege and Peirce hardly began publicity. One might guess that Hegel did, in 1807,...
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Culture in Mind: Cognition, Culture, and the Problem of Meaning

Bradd Shore - 1996 - 447 pages
...sense, which may be the common property of many and therefore is not a part of the individual mind. For one can hardly deny that mankind has a common store of thoughts which is translated from one generation to another. [Frege, 1982, quoted in Johnson-Laird, 1983:182] distinguishes...
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Sign, Text, Scripture: Semiotics and the Bible

George Aichele - 1997 - 172 pages
...sense may be the common property of many people, and so is not a part or a mode of the individual mind. For one can hardly deny that mankind has a common...which is transmitted from one generation to another (Frege 1952: 59). Here we make another step forward, for sense is not purely individual or subjective....
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Readings in the Philosophy of Language

Peter Ludlow - 1997 - 1108 pages
...which may be the common property of many and therefore is not a part of a mode of the individual mind. For one can hardly deny that mankind has a common...thoughts which is transmitted from one generation to another.6 In the light of this, one need have no scruples in speaking of the sense, whereas in the...
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Philosophy of Language

Alexander Miller - 1998 - 372 pages
...which may be the common property of many people, and so is not a part or a mode of the individual mind. For one can hardly deny that mankind has a common...thoughts which is transmitted from one generation to another.15 And it seems perfectly reasonable to demand that any notion of 38 So, sense be able to play...
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