| 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... | |
| 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... | |
| 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... | |
| 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... | |
| 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... | |
| 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,... | |
| 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... | |
| 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.... | |
| 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... | |
| 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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