WeRead Powered by ReaderPub
Essays: Scientific, Political, & Speculative; Vol. 2 of 3 / Library Edition (1891), Containing Seven Essays not before Republished, and Various other Additions. cover

Essays: Scientific, Political, & Speculative; Vol. 2 of 3 / Library Edition (1891), Containing Seven Essays not before Republished, and Various other Additions.

Chapter 29: ENDNOTES TO PROF. GREEN’S EXPLANATIONS.
Open in WeRead

About This Book

The essays examine the origins and methods of scientific knowledge, arguing that science extends perception through reasoning and progresses from qualitative to quantitative prediction; present a scheme for classifying the sciences and a critique of Comte's philosophy; analyze the nature and discovery of laws and how to weigh evidence; offer a clear account of electricity and engage in methodological debates over tests of truth with replies to critics; and address aesthetics, considering style, beauty, architectural types, gracefulness, personal beauty, the origins and function of music, and the physiology of laughter.

ENDNOTES TO PROF. GREEN’S EXPLANATIONS.

44 Contemporary Review, December, 1877, p. 35.

45 Contemporary Review, December, 1877, p. 37

46 If I am asked why here I used the phrase “states of con­scious­ness” rather than “manifestations of existence,” though I had previously preferred the last to the first, I give as my reason the desire to maintain continuity of language with the preceding chapter, “The Dynamics of Consciousness.” In that chapter an examination of con­scious­ness had been made with the view of ascertaining what principle of cohesion determines our beliefs, as preliminary to observing how this principle operates in establishing the beliefs in subject and object. But on proceeding to do this, the phrase “state of con­scious­ness” was supposed, like the phrase “manifestation of existence,” not to be used as anything more than a name by which to distinguish this or that form of being, as an undeveloped receptivity would become aware of it, while yet self and not-self were undistinguished.

47 Contemporary Review, December, 1877, pp. 49, 50.

48 Contemporary Review, March, 1878, p. 753.

49 Ibid., March, 1878, p. 755.

50 Contemporary Review, December, 1877, p. 44.

51 Ibid., December, 1877, p. 44.

52 Ibid., March, 1878, p. 745.

53 Ibid., January, 1881, p. 115.