The Concept of Nature / The Tarner Lectures Delivered in Trinity College, November 1919
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About This Book
A philosophically grounded lecture series argues that perceptual qualities belong to nature itself rather than being psychic additions, and objects to a common bifurcation that separates apparent experience from a conjectured causal reality. It probes how notions of causation, time, space, and perceptual error are affected by that division and seeks formulations that express relations among things as they are apprehended. The exposition favors clarity over technical jargon, addresses readers with scientific interests, and closes with applied reflections intended to show how the outlook bears on scientific disciplines.
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