"A priori" Quotes from Famous Books
... individual, with its purposes, its valuations, its force, is destined to terminate within a limited time, and to a certain extent each individual must start at the beginning. Since the life of the group has no such a priori fixed time limit, and its forms are really arranged as though they were to last forever, the group accomplishes a summation of the achievements, powers, experiences, through which it makes itself far ... — Introduction to the Science of Sociology • Robert E. Park
... and analysis. An adequate realization of their nature will be a large factor in preventing cynical apprehensions from becoming actual. This chapter is an attempt at a preliminary listing, inadequate, of course, as any preliminary examination must be. While an a priori argument based on a fatalistic formula as to how a "capitalistic nation" must conduct itself does not appeal to me, there are nevertheless concrete facts which are suggested by that formula. Part of our comparatively better course in China in the past is due to the fact that ... — China, Japan and the U.S.A. - Present-Day Conditions in the Far East and Their Bearing - on the Washington Conference • John Dewey
... James the Third! The true king! No Usurper. In the evening they pulled a good part of the Quakers' and Anabaptists' meeting-houses down. The heads of houses have represented that it was begun by the Whiggs." Probably the heads of houses reasoned on a priori principles when they arrived ... — Oxford • Andrew Lang
... through later excommunications, 814-l. Clement, 12th Pope, issued a Bull against Masonry in 1738, 50-m. Cleanthes, a disciple of Zeno, regarded the Universe as the Great Cause, 670-u. Co-existence of the principle of generation in another and in itself, 654-m. Cognition, a priori and a posteriori explained by Malakoth behind Seir Aupin, 799-l. Coins, medals and seals contained the Zodiac and signs, 462-l. Cold, like absence of motion, characteristic of death, 664-l. Colors, analogy in the moral and intellectual world of ... — Morals and Dogma of the Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite of Freemasonry • Albert Pike
... present day, has not the designation of an 'hypnotical subject' become almost a social position? To be fed, to be paid, admired, exhibited in public, run after, and all the rest of it—all this is enough to make the most impartial looker-on skeptical. But is it enough to enable us to produce an a priori negation? Certainly not; but it is sufficient to justify legitimate doubt. And when we come to moral phenomena, where we have to put faith in the subject, the difficulty becomes still greater. Supposing suggestion and ... — Complete Hypnotism: Mesmerism, Mind-Reading and Spiritualism • A. Alpheus
|