| Richard Rorty, Jerome B. Schneewind, Quentin Skinner - 1984 - Страниц: 420
...meant' is different depending upon how large a range of actual and possible behavior one evisages. People often say, quite reasonably, that they only...meant, what he was really getting at in the Second Treatise, only after conversations in heaven with, successively, Jefferson, Marx, and Rawls. It is... | |
| David Harlan - 2009 - Страниц: 329
...or ideas. After all, there are as many possible meanings to a text as there are possible contexts: "People often say, quite reasonably, that they only...reacting to the consequences of their original utterance. [In the same way,] it is perfectly reasonable to describe Locke as finding out what he really meant,... | |
| David Harlan - 2009 - Страниц: 329
...or ideas. After all, there are as many possible meanings to a text as there are possible contexts: "People often say, quite reasonably, that they only...what they meant by listening to what they said later on—when they heard themselves reacting to the consequences of their original utterance. [In the same... | |
| David Wittenberg - 2002 - Страниц: 300
...writing in his characteristic liberalistic mode, as a conversation between reasonable individuals: People often say, quite reasonably, that they only...what they meant by listening to what they said later on—when they heard themselves reacting to the consequences of their original utterance. It is perfectly... | |
| Joy Connolly - 2009 - Страниц: 321
...an ideally reasonable and educable Aristotle could be brought to accept as such a description. ... It is perfectly reasonable to describe Locke as finding...meant, what he was really getting at in the Second Treatise, only after conversations in heaven with, successively, Jefferson, Marx, and Rawls. (51, 54)... | |
| Richard Rorty - 1991 - Страниц: 368
...behavior one envisages. People often say, quite reasonably, that they found out what they meant only by listening to what they said later on - when they...utterance. It is perfectly reasonable to describe Locke as f1nding out what he really meant, what he was really getting at, in the Second Treatise only after... | |
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