| John McClintock - 1873 - Страниц: 976
...presented themselves for solution, each corresponding to a distinct branch of metaphysical inquiry : " What can I know?" "What ought I to do?" "What may I hope for?" The answer to the first question, which was the investigation of the nature of knowledge and... | |
| 1888 - Страниц: 738
...educators. It was the old inquiry reformulated. Kant said it is the business of philosophy to answer the three questions, " What can I know? What ought I to do? What may I hope? " The teacher only puts them more specifically when he asks what all live workers should demand to know :... | |
| John Henry Wilbrandt Stuckenberg - 1882 - Страниц: 504
...(Kosenknuiz and Schubert, iii. 186), he, however, says that philosophy deals with four questions, namely, What can I know ? What ought I to do ? What may I hope ? What is man ? "The first question is answered by metaphysics; the second by morality; the third by... | |
| Joseph Parrish Thompson - 1884 - Страниц: 360
...question of his own being,1 its origin, its relations, its obligations, its possibilities, its destiny : " What can I know ? What ought I to do ? What may I hope ? " 2 As in defming science we were careful to eliminate from the definition*all theoretical prepossession... | |
| Immanuel Kant, John Henry Bernard - 1889 - Страниц: 428
...end of Pure Reason. — The whole interest of my Reason is centred in the three following questions:1 What can I know? What ought I to do? What may I hope? The first question is purely speculative, and Kant considers that he has sufficiently answered it in the... | |
| Johann Eduard Erdmann - 1890 - Страниц: 744
...Kant, in almost literal agreement with Pyrrho, states the task of philosophy to be the answering of the three questions : What can I know ? What ought I to do ? What may I hope ? He designates the first of these as theoretical, the second as practical, the third as at the same... | |
| John McClintock - 1891 - Страниц: 972
...presented themselves for solution, each corresponding to a distinct branch of metaphysical inquiry : " What can I know?" "What ought I to do?" "What may I hop« for?" The answer to the first question, which was the investigation of the nature of knowledge... | |
| 1911 - Страниц: 400
...of reason, speculative as well as practical," says Kant himself, " is centred in the three following questions: What can I know? What ought I to do? What may I hope? " Kant's answers to these questions, as given in his three Critiques, are stated by Professor Wenley... | |
| Theodore Chickering Williams - 1893 - Страниц: 314
...philosophy is Man investigating his own nature. The three great questions, as Kant puts them, are, "What can I know?" "What ought I to do?" "What may I hope for?" See how human these problems are, — not, What are the divine attributes? What is the first... | |
| Wilfrid Ward - 1893 - Страниц: 356
...method is wrong. Kant stated the three great questions to which philosophy addresses itself to be: "What can I know?" "What ought I to do?" •' What may I hope ?" and it is a special characteristic of the thinkers I have referred to that they see the intimate... | |
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