Wyatt

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Science, after all, is naïve; it supposes that it is dealing with things in themselves, in their full—blooded external and uncorrupted reality; philosophy is a little more sophisticated, and realizes that the whole material of science consists of sensations, perceptions and conceptions, rather than of things. “Kant’s greatest merit,” says Schopenhauer, “is the distinction of the phenomenon from the thing—in—itself.”22
The Story of Philosophy (Dover Thrift Editions: Philosophy)
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