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Ten Philosophical Mistakes Ten Philosophical Mistakes by Mortimer J. Adler
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“But many of the conceptual constructs that we employ in scientific and in philosophical thought concern objects such as black holes and quarks in physics, and God, spirits, and souls in metaphysics. These are objects about which it is of fundamental importance to ask about their existence in reality.”
Mortimer J. Adler, Ten Philosophical Mistakes
“Strictly used, concepts are (a) acquired dispositions to recognize perceived objects as being of this kind or of that kind, and at the same time (b) to understand what this kind or that kind of object is like, and consequently (c) to perceive a number of perceived particulars as being the same in kind and to discriminate between them and other sensible particulars that are different in kind. In addition, concepts are acquired dispositions to understand what certain kinds of objects are like both (a) when the objects, though perceptible, are not actually perceived, and (b) also when they are not perceptible at all, as is the case with all the conceptual constructs we employ in physics, mathematics, and metaphysics.”
Mortimer J. Adler, Ten Philosophical Mistakes
“We ought to desire whatever is really good for us and nothing else.”
Mortimer J. Adler, Ten Philosophical Mistakes
tags: axiom