The general philosophical principle is that every new occasion takes account of every occasion in its past.
The general philosophical principle is that every becoming occasion objectifies every past occasion in some way.
In harmony with
his general philosophical principles Humboldt regards language, the single word as well as connected speech, as an act, «a truly creative act of the mind.»
Not exact matches
The notion of Augustine and Thomas, in their theology of the Trinity, that persons are constituted in relation of opposition or mutual immanence is made a
general principle in the Whiteheadian
philosophical scheme.
These are
general principles which do not concern religion more than it does other
philosophical issues.
In 1972 he turned to words and their immateriality to explore the relationship between abstract categories of thought, such as
general and particular, finite and infinite, culture and nature, the passing of historical time and the hypothesis of the eternity of universal physical laws, the routine of experience and the abstraction of
philosophical principles.