subjective idealism

  • 61Phenomenalism — In epistemology and the philosophy of perception, phenomenalism is the view that physical objects do not exist as things in themselves but only as perceptual phenomena or sensory stimuli (e.g. redness, hardness, softness, sweetness, etc.)… …

    Wikipedia

  • 62Max Adler (Marxist) — Max Adler (born 15 January 1873 in Vienna; died 28 June 1937 in Vienna) was an Austrian jurist, politician and social philosopher; his theories were of central importance to Austromarxism. He was a brother of Oskar Adler and Friedrich Adler.… …

    Wikipedia

  • 63Dmitry Merezhkovsky — For his brother, a Russian biologist, see Konstantin Mereschkowski. Born Dmitry Sergeyevich Merezhkovsky 2 August 1865(1865 08 02) St Petersburg, Russia Died 9 December 1941( …

    Wikipedia

  • 64Nikolai Lossky — ] cquote|Due to the tradition of the Church, Russia had an implicit philosophy, a philosophy that was born of the Neoplatonism of the Church Fathers. This implicit Neo platonism is the true heritage of Russian thinking. Selected bibliography *… …

    Wikipedia

  • 65List of topics in philosophy of mind — * Alan Turing * Alexius Meinong * Anomalous monism * Anthony Kenny * Arnold Geulincx * Association for the Scientific Study of Consciousness * Australian materialism * Baruch Spinoza * Biological naturalism * Brain in a vat * C. D. Broad *… …

    Wikipedia

  • 66japan — japanner, n. /jeuh pan /, n., adj., v., japanned, japanning. n. 1. any of various hard, durable, black varnishes, originally from Japan, for coating wood, metal, or other surfaces. 2. work varnished and figured in the Japanese manner. 3. Japans,… …

    Universalium

  • 67Japan — /jeuh pan /, n. 1. a constitutional monarchy on a chain of islands off the E coast of Asia: main islands, Hokkaido, Honshu, Kyushu, and Shikoku. 125,716,637; 141,529 sq. mi. (366,560 sq. km). Cap.: Tokyo. Japanese, Nihon, Nippon. 2. Sea of, the… …

    Universalium

  • 68Hegel, Georg Wilhelm Friedrich — (1770–1831)    Philosopher.    Hegel was born in Stuttgart, Germany, and was educated at the University of Tübingen. As a tutor in Switzerland, he wrote a life of Jesus Christ whom he saw as one who transcended both virtue and vice. He settled in …

    Who’s Who in Christianity

  • 69Berkeley, George — (1685 1753)    An empiricist philosopher, and Bishop of Cloyne from 1734 to 1752, Berkeley is now known chiefly not for his sermons and ecclesiastical works or even for his strange writings on tar water, but rather for his philosophical works, in… …

    Christian Philosophy

  • 70common sense, philosophy of —       18th and early 19th century Scottish school of Thomas Reid (Reid, Thomas), Adam Ferguson, Dugald Stewart, and others, who held that in the actual perception of the average, unsophisticated man, sensations (sensation) are not mere ideas or… …

    Universalium