Примери за използване на Metaphysical realism на Английски и техните преводи на Български
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Therefore, metaphysical realism is necessarily dualistic.
This self-contradictory theory leads to Metaphysical Realism.
Metaphysical realism therefore, is of necessity dualistic.
This self-contradictory worldview leads to metaphysical realism.
Metaphysical Realism is, therefore, of necessity Dualistic.
This self-contradictory world view leads to metaphysical realism.
For Metaphysical Realism, reality belongs not only to percepts but also to imperceptible forces;
Extra-human ethical norms always appear as accompaniments to this metaphysical realism.
Metaphysical Realism is a heterogeneous mixture of Naive Realism and Idealism.
Hence these extra-human moral norms always appear as corollaries of Metaphysical Realism.
Metaphysical Realism is a self-contradictory mixture of Naïve Realism and Idealism.
These extra-human moral standards always occur as accompanying features of metaphysical realism.
It was thought that the metaphysical reals, which Metaphysical Realism after all requires, could be known by means of concepts.
It was believed that from concepts could be derived the metaphysical realities which of necessity, metaphysical realism must have.
If we reject the invalid components of metaphysical realism, the world presents itself as the sum of percepts and their conceptual(ideal) relations.
They believed that, through concepts,they could know the metaphysically real entities that metaphysical realism necessarily requires.
When the untenable part of metaphysical realism is rejected, we then have the world before us as the sum of perceptions and their conceptual(ideal) relations.
The question concerning the limits of knowledge troubles only Naive and Metaphysical Realism, both of which see in the contents of mind only ideal representations of the real world.
Then metaphysical realism merges into a world view which requires the principle of perceptibility for perceptions and that of“think-ability” for the relations between the perceptions.
The question of limits to cognition exists only for naive and metaphysical realism, both of which see in the soul's content only a conceptual representation of the world.
Metaphysical Realism, then, merges itself in a view of the world according to which the principle of perceptibility holds for percepts, and that of conceivability for the relations between the percepts.
The question concerning the limits of knowledge exists only for Naive and Metaphysical Realism, both of which see in the contents of the soul only an ideal representative of the real world.
Naïveand Metaphysical Realism, if they are to be consistent, have to deny freedom for one and the same reason, viz., because for them man does nothing but carry out, or execute, principles necessarily imposed upon him.
They are analogous to the invisible"visible forces" of metaphysical realism, which does not seek reality through the part of it that man has in his thinking, but hypothetically adds it on to actual experience.
Naive and Metaphysical Realism, if they are to be consistent, have to deny freedom for one and the same reason, viz., because, for them, man does nothing but carry out, or execute, principles necessarily imposed upon him.
Let us call the world view characterized above, into which metaphysical realism merges if it discards its contradictory elements, monism, because it unites one-sided realism with idealism in a higher unity.
When metaphysical realism further states that we enter into a conscious-ideal relationship with our perceptual world but can enter into a dynamic relationship(of forces) only with the real world, it commits the same error again.
If one rejects the untenable part of Metaphysical Realism, there remains the concept of the world as the sum of percepts and their conceptual(ideal) relations.
The worldview into which metaphysical realism merges when it eliminates its contradictory elements can be called monism, because it combines one-sided realism with idealism into a higher unity.
Let us call the view which we have just characterized, and into which Metaphysical Realism merges when it discards its contradictory elements, Monism, because it combines one-sided Realism and Idealism into a higher unity.