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k (Yeni sayfa: {| border="1" |- | The key to true knowledge was to be found not from the deliverances of the senses or the received wisdom of the past, but by turning inward to the resources of the hu...) |
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| 7. satır: | 7. satır: | ||
else, all the knowledge we may need for the conduct of life, and the | else, all the knowledge we may need for the conduct of life, and the | ||
means of using it in order to acquire all the most abstruse items of knowledge | means of using it in order to acquire all the most abstruse items of knowledge | ||
| − | that human reason is capable of possessing. (AT X 496: CSM II 400 | + | that human reason is capable of possessing. (AT X 496: CSM II 400<ref>; John Cottingham (1992), "''Introduction''", John Cottingham(ed.) '''The Cambridge Companion To Descartes''',Cambridge:Cambridge University Press, p. 6</ref> |
| − | <ref>; John Cottingham (1992), "''Introduction''", John Cottingham(ed.) '''The Cambridge Companion To Descartes''',Cambridge:Cambridge University Press, p. 6</ref> | ||
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10.26, 17 Eylül 2009 itibarı ile sayfanın şu anki hâli
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The key to true knowledge was to be found not from the deliverances of the senses or the received wisdom of the past, but by turning inward to the resources of the human mind itself: I shall bring to light the true riches of our souls, opening up to each of us the means whereby we can find, within ourselves, without any help from anyone else, all the knowledge we may need for the conduct of life, and the means of using it in order to acquire all the most abstruse items of knowledge that human reason is capable of possessing. (AT X 496: CSM II 400[1] |
- ↑ ; John Cottingham (1992), "Introduction", John Cottingham(ed.) The Cambridge Companion To Descartes,Cambridge:Cambridge University Press, p. 6