Aries Tottle's mode, in a word, was based on noumena; Hog's on phenomena.
2
Phenomena and noumena and so on and so on.
3
The various awe-compelling phenomena soon ceased to have any connection with the anthropomorphic noumena they had begotten.
4
Then noumena, which are not in your minds when you are born, have no way of getting in-
5
There is the world of appearance (phenomena), and there is the world of reality or substance (noumena).
1
Our models may get closer and closer, but we will never reach direct perception of reality's thing-in-itself.
2
Thing-in-itself, or reality, lies behind appearances permanently beyond our ken.
3
Thing-in-itself means thing cut off from all possible relationships.
4
If only you knew what the Thing-in-itself was.
5
Supposing-supposing the Transcendental Ego was the Thing-in-itself?
1
The so-called natural sciences, and their limits-Thephenomenon and the noumenon.
2
What signified their endless pages about dualism and monism, about phenomenon and noumenon?
3
The intuition gives the world, the phenomenon; the concept gives the noumenon, the Spirit.
4
What, therefore, we call noumenon must be understood by us as such in a negative sense.
5
The conception of a noumenon is therefore merely a limitative conception and therefore only of negative use.
6
Even if he does not know it as a noumenon he can investigate it as a phenomenon.
7
His spiritual noumenon and phenomenon, silenced portraiture.
8
The transcendent questions concerning the noumenon of things are unanswerable; we know ourselves, even, only as phenomena!
9
The noumenon is a bit difficult to locate; it can be apprehended only be a process of reasoning-whichis a phenomenon.
10
On the contrary, he accepted it, and he has made the words "phenomenon" and "noumenon" household words in philosophy.
11
Hurrah (therefore) for the noumenon!
12
It is a noumenon and belongs properly to the unknowable-thatis to say, according to the sense in which it is understood.
13
If we wish to call this object a noumenon, because the representation of it is non-sensuous, we are at liberty to do so.
14
The conception of a noumenon, considered as merely problematical, is, however, not only admissible, but, as a limitative conception of sensibility, absolutely necessary.
15
But my dissatisfaction with the quoted passage is not on account of noumenon; it is on account of the misuse of the word "silenced."
16
The Greeks called it the Noumenon behind the manifested world of phenomena.