Some Problems of Philosophy : a Beginning of An Introduction to Philosophy

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The parts, e. g., might have space-relations, but nothing more; or they might also gravitate; or 132 THE ONE AND THE MANY exchange heat; or know, or love one another, etc.) Such is the cash-value of the world's unity, empirically realized.^Its total unity is the sum of all the partial unities. It consists of them and follows upon them. Such an idea, however, outrages rationalistic minds, which habitually despise all this practical small-change. Such minds insist on a deeper, more through-and- t...hrough union of all things in the absolute, 'each in all and all in each,' as the prior con- dition of these empirically ascertained connec- tions. (But this may be only a case of the usual worship of abstractions, like calling 'bad weather' the cause of to-day's rain, etc., or accounting for a man's features by his 'face,' when really the rain is the bad weather, is what you mean by 'bad weather,' just as the features are what you mean by the face.
lJ!o sum up, the world is 'one' in some re- spects, and ' many ' in others.


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