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A Essay Towards a New Theory of Vision by George Berkeley
page 5 of 85 (05%)
96 This illustrated by an example
97 By what means he would come to denominate visible OBJECTS,
high or low, etc.
98 Why he should think those OBJECTS highest, which are painted on
the lowest part of his eye, and VICE VERSA
99 How he would perceive by sight, the situation of external objects
100 Our propension to think the contrary, no argument against
what has been said
101 Objection
102 Answer
103 An object could not be known at first sight by the colour
104 Nor by the magnitude thereof
105 Nor by the figure
106 In the first act of vision, no tangible thing would be suggested
by sight
107 Difficulty proposed concerning number
108 Number of things visible, would not at first sight suggest
the like number of things tangible
109 Number the creature of the mind
110 One born blind would not at first sight number visible things
as others do
111 The situation of any object determined with respect only to objects
of the same sense
112 No distance, great or small, between a visible and tangible thing
113 The not observing this, cause of difficulty in erect vision
114 Which otherwise includes nothing unaccountable
115 What is meant by the picture being inverted
116 Cause of mistake in this matter
117 Images in the eye, not pictures of external objects
118 In what sense they are pictures
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