Representation and Reality
ABOVE AND BEYOND
The LEGACY of SCHOPENHAUER
Mirror Test
Darwin's old study at Down
Down House
What is a Primitive World
Charles Darwin
Beagle
Beagle
Alfred Wallace, aged 46, in 1869
Charles Darwin
Darwin's study
Darwin
Branch
Man's Oneness with Nature
Hegel
No news is good news
Revolution in Europe
DECLARATIONS OF THE RIGHTS OF MAN
INTELLECTUALS GATHERING AT THE CAFE D'ALEXANDRE, P…
THE STROMING OF THE BASTIEEL
A LADY AT HER MIRROR, JEAN RAOUX (1720s)
RULED BY THE HEART
YALE UNIVERISTY
Knowledge of the External World
IN THE EYE OF THE BEHOLDER
Denis Diderot
John Locke
VOILA D'AMORE
LEIBNIZ WITH QUEEN SOPHIA CHARLOTTE OF PRUSSIA
FREEDOM OF EXPRESSION
Benedict Spinoza
Checking the facts
THE PICTURE THEORY OF MEANING
QUEEN CHRISTINA OF SWEDEN & DESCARTES
THE GREAT RATIONALISTS
HOBBES
THE COPERNICAN SYSTEM
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THE NATURE OF EXPERIENCE


Kant believed that anything that cannot be apprehended by our bodily apparatus can never be experience for us. The woman depicted in John Evereit Millas ‘The Blind Girl” (1856) can enjoy the sound or music from her concertina, the touch of her daughter’ hand and the smell of her hair, but can never “experience” the rainbow in the sky behind her
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