IDEA - Definiția din dicționar
Traducere: română
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I*de"a (?), n.;
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Her sweet
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Being the right
Both in your form and nobleness of mind.
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This representation or likeness of the object being transmitted from thence [the senses] to the imagination, and lodged there for the view and observation of the pure intellect, is aptly and properly called its
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2. A general notion, or a conception formed by generalization.
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Alice had not the slightest
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3. Hence: Any object apprehended, conceived, or thought of, by the mind; a notion, conception, or thought; the real object that is conceived or thought of.
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Whatsoever the mind perceives in itself, or as the immediate object of perception, thought, or undersanding, that I call
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4. A belief, option, or doctrine; a characteristic or controlling principle; as, an essential idea; the idea of development.
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That fellow seems to me to possess but one
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What is now “
“how it showed . . .
Answering his great
to its present use, when this person “has an
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5. A plan or purpose of action; intention; design.
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I shortly afterwards set off for that capital, with an
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6. A rational conception; the complete conception of an object when thought of in all its essential elements or constituents; the necessary metaphysical or constituent attributes and relations, when conceived in the abstract.
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7. A fiction object or picture created by the imagination; the same when proposed as a pattern to be copied, or a standard to be reached; one of the archetypes or patterns of created things, conceived by the Platonists to have excited objectively from eternity in the mind of the Deity.
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Thence to behold this new-created world,
The addition of his empire, how it showed
In prospect from his throne, how good, how fair,
Answering his great
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&hand_; “In England, Locke may be said to have been the first who naturalized the term in its Cartesian universality. When, in common language, employed by Milton and Dryden, after Descartes, as before him by Sidney, Spenser, Shakespeare, Hooker, etc., the meaning is Platonic.”
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