| 11. | The body must therefore be exposed to external objects and possess receptivity for them.
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| 12. | This causes the internal object to destroy the external object and take its place.
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| 13. | Therefore, happiness is the result of self-conquest and freedom from external objects.
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| 14. | It is separate from the external object.
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| 15. | Images of external objects must be kept in the same sequence in which they were received.
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| 16. | That is, there is an " ontological commitment " to such external objects.
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| 17. | The word " only " is intended to deny the existence of any external objects of consciousness.
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| 18. | Fodor suggests that the character of these modules permits the possibility of causal relations with external objects.
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| 19. | A private, subjective intuition is thereby discursively thought to be a representation of an external object.
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| 20. | The external object is perceived by the intellect's understanding as being the cause of sensations.
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