So while legal constructs are unique to classical Roman, modern civil and common law cultures, legal concepts or primitive and archaic law get their meaning from sensed experience based on facts as opposed to theory or abstract.
42.
Michael Allen, who as assistant headmaster at Hyde Park High School in Boston has overseen the prospective teachers in the shortcut program this summer, said his own time in education school gave him invaluable common sense experience.
43.
The mind like fire, seeks out more fuel to sustain it, in the case of the mind this is " sense experience ", hence the emphasis the Buddha places on " guarding the gates of the senses ".
44.
"It s rare to find dream-pop that resolves with such assured optimism, in which you can sense experience shifting into its proper place . . . Kramies seems to have mastered the talent of simply breathing it into shape"
45.
Adventitious ideas are those concepts that we gain through sense experiences, ideas such as the sensation of heat, because they originate from outside sources; transmitting their own likeness rather than something else and something you simply cannot will away.
46.
The whole world of sense experiences and appearances, however, is the effect of an absolutely necessary being which can be thought of as a thing & ndash; in & ndash; itself which is not in the world of appearances.
47.
Reason without the focus on sense experience is pure reason ( Rudolf Steiner s pure thinking or pure " sinnen " ) and in that condition, reason is able to make contact with and be irradiated itself by wisdom.
48.
The approach was a response to the " ideal system " that began with Descartes'concept of the limitations of sense experience and led Locke and Hume to a skepticism that called religion and the evidence of the senses equally into question.
49.
The school's Outdoor Leadership Program supplements the curriculum by taking students into the nearby Wind River Mountains ( among other locations in the Wyoming / Utah area ) to help them form their memories and imaginations through sense experience of the created world.
50.
The rationalists had such a high confidence in reason that empirical proof and physical evidence were regarded as unnecessary to ascertain certain truths in other words, " there are significant ways in which our concepts and knowledge are gained independently of sense experience ".