Време: Разлика между версии

Изтрито е съдържание Добавено е съдържание
м -и век ---> век ; козметични промени
м интервал
Ред 144:
|date=2004-08-12
|copyright=2004
|first=Robert : Johns Hopkins University
|last=Rynasiewicz
|publisher=Stanford University
Ред 174:
|url=http://www.iep.utm.edu/l/leib-met.htm#H7
|title=Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz (1646 – 1716) Metaphysics – 7. Space, Time, and Indiscernibles
|first=Douglas : Staffordshire University
|last=Burnham
|year=2006
Ред 185:
|date=1997-01-22
|last=Mattey
|first=G. J. : UC Davis
|quote=What is correct in the Leibnizian view was its anti-metaphysical stance. Space and time do not exist in and of themselves, but in some sense are the product of the way we represent things. The are ideal, though not in the sense in which Leibniz thought they are ideal (figments of the imagination). The ideality of space is its mind-dependence: it is only a condition of sensibility.... Kant concluded „absolute space is not an object of outer sensation; it is rather a fundamental concept which first of all makes possible all such outer sensation.“...Much of the argumentation pertaining to space is applicable, mutatis mutandis, to time, so I will not rehearse the arguments. As space is the form of outer intuition, so time is the form of inner intuition.... Kant claimed that time is real, it is „the real form of inner intuition.“
|accessdate=2008-01-10}}
</ref><ref name="McCormick">{{cite web
|title=Immanuel Kant (1724 – 1804) Metaphysics : 4. Kant's Transcendental Idealism
|url=http://www.iep.utm.edu/k/kantmeta.htm#H4
|work=The Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy
|first=Matt : California State University, Sacramento
|last=McCormick
|year=2006