QuoteThat means, that the still popular, but incompetent notion of a primary emphasis on "sense-perception as such," falls essentially into the category of a fantasy, that actually as a particular kind of lie which has captured the beliefs of the susceptible ingenue. Instead of mere observations of sense-perceptual experiences, we should rely upon such ironies as the celebrated 1960 German film's thematic witticism: "The important thing is the effect."3 Rather than merely reciting the name assigned to an effect, identify the effect itself, but not within the crude terms of sense-perception as such: that required correction supplies the only trustworthy notion of a competently scientific approach. For example: rather than merely pointing to the name of a living process, produce the effect, and then produce the cause of action which had generated the effect.
Bearing in mind the previous, this omission you mention
Quotethe local priest missed out the section of preparation - "We do not presume to come to this thy table . . . " and as a result I arrived at the rail feeling much too comfortable.may have been entirely intentional?
Eric
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