Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://citation.dbpedia.org/hash/7c4d6b6c0c3ae83466b162aca5340666c4569720359e41e28915c103a7dae926> ?p ?o }
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- 7c4d6b6c0c3ae83466b162aca5340666c4569720359e41e28915c103a7dae926 first "B.".
- 7c4d6b6c0c3ae83466b162aca5340666c4569720359e41e28915c103a7dae926 isCitedBy Self-refuting_idea.
- 7c4d6b6c0c3ae83466b162aca5340666c4569720359e41e28915c103a7dae926 last "Russell".
- 7c4d6b6c0c3ae83466b162aca5340666c4569720359e41e28915c103a7dae926 location "New York".
- 7c4d6b6c0c3ae83466b162aca5340666c4569720359e41e28915c103a7dae926 page "180".
- 7c4d6b6c0c3ae83466b162aca5340666c4569720359e41e28915c103a7dae926 publisher "Simon and Schuster".
- 7c4d6b6c0c3ae83466b162aca5340666c4569720359e41e28915c103a7dae926 quote "As against solipsism it is to be said, in the first place, that it is psychologically impossible to believe, and is rejected in fact even by those who mean to accept it. I once received a letter from an eminent logician, Mrs. Christine Ladd Franklin, saying that she was a solipsist, and was surprised that there were no others. Coming from a logician and a solipsist, her surprise surprised me.".
- 7c4d6b6c0c3ae83466b162aca5340666c4569720359e41e28915c103a7dae926 title "Human Knowledge: Its Scope and Limits".
- 7c4d6b6c0c3ae83466b162aca5340666c4569720359e41e28915c103a7dae926 year "1948".