id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt 16833 Mill, John Stuart Auguste Comte and Positivism .txt text/plain 53016 1788 51 M. Comte claims no originality for this conception of human knowledge. Comte's view of the evolution of human thought, as a when the real character of the positive laws of nature had come to be in general laws, the positive spirit, having now no longer need of the whatever number of different abstract sciences these laws may belong. Comte in the expression, that concrete science relates to Beings, or science, considered as to their relation to the general sum of human philosophic point of view leads us to conceive the study of natural laws Comte's conception of Positive Philosophy, thought that the proper mode of constructing a positive Social Science must be by deducing it from the general laws of human nature, using the evidence, contradicts the established general laws of human nature; if Comte, regard the Grand Etre, Humanity, or Mankind, as composed, in the ./cache/16833.txt ./txt/16833.txt