The image is clearly a psychical phenomenon, containing a sensible element of which we are conscious; the fundamental faculty of the perception is exerted on it as on a real object, and the immediate results are precisely identical.
I will give one instance in a thousand to prove the innate tendency even in the act of dreaming to transform the image into a real object.
The answer is: Undoubtedly, but only as an ideal, and not as a real object.
At the same time, I cannot say that, by such a definition, I have defined a real object.
Instinct and reason force us to suppose a real object of sensible intuition.
Please note the wording; it assumes that there is the real object, something which stands in a contrasting relation with objects not real or else less real.
On the one hand, the retort of the objector depends upon talking about the real object.
Employ the term "a real object," and the change produced by the activity characteristic of the optical apparatus is of just the same kind as that of the camera lens or that of any other physical agency.
Activity of the necessary force at the right place, may be normally caused by the organ of sense, say the eye, when fixed on a real object, say a candlestick.
In case one, we have a natural sensation converted into a perception of a real object.
When a thought which in any degree apprehends or comprehends a real object, is said to be incorrect, this is as much as to say that it comprises much that is not found in the object itself, and consequently does not coincide with it.
It would be far less accurate to say that knowledge is the correct thought, instead of the living thought of a real object; although, indeed, the former is involved in and inseparable from the latter.
Representation and belief are not completely separated; it is the nature of the image to appear at first as a real object.
Wanting a real object, I evoked through the power of my desires, a phantom, which thenceforth never left me; I made a woman, composed of all the women that I had already seen.
Love-plays, "which differ from the others in that they are not mere exercises, but have in view a real object.
In ordinary perception we tell a real object from an illusion by appealing to the testimony of others.
There is no length or breadth, or color, or before or after, or here or there, and so on except in a real object or thing.
Hence it is called hylic or material intellect, because it is like matter which in itself is nothing actual but is potentially everything, being capable of receiving any form and becoming any real object.
In the absence of a real object, I evoked by the power of my vague desires a phantom that was never to leave me.
If the imagination has to subordinate itself to a real object it ceases in so far to be free.
Hence the more ideal the imagination the farther it gets away from a real object.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "real object" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.