The philosophical doctrine of the soul, and its separate existence, has nothing to do with this physiological question, but rests on a species of proof altogether different. The Quarterly Review - Page 151820Affichage du livre entier - À propos de ce livre
| Sir William Lawrence - 1819 - 646 pages
...I say, physiologically speaking; and beg you to attend particularly to this qualification: because the theological doctrine of the soul, and its separate existence, has nothing to do with this physiological question, but rests on a species of proof altogether different. These sublime... | |
| Royal Medical and Chirurgical Society of London - 1871 - 434 pages
...I say physiologically speaking, and beg you to attend particularly to this qualification ; because the theological doctrine of the soul, and its separate existence, has nothing to do with this physiological question, but rests on a species of proof altogether different. These sublime... | |
| George Harris - 1876 - 462 pages
...angels, and the souls of men are one and the same substance. • Sir W. Lawrence, however, contends that " the theological doctrine of the soul, and its separate existence, has nothing to do with this psychological question," — the nature of life. — Lectures on Comparative Anatomy, a.... | |
| Helena Petrovna Blavatsky - 1895 - 72 pages
...Sir William Lawrence, the eminent surgeon, declared in his lectures* that: — " The philosophical doctrine of the soul, and its separate existence, has nothing to do with this physiological question, but rests on a species of proof altogether different. These sublime... | |
| Helena Petrovna Blavatsky - 1910 - 72 pages
...instance, Sir William Lawrence, the eminent surgeon, declared in his lectures that: — The philosophical doctrine of the soul, and its separate existence, has nothing to do with this physiological question, but rests on a species of proof altogether different. These sublime... | |
| Helena Petrovna Blavatsky - 1910 - 70 pages
...instance, Sir William Lawrence, the eminent surgeon, declared in his lectures that:— The philosophical doctrine of the soul, and its separate existence, has nothing to do with this physiological question, but rests on a species of proof altogether different. These sublime... | |
| 1820 - 594 pages
...misrepresenting the inferences to which they justly lead, it may not be brought to invalidate those other proofs of the immaterial and immortal nature...soul and its separate existence has nothing to do with this physiological question.' — p. 8. Nothing to do with it! Is he in his senses, or is he insultmg... | |
| 1872 - 734 pages
...us would endorse Lawrence's statement that we know nothing of mind except in connexion with matter, and that " the theological doctrine of the soul and its separate existence has nothing to do with the physiological question, but rests on a species of proof altogether different." That proof... | |
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