Vignaud Pamphlets: Francis Bacon1837 |
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Pagina 340
... practice ; that Sir Thomas More , nearly a century before , had pointedly shown his disapproval of it , and that a judge of Bacon's own time had expressly marked his sense of its impropriety . It is evident , too , that Bacon must have ...
... practice ; that Sir Thomas More , nearly a century before , had pointedly shown his disapproval of it , and that a judge of Bacon's own time had expressly marked his sense of its impropriety . It is evident , too , that Bacon must have ...
Pagina 314
... practice the most barbarous and the most absurd that has ever disgraced jurisprudence , -in a practice of which , in the preceding generation , Elizabeth and her mini- sters had been ashamed , —in a practice which , a few years later ...
... practice the most barbarous and the most absurd that has ever disgraced jurisprudence , -in a practice of which , in the preceding generation , Elizabeth and her mini- sters had been ashamed , —in a practice which , a few years later ...
Pagina 366
... practice . But though every body is constantly performing the process described in the second book of the Novum Organum , some men perform it well , and some perform it ill . Some are led by it to truth , and some to error . It led ...
... practice . But though every body is constantly performing the process described in the second book of the Novum Organum , some men perform it well , and some perform it ill . Some are led by it to truth , and some to error . It led ...
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admit appear attempt attention Bacon believe called cause Chancellor character charges common conduct considered course court discovery Dixon doubt edition effect Elizabeth employed England English Essays Essex evidence facts favour feeling followed Francis gifts give given hand highest House human important inductive influence instances intellect interest James judges judgment justice kind King knowledge known language learning less letters living Lord Campbell manner matter means method mind moral nature never object observation once opinion Parliament person philosophy plays position practice present prove published Queen question readers reason received reference regard remarkable respect seems Shakespeare Spedding theory thing thought tion true truth UNIV whole writings written wrote