The National Quarterly Review, Volume 2,Nummer 3Pudney & Russell, 1860 |
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Resultaten 6-10 van 48
Pagina 23
... facts , and to extract science from these facts . In commenting on this , Mr. Ellis , one of the editors of the new edition , very forcibly and justly remarks : " In truth , it is a design which cannot be completed , there being no ...
... facts , and to extract science from these facts . In commenting on this , Mr. Ellis , one of the editors of the new edition , very forcibly and justly remarks : " In truth , it is a design which cannot be completed , there being no ...
Pagina 25
... facts to show that the old system had been broken up before Bacon wrote a line . But this detracts nothing from the glory of the great English philosopher , who reduced the chaos to a system , pro- claiming his mission in such words as ...
... facts to show that the old system had been broken up before Bacon wrote a line . But this detracts nothing from the glory of the great English philosopher , who reduced the chaos to a system , pro- claiming his mission in such words as ...
Pagina 27
... fact he has only demonstrated what Bacon had described in plain terms in his Novum Organum . " It should be inquired , " says the philosopher , writing nearly half a century before New- ton was born , " whether there be not a kind of ...
... fact he has only demonstrated what Bacon had described in plain terms in his Novum Organum . " It should be inquired , " says the philosopher , writing nearly half a century before New- ton was born , " whether there be not a kind of ...
Pagina 32
... facts . For instance , what woman has ever done justice to the character and motives of Henry VIII ? In science , women are as much out of their element as in history . As a general thing , their scientific knowledge is cramped and ...
... facts . For instance , what woman has ever done justice to the character and motives of Henry VIII ? In science , women are as much out of their element as in history . As a general thing , their scientific knowledge is cramped and ...
Pagina 46
... fact less disputed than that every civilized nation has its golden age - that in which it produces the best intellectual fruit of which its genius is capable . Those who disagree with each other , on almost all other subjects , yield a ...
... fact less disputed than that every civilized nation has its golden age - that in which it produces the best intellectual fruit of which its genius is capable . Those who disagree with each other , on almost all other subjects , yield a ...
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The National Quarterly Review, Volume 4 Edward Isidore Sears,David Allyn Gorton,Charles H. Woodman Volledige weergave - 1862 |
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