The London Quarterly Review, Volumen6Theodore Foster, 1812 |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 100
Página 7
... appears to us , we must say , to be nothing less than absurd ; and has led the critic into incon- sistencies which all his ingenuity has not been able to veil . The epithets of important ' and ' valuable , ' so liberally bestowed upon ...
... appears to us , we must say , to be nothing less than absurd ; and has led the critic into incon- sistencies which all his ingenuity has not been able to veil . The epithets of important ' and ' valuable , ' so liberally bestowed upon ...
Página 10
... appears to have conceived very indistinct and inadequate notions . He thinks that there is nothing equivalent to analysis in any process which we can apply to the mind , because there is no process which enables us to subject its powers ...
... appears to have conceived very indistinct and inadequate notions . He thinks that there is nothing equivalent to analysis in any process which we can apply to the mind , because there is no process which enables us to subject its powers ...
Página 11
... appears to be the case , how can he with any sort of consistency deny that the meta- physical inquirer may often be able , by a more correct analysis of intellectual phenomena , to make interesting additions to the phi- losophy of the ...
... appears to be the case , how can he with any sort of consistency deny that the meta- physical inquirer may often be able , by a more correct analysis of intellectual phenomena , to make interesting additions to the phi- losophy of the ...
Página 25
... appears to me , ' he adds , that to appeal to etymology in a philosophical argument ( excepting , perhaps , in those cases where the word itself is of philosophical origin ) is altogether nugatory ; and can serve , at the best , to ...
... appears to me , ' he adds , that to appeal to etymology in a philosophical argument ( excepting , perhaps , in those cases where the word itself is of philosophical origin ) is altogether nugatory ; and can serve , at the best , to ...
Página 39
The tide of popular opinion , indeed , appears , at length , to be ef- fectually turned , and many indications concur to shew , that the in- dignant spirit of resentment , which has burst forth in the Spanish peninsula , is with ...
The tide of popular opinion , indeed , appears , at length , to be ef- fectually turned , and many indications concur to shew , that the in- dignant spirit of resentment , which has burst forth in the Spanish peninsula , is with ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Términos y frases comunes
afford Anthony Wood appears army Batavia beauty believe Bell Bishop boys Brahman Buonaparte called Calvinistic Captain Krusenstern cause character Christ Christians church conscription divine doctrines Dutch duty effect England English equally established Faber fact faith father favour feelings force France French Hindoos Holy Office honour human Hyder important India infanticide Inquisition interest Ireland island Java Jews knowledge labour Lancaster Lancaster's language letters Lord Carhampton Lord Charlemont Madras mankind manner means ment merit mind moral Mysore nation nature never object observation occasion officers opinion original perhaps persons philosophical Portugal possession practice present principles produced profession racter readers reason religion remarkable respect Ross Cuthbert says scripture seems Seringapatam shew Spain spirit Stewart Stonehenge supposed taste thing tides tion truth whole words writer