The London Quarterly Review, Volumen6Theodore Foster, 1812 |
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Página 2
... equally applied to the repulsive and visionary speculations of the schoolmen . In the ancient systems of Greece , the philosophy of the mind was classed among the branches of physical science ; and as the laws of mind are as much parts ...
... equally applied to the repulsive and visionary speculations of the schoolmen . In the ancient systems of Greece , the philosophy of the mind was classed among the branches of physical science ; and as the laws of mind are as much parts ...
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... equally unscientific in the design , and uninteresting in the execution ; destitute , at once , of the sober charms of truth , and of those imposing attractions which fancy , when united to taste , can lend to fiction . In consequence ...
... equally unscientific in the design , and uninteresting in the execution ; destitute , at once , of the sober charms of truth , and of those imposing attractions which fancy , when united to taste , can lend to fiction . In consequence ...
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... equally in its scope from the pneumatologi- cal discussions concerning the seat of the soul , and the possibility or the impossibility of its bearing any relation to space or to time , which so long gave employment to the subtility of ...
... equally in its scope from the pneumatologi- cal discussions concerning the seat of the soul , and the possibility or the impossibility of its bearing any relation to space or to time , which so long gave employment to the subtility of ...
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... equally applicable , and equally promised advancement to both . In the article alluded to , it was on the other hand argued , that induction can only be ap- plied to the study of the mind in the way of observation , -that observation ...
... equally applicable , and equally promised advancement to both . In the article alluded to , it was on the other hand argued , that induction can only be ap- plied to the study of the mind in the way of observation , -that observation ...
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... equally and perfectly known to every one . We may here observe , that the disputes and uncertainties to which we have alluded , give no ground to the opinion which we often hear from the superficial , that there is nothing satisfactory ...
... equally and perfectly known to every one . We may here observe , that the disputes and uncertainties to which we have alluded , give no ground to the opinion which we often hear from the superficial , that there is nothing satisfactory ...
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