The London Quarterly Review, Volumen6Theodore Foster, 1812 |
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... kind , which is not given to politics or polite litera- ture , is wholly engrossed by the more brilliant and profitable pur- suits of physical science . The study of the mind seems to be no longer thought in any degree necessary to the ...
... kind , which is not given to politics or polite litera- ture , is wholly engrossed by the more brilliant and profitable pur- suits of physical science . The study of the mind seems to be no longer thought in any degree necessary to the ...
Página 5
... kind of connexion among our thoughts , an as- sociation , what difficulty is there in showing that all the phenome- na of mind are cases of the association of ideas ? But what ad- vantage , ' continues Mr. Stewart , ' do we reap from ...
... kind of connexion among our thoughts , an as- sociation , what difficulty is there in showing that all the phenome- na of mind are cases of the association of ideas ? But what ad- vantage , ' continues Mr. Stewart , ' do we reap from ...
Página 7
... kind , would be utterly unaccountable , were it true , as the Reviewer maintains , that all men have equal knowledge of all the operations of their minds . Without going back to those dark and unscien- tific ages , when false ...
... kind , would be utterly unaccountable , were it true , as the Reviewer maintains , that all men have equal knowledge of all the operations of their minds . Without going back to those dark and unscien- tific ages , when false ...
Página 8
... kind in all ? If we all know , abso- lutely , every thing that can be known about the laws which regu- late our intellectual operations , how comes it that there is ever any hesitation , or any difference of opinion as to the question ...
... kind in all ? If we all know , abso- lutely , every thing that can be known about the laws which regu- late our intellectual operations , how comes it that there is ever any hesitation , or any difference of opinion as to the question ...
Página 10
... kind of analysis , the Reviewer 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 ...
... kind of analysis , the Reviewer 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 ...
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