The London Quarterly Review, Volumen6Theodore Foster, 1812 |
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Página 11
... readers must be well acquainted with the extraordinary fact , that the eye which seems to extend its ken so wide cannot of itself enable us to judge of the distance or magnitude of the nearest object within our horizon . This fact is ...
... readers must be well acquainted with the extraordinary fact , that the eye which seems to extend its ken so wide cannot of itself enable us to judge of the distance or magnitude of the nearest object within our horizon . This fact is ...
Página 15
... readers have seen , that this science does admit of ex- perimental aids ; but admitting , he adds , that all the knowledge we possess of mind is derived from observation solely , it would not therefore follow , that the philosophy of ...
... readers have seen , that this science does admit of ex- perimental aids ; but admitting , he adds , that all the knowledge we possess of mind is derived from observation solely , it would not therefore follow , that the philosophy of ...
Página 19
... readers to Mr. Stewart's animadversions . These were occasioned by an opinion pretty confidently delivered by the Reviewer , that Bacon meditated nothing farther in his Novum Organum , than the advancement of inquiries relating to the ...
... readers to Mr. Stewart's animadversions . These were occasioned by an opinion pretty confidently delivered by the Reviewer , that Bacon meditated nothing farther in his Novum Organum , than the advancement of inquiries relating to the ...
Página 20
... reader against the supposition , that he had nothing else in view but the improvement of physics . - Etiam dubitabit ... readers who are conversant in the more abstract discussions of metaphysical science ; the second , while equally ...
... reader against the supposition , that he had nothing else in view but the improvement of physics . - Etiam dubitabit ... readers who are conversant in the more abstract discussions of metaphysical science ; the second , while equally ...
Página 27
... readers .'- ' It is by the exclu- sive use of some favourite figure , ' he adds , that careless thinkers are gradually led to mistake a simile or distant analogy for a legiti- mate theory . ' " Some late metaphysicians , too easily ...
... readers .'- ' It is by the exclu- sive use of some favourite figure , ' he adds , that careless thinkers are gradually led to mistake a simile or distant analogy for a legiti- mate theory . ' " Some late metaphysicians , too easily ...
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