The Book of Nature, Volumen3Longman, Rees, Orme, Brown, and Green, 1828 |
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Página 59
... desire we feel of future being is the true and natural impulse of a high - born This lecture was delivered during the period of the French Revolution . and inextinguishable principle : and that the blow which prostrates DURATION OF THE ...
... desire we feel of future being is the true and natural impulse of a high - born This lecture was delivered during the period of the French Revolution . and inextinguishable principle : and that the blow which prostrates DURATION OF THE ...
Página 84
... desire to be acquainted with , till debauched in their adven- ture with original sin , will no longer be able to cheat us , we shall see into the whole process of transubstantiation , and though we behold nothing in matter , we shall ...
... desire to be acquainted with , till debauched in their adven- ture with original sin , will no longer be able to cheat us , we shall see into the whole process of transubstantiation , and though we behold nothing in matter , we shall ...
Página 100
... desire of communicating , and those possessed by others he feels an equal desire of diving into . But ideas in themselves are incommunicable : he requires here , as in the case of sensible objects , a circulating medium by which their ...
... desire of communicating , and those possessed by others he feels an equal desire of diving into . But ideas in themselves are incommunicable : he requires here , as in the case of sensible objects , a circulating medium by which their ...
Página 121
... desire . But it has somehow or other happened , as we have already seen , that there have been a few wise and grave men , and of great learning , talents , and moral excellence , in different periods of the world , who have had a ...
... desire . But it has somehow or other happened , as we have already seen , that there have been a few wise and grave men , and of great learning , talents , and moral excellence , in different periods of the world , who have had a ...
Página 124
... desire . He allowed a doubt upon every thing for the very purpose of removing it by direct proofs . He began , there- fore , as we have already seen , by doubting of his own existence : and , as we have also seen , he made sad work of ...
... desire . He allowed a doubt upon every thing for the very purpose of removing it by direct proofs . He began , there- fore , as we have already seen , by doubting of his own existence : and , as we have also seen , he made sad work of ...
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Términos y frases comunes
action animal appears Aristotle beauty behold believe Bishop Berkeley Bishop Butler body brain called Cartes character Charles Bell colour common sense connexion consequently constitution Deity derived desire distinct divine doctrine doubt Dugald Stewart Epicurus equally Essay existence external objects faculties fear feeling Fingal Gaul genius Greek happiness heart hence human hypothesis imagination immaterial important innate ideas instances instinct intelligence intuitive intuitive knowledge judgment kind knowledge language Lect lecture Locke Malebranche mankind material matter means ment mental mind moral nature never opinion organ passions PATHOGNOMY peculiar peculiarly perceive perception perhaps phantasms philosophers physiognomy physiologists Plato pleasure poetry poets possessed present principle produced proof propensity prove Pyrrho quadrupeds qualities quently racter reason Reid resemblance retributive justice says sensation soul Spurzheim sublime supposed taste temperament term theosophy thing thou tion truth virtue whole words