The Book of Nature, Volumen3Longman, Rees, Orme, Brown, and Green, 1828 |
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Página 3
... principle and properties of matter , both under an unorganized and under an organic modification and although I have endeavoured to do my utmost to put you in possession of the clearest and most valuable facts which are known upon these ...
... principle and properties of matter , both under an unorganized and under an organic modification and although I have endeavoured to do my utmost to put you in possession of the clearest and most valuable facts which are known upon these ...
Página 7
... principle , the latter can have NO PLACE of exist- ence , it can exist NO WHEre , for WHERE , or PLACE , is an idea that cannot be separated from the idea of extension : and hence the meta- physical immaterialists of modern times freely ...
... principle , the latter can have NO PLACE of exist- ence , it can exist NO WHEre , for WHERE , or PLACE , is an idea that cannot be separated from the idea of extension : and hence the meta- physical immaterialists of modern times freely ...
Página 9
... PRINCIPLE OF EVIL running coeval with the immutable PRINCIPLE of good ; who , in working upon it , had to contend with all its essential defects , and has made the best of it in his power . But the moment we admit that . matter is a ...
... PRINCIPLE OF EVIL running coeval with the immutable PRINCIPLE of good ; who , in working upon it , had to contend with all its essential defects , and has made the best of it in his power . But the moment we admit that . matter is a ...
Página 15
... principle of life itself ; that wonderful principle equally common to plants and animals , which maintains the individuality , connects organ with organ , resists the laws of chemical change or putrefac- tion , which instantly commence ...
... principle of life itself ; that wonderful principle equally common to plants and animals , which maintains the individuality , connects organ with organ , resists the laws of chemical change or putrefac- tion , which instantly commence ...
Página 16
... principle that so strikingly separates organized from unorganized matter ? that , as I have observed on a former occasion , from the first moment it begins to act infuses energy into the lifeless clod ; draws forth form , and order ...
... principle that so strikingly separates organized from unorganized matter ? that , as I have observed on a former occasion , from the first moment it begins to act infuses energy into the lifeless clod ; draws forth form , and order ...
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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