History of the Intellectual Development of Europe, Volumen2Bell, 1864 |
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Página 31
... never produced artists ; religion turned them from the beautiful , and made them soldiers , philosophers , and men of affairs . Splendid flowers and rare exotics ornamented the courtyards and even the inner chambers . Great care was ...
... never produced artists ; religion turned them from the beautiful , and made them soldiers , philosophers , and men of affairs . Splendid flowers and rare exotics ornamented the courtyards and even the inner chambers . Great care was ...
Página 33
... never translated into their own tongue the great But disap- prove of Greek poets , though they so sedulously collected and translated European mythology . the Greek philosophers . Their religious sentiments and se- date character caused ...
... never translated into their own tongue the great But disap- prove of Greek poets , though they so sedulously collected and translated European mythology . the Greek philosophers . Their religious sentiments and se- date character caused ...
Página 36
... never failed to obtain an au- dience in the midst of Arab tents . Around the evening fires in Spain the wandering literati exercised their wonderful pow- ers of Oriental invention , edifying the eager listeners by such narrations as ...
... never failed to obtain an au- dience in the midst of Arab tents . Around the evening fires in Spain the wandering literati exercised their wonderful pow- ers of Oriental invention , edifying the eager listeners by such narrations as ...
Página 39
... never be im- parted to a barbarian . " ments in From the Hindus the Arabs learned arithmetic , especially Their great improve- that valuable invention termed by us the Arabic numerals , but honourably ascribed by them to its proper ...
... never be im- parted to a barbarian . " ments in From the Hindus the Arabs learned arithmetic , especially Their great improve- that valuable invention termed by us the Arabic numerals , but honourably ascribed by them to its proper ...
Página 49
... never to be at rest . If we look at the stars , they seem to be as small as money - pieces ; but mathematical proofs convince us that they are larger than the earth . These and other things are judged by the senses , but rejected by ...
... never to be at rest . If we look at the stars , they seem to be as small as money - pieces ; but mathematical proofs convince us that they are larger than the earth . These and other things are judged by the senses , but rejected by ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
A History of the Intellectual Development of Europe, Volumen2 John William Draper Vista completa - 1914 |
History of the Intellectual Development of Europe (Complete) John William Draper Vista previa limitada - 1903 |
Términos y frases comunes
action advance Age of Faith Age of Reason Alhazen altogether animals appearance Arabs asserted astronomical authority become bishops bodies Boniface brought carbonic carbonic acid cause century cerebrum Christian Church clergy condition Constantinople Copernicus countries Crusades decline determined developement direction discovery doctrine earth ecclesiastical England Europe evidence existence facts force France Galileo ganglia Greek heat heaven heliocentric theory heresy Holy human ideas impression individual influence intellectual Italian Italy Jews King light living manner marsupial material mechanical ment miracle play Mohammedan moral motion movement nations nature nebular hypothesis nervous system never opinion organic forms Papacy Papal passed period philosophical physical planet political pontiff Pope present principle progress Reformation relations religious respecting result Rome Saracens scientific social solar system Spain stars strata succession temperature theology theory things thousand tion transubstantiation true truth universe University of Paris