The British Quarterly Review, 28. ciltHenry Allon Hodder and Stoughton, 1858 |
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59 sonuçtan 1-5 arası sonuçlar
Sayfa 16
... equally in cold coun- tries , and accounts almost everything as being in their hands even in the most temperate regions . Everywhere the forces of nature seem to be not so much for man as against him . The two come together , not so ...
... equally in cold coun- tries , and accounts almost everything as being in their hands even in the most temperate regions . Everywhere the forces of nature seem to be not so much for man as against him . The two come together , not so ...
Sayfa 28
... equally so with those of Greece and Rome . It will be in vain for Mr. Buckle to say it happened from this cause or that , for upon his principle there should not have been any causes in existence equal to such effects . All that those ...
... equally so with those of Greece and Rome . It will be in vain for Mr. Buckle to say it happened from this cause or that , for upon his principle there should not have been any causes in existence equal to such effects . All that those ...
Sayfa 44
... equally true of the most paltry ornament , -the subsistence of nations , and the poorest frippery that adorns an idol to delude the vulgar ; and it is equally true of every kind of material object which in the most advanced civilization ...
... equally true of the most paltry ornament , -the subsistence of nations , and the poorest frippery that adorns an idol to delude the vulgar ; and it is equally true of every kind of material object which in the most advanced civilization ...
Sayfa 45
... equally proved by their deductions and our observations ; and we shall first advert to the circumstances which appear to have led inquirers in the two countries to take a different course . When the science was first cultivated , the ...
... equally proved by their deductions and our observations ; and we shall first advert to the circumstances which appear to have led inquirers in the two countries to take a different course . When the science was first cultivated , the ...
Sayfa 55
... equally parts of nature . The whole perceptible universe is nature . If the term be re- stricted to the material world it is equally inaccurate , for without it life is not conceivable . From first to last the powers of nature We can ...
... equally parts of nature . The whole perceptible universe is nature . If the term be re- stricted to the material world it is equally inaccurate , for without it life is not conceivable . From first to last the powers of nature We can ...
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