The British Quarterly Review, 28. ciltHenry Allon Hodder and Stoughton, 1858 |
Kitabın içinden
100 sonuçtan 6-10 arası sonuçlar
Sayfa 19
... mind after this manner , never so dealt with them . They both knew , indeed , that it is only through a knowledge of our own mind that our knowledge of mind at all becomes possible . But such men have always known that in the condition ...
... mind after this manner , never so dealt with them . They both knew , indeed , that it is only through a knowledge of our own mind that our knowledge of mind at all becomes possible . But such men have always known that in the condition ...
Sayfa 20
... mind ; but the mind , as we know it , is lodged in a body , and as a matter of history it is awakened to its first ideas , in regard to those objects , by the senses , though the knowledge which thus begins in ' sensation ' is taken up ...
... mind ; but the mind , as we know it , is lodged in a body , and as a matter of history it is awakened to its first ideas , in regard to those objects , by the senses , though the knowledge which thus begins in ' sensation ' is taken up ...
Sayfa 21
... mind is more occupied with vast general laws , real or supposed , than with individual responsibility . It is a tendency of this sort which , in the history of superstition , has made so much of the elemental powers of nature , and so ...
... mind is more occupied with vast general laws , real or supposed , than with individual responsibility . It is a tendency of this sort which , in the history of superstition , has made so much of the elemental powers of nature , and so ...
Sayfa 25
... mind , to bolster up its own sickly theories , should be disposed in this manner to attribute everything elevated in the history of our nature , not merely to one simple quality , but to a quality destitute of all nobleness ? Every one ...
... mind , to bolster up its own sickly theories , should be disposed in this manner to attribute everything elevated in the history of our nature , not merely to one simple quality , but to a quality destitute of all nobleness ? Every one ...
Sayfa 26
... mind , and this is one of them . The extravagance to which a disposition to reason after this manner has led Mr. Buckle is almost incredible . For let it be for a moment ceded to him that knowledge is more powerful ' as an agent of ...
... mind , and this is one of them . The extravagance to which a disposition to reason after this manner has led Mr. Buckle is almost incredible . For let it be for a moment ceded to him that knowledge is more powerful ' as an agent of ...
Diğer baskılar - Tümünü görüntüle
Sık kullanılan terimler ve kelime öbekleri
almanac ancient Anglo-Catholicism Anne Boleyn appears believe Buckle Canterbury Hall century character Christ Christian Church civil Comte course Cromwell Ctesias Disraeli divine doctrine doubt ecclesiastical England English Erastianism existence fact faith favour feeling France French Froude give Government Guizot hand Henry Henry VIII heresy Herodotus honour House of Commons human idea India John kalendars king labour laws Lollards Lord Lord John Russell Louis Louis XVIII matter means ment mind minister Montaigne moral nation nature never opinion Oude Parliament party passage person philosophy political possessed present principles question reader Reformer Reformer's regard relation religion religious remarks revolution Scripture seems Shirley Sir James Outram society spirit Talleyrand Talookdars Testament theology theory things thought tion true truth Uncial Vaughan volume Whig whole words writings Wycliffe Wycliffe's