The Quarterly Review, Band 159William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, Sir John Murray (IV), Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle), George Walter Prothero John Murray, 1885 |
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Seite 160
... nature are most flagrantly unfair . He was no master of the great science of human nature , ' says Macaulay . ' He had studied . not the genus man , but the species Londoner . Nobody was ever so thoroughly conversant with all the forms ...
... nature are most flagrantly unfair . He was no master of the great science of human nature , ' says Macaulay . ' He had studied . not the genus man , but the species Londoner . Nobody was ever so thoroughly conversant with all the forms ...
Seite 366
... nature the symmetry and order , on which science rests , is clearly not the same thing as to read it in nature . Yet unless it is in nature as well as in our thinking , that is to say , unless it is true objectively as well as ...
... nature the symmetry and order , on which science rests , is clearly not the same thing as to read it in nature . Yet unless it is in nature as well as in our thinking , that is to say , unless it is true objectively as well as ...
Seite 374
... Nature at length had a soul . ' In Bacon's language the Interpretatio Naturæ is the Regnum Hominis . If man can interpret Nature , he is greater than Nature ; if Nature can be interpreted , it is a rational unity in actual harmony with ...
... Nature at length had a soul . ' In Bacon's language the Interpretatio Naturæ is the Regnum Hominis . If man can interpret Nature , he is greater than Nature ; if Nature can be interpreted , it is a rational unity in actual harmony with ...
Inhalt
London 1884 | 450 |
Hansards Parliamentary Debates 18821884 | 480 |
And other Works | 499 |
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