| 1834 - 494 Seiten
...number of 20,000 persons, 7789 receive wages, and only 158 pay a rent exceeding four shillings a-week. The same paper stated that there were in the above...consideration of the contents of this paper. EVENING — GKOHGE'S STREET ASSEMBLY ROOMS. In the evening, at 8 o'clock, the general meeting of all the Sections,... | |
| British Association for the Advancement of Science - 1834 - 562 Seiten
...essential rule of its conduct to exclude carefully all opinions from its transactions and publications, — to confine its attention rigorously to facts, —...can be stated numerically and arranged in tables. The first operation of the Society will probably be to subdivide and organize its general council in... | |
| British Association for the Advancement of Science - 1834 - 564 Seiten
...opinions from its transactions and publications,—to confine its attention rigorously to facts,—and, as far as it may be found possible, to facts which can be stated numerically and arranged in tables. The first operation of the Society will probably be to subdivide and organize its general council in... | |
| The London and Westminster Review April-August,1838 - 1838 - 612 Seiten
...opinions from its transactions and publications,—to confine its attention rigorously to facts,—and, as far as it may be found possible, to facts which can be stated numerically and arranged in tables. " The first operation of the Society will probably be to subdivide and organize its general Council... | |
| Thomas Chalmers - 1841 - 348 Seiten
...first, they propose " to confine their atten tion rigorously to facts — and, as far as it may b« found possible, to facts which can be stated numerically and arranged in tables." Now by this exclusion of all which cannot be stated numerically, we venture to affirm that an interdict... | |
| Institute of Actuaries (Great Britain) - 1873 - 508 Seiten
...essential rule of its conduct to exclude carefully all opinions from its transactions and publications, — to confine its attention rigorously to facts, —...can be stated numerically and arranged in tables. " The first operation of the Society will probably be to subdivide and organise its General Council... | |
| Ida H. Stamhuis - 1989 - 312 Seiten
...its transactions and publications — to confine its attention rigorously to facts — and as far as may be found possible, to facts which can be stated numerically and arranged in tables."9 Na een moeilijke start werd in 1838 begonnen met het uitgeven van een eigen tijdschrift,... | |
| Tadao Miyakawa - 1999 - 520 Seiten
...essential rule of its conduct to exclude carefully all opinions from its transactions and publications - to confine its attention rigorously to facts - and,...facts which can be stated numerically and arranged in tables."12 The London Society began with the project of a great questionnaire or interrogatory, which... | |
| Daniel R. Headrick - 2000 - 246 Seiten
...essential rule of its conduct to exclude carefully all opinions from its transactions and publications — to confine its attention rigorously to facts — and,...facts which can be stated numerically and arranged in tables.108 Behind this facade of unsullied objectivity, the founders of the society and others that... | |
| Harro Maas - 2005 - 364 Seiten
...its transactions and publications [and] confine its attention rigorously to facts - and, as far as may be found possible, to facts which can be stated numerically and arranged in tables" (Newmarch 1869, 386). That was it. There followed an enumeration of the classes of facts to which the... | |
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