The Port FolioEditor and Asbury Dickens, 1815 |
Z wnętrza książki
Wyniki 1 - 3 z 84
Strona 25
... cause and effect . Night invariably precedes day , and day invariably follows night . Is night the cause of day , and day the effect of night ? Yes , if T. C.'s universal and incontrovertible maxim be true . When a stroke of a sword ...
... cause and effect . Night invariably precedes day , and day invariably follows night . Is night the cause of day , and day the effect of night ? Yes , if T. C.'s universal and incontrovertible maxim be true . When a stroke of a sword ...
Strona 26
... causes gra- vitation ? prove it to be a cause operating from without ? You can- not . Then it must be a cause from within . Now in T. C.'s vo- cabulary , the cause ab intra is synonymous with sensation and volition . Hence clocks are ...
... causes gra- vitation ? prove it to be a cause operating from without ? You can- not . Then it must be a cause from within . Now in T. C.'s vo- cabulary , the cause ab intra is synonymous with sensation and volition . Hence clocks are ...
Strona 41
... cause . and effect . Night invariably precedes day , and day invariably follows night . Is night the cause of day , and day the effect of night ? Yes , if T. C.'s universal and incontrovertible maxim be true . When a stroke of a sword ...
... cause . and effect . Night invariably precedes day , and day invariably follows night . Is night the cause of day , and day the effect of night ? Yes , if T. C.'s universal and incontrovertible maxim be true . When a stroke of a sword ...
Inne wydania - Wyświetl wszystko
Kluczowe wyrazy i wyrażenia
Aden admiration agreeable American ancient animals appear arms army Atalantis Ausonius beauty Botherum British called Canaan Canaanites captain cause Chaldee character colours command degree delight doubt earth Edinburgh Review enemy England English English language fame favour feel fire fort Erie French genius gentleman give glory Gratian heart Hebrew honour human Iago Irish language island labour land language learned light literary literature lived manner means ment merit military mind moral nation nature never night object observation occasion officer opinion original passage peace perhaps Phenicians pistil plant Plautus pleasure poet PORT FOLIO possess present racter readers remarks respect Sackett's Harbour sensibility sensient Shakspeare Sophocles soul spirit supposed talents taste thee thing thou Tibullus tion troops truth vegetable virtue Voltaire voluntarity whole words writers young