The London Quarterly Review, Volume 6Theodore Foster, 1812 |
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Page 7
... appears to us , we must say , to be nothing less than absurd ; and has led the critic into incon- sistencies which all his ingenuity has not been able to veil . The epithets of important ' and ' valuable , ' so liberally bestowed upon ...
... appears to us , we must say , to be nothing less than absurd ; and has led the critic into incon- sistencies which all his ingenuity has not been able to veil . The epithets of important ' and ' valuable , ' so liberally bestowed upon ...
Page 10
... appears to have conceived very indistinct and inadequate notions . He thinks that there is nothing equivalent to analysis in any process which we can apply to the mind , because there is no process which enables us to subject its powers ...
... appears to have conceived very indistinct and inadequate notions . He thinks that there is nothing equivalent to analysis in any process which we can apply to the mind , because there is no process which enables us to subject its powers ...
Page 11
... appears to be the case , how can he with any sort of consistency deny that the meta- physical inquirer may often be able , by a more correct analysis of intellectual phenomena , to make interesting additions to the phi- losophy of the ...
... appears to be the case , how can he with any sort of consistency deny that the meta- physical inquirer may often be able , by a more correct analysis of intellectual phenomena , to make interesting additions to the phi- losophy of the ...
Page 25
... appears to me , ' he adds , that to appeal to etymology in a philosophical argument ( excepting , perhaps , in those cases where the word itself is of philosophical origin ) is altogether nugatory ; and can serve , at the best , to ...
... appears to me , ' he adds , that to appeal to etymology in a philosophical argument ( excepting , perhaps , in those cases where the word itself is of philosophical origin ) is altogether nugatory ; and can serve , at the best , to ...
Page 39
The tide of popular opinion , indeed , appears , at length , to be ef- fectually turned , and many indications concur to shew , that the in- dignant spirit of resentment , which has burst forth in the Spanish peninsula , is with ...
The tide of popular opinion , indeed , appears , at length , to be ef- fectually turned , and many indications concur to shew , that the in- dignant spirit of resentment , which has burst forth in the Spanish peninsula , is with ...
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