The London Quarterly Review, Volume 6Theodore Foster, 1812 |
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Page 6
... give names to phenomena perfectly notorious to all mankind . Mr. Stewart here largely controverts all those positions , and vindi- cates the claims of the philosophy of the mind to increase both our knowledge and our power , in terms to ...
... give names to phenomena perfectly notorious to all mankind . Mr. Stewart here largely controverts all those positions , and vindi- cates the claims of the philosophy of the mind to increase both our knowledge and our power , in terms to ...
Page 8
... give no ground to the opinion which we often hear from the superficial , that there is nothing satisfactory in the science of the mind , -that all its principles are unsettled , - and that there is no hope of farther light . The ...
... give no ground to the opinion which we often hear from the superficial , that there is nothing satisfactory in the science of the mind , -that all its principles are unsettled , - and that there is no hope of farther light . The ...
Page 29
... gives motion to a puppet . If , for a mo- ment , I am carried along by their theories , of human knowledge , and of human life , I seem to myself to be admitted behind the curtain of what I had once conceived to be a magnificent theatre ...
... gives motion to a puppet . If , for a mo- ment , I am carried along by their theories , of human knowledge , and of human life , I seem to myself to be admitted behind the curtain of what I had once conceived to be a magnificent theatre ...
Page 36
... give precisely the infor- mation which its title promises ; but it contains many exquisite ob- servations on the pleasures of imagination , and an animated ex- hortation to mix their cultivation with the graver pursuits of science and ...
... give precisely the infor- mation which its title promises ; but it contains many exquisite ob- servations on the pleasures of imagination , and an animated ex- hortation to mix their cultivation with the graver pursuits of science and ...
Page 40
... gives of him ; or whether he meant only to draw a bigoted and canting confes- sor , without much solicitude as to the fidelity of the individual re- semblance . With this exception , we are not disposed to question the dramatic truth of ...
... gives of him ; or whether he meant only to draw a bigoted and canting confes- sor , without much solicitude as to the fidelity of the individual re- semblance . With this exception , we are not disposed to question the dramatic truth of ...
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