The London Quarterly Review, Volume 6Theodore Foster, 1812 |
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Page 11
... immediately perceived by the eye , in what manner do we come to acquire the power of judging of distances and magni- tudes by means of that organ ? Bishop Berkeley was the first who explained the nature of this wonderful process , and ...
... immediately perceived by the eye , in what manner do we come to acquire the power of judging of distances and magni- tudes by means of that organ ? Bishop Berkeley was the first who explained the nature of this wonderful process , and ...
Page 22
... immediately or mediately from the senses ; but they all carried this principle to an extravagant length ; aud from holding that the mind is originally furnished with ideas whose existence has no sort of dependence upon any information ...
... immediately or mediately from the senses ; but they all carried this principle to an extravagant length ; aud from holding that the mind is originally furnished with ideas whose existence has no sort of dependence upon any information ...
Page 49
... immediately rekindle in Europe the war which he had so lately extinguished , and he wanted an army to command , and a field for enterprise . Perhaps , as our author hints , he wish- ed to expend a certain number of officers who , though ...
... immediately rekindle in Europe the war which he had so lately extinguished , and he wanted an army to command , and a field for enterprise . Perhaps , as our author hints , he wish- ed to expend a certain number of officers who , though ...
Page 69
... immediately succeeded the plain lancet arch , distinguished by slender and numerous detached columns , by arches highly pointed , and by plain , but light and elegant groinings knit together at their intersection by carved keystones ...
... immediately succeeded the plain lancet arch , distinguished by slender and numerous detached columns , by arches highly pointed , and by plain , but light and elegant groinings knit together at their intersection by carved keystones ...
Page 75
... immediately beneath the moon , and at the antipodes of that re- gion , at the same time ; so that the moon attracts one side of the globe , and repels the other . ' The sun and moon , in conjunction or opposition , are required to ...
... immediately beneath the moon , and at the antipodes of that re- gion , at the same time ; so that the moon attracts one side of the globe , and repels the other . ' The sun and moon , in conjunction or opposition , are required to ...
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