The London Quarterly Review, Volume 6Theodore Foster, 1812 |
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Page 5
... seems to have flattered him- self that he had resolved into one single law , all the various phe- nomena , both intellectual and moral , of the human mind . ' When it is once determined to call every thing of which we are conscious , an ...
... seems to have flattered him- self that he had resolved into one single law , all the various phe- nomena , both intellectual and moral , of the human mind . ' When it is once determined to call every thing of which we are conscious , an ...
Page 6
tigation . The public seems already sufficiently disposed to ne- glect if not to undervalue it ; and if the idea should prevail that it has nothing either new or useful to communicate , it is pretty clear that all remaining curiosity ...
tigation . The public seems already sufficiently disposed to ne- glect if not to undervalue it ; and if the idea should prevail that it has nothing either new or useful to communicate , it is pretty clear that all remaining curiosity ...
Page 15
... seems , at first view , fitted only to gratify a speculative curiosity ; and which , in its infancy , served to amuse the leisure of the Chaldean shepherd ? To those who have imbibed the spirit of Bacon's philosophy , it is su ...
... seems , at first view , fitted only to gratify a speculative curiosity ; and which , in its infancy , served to amuse the leisure of the Chaldean shepherd ? To those who have imbibed the spirit of Bacon's philosophy , it is su ...
Page 16
... seems to have thought it indispensible to the philosophical character to view it in that light . A l'égard de la métaphysique , says he , il paroit que Newton ne l'avoit pas entièrement négligée . Il étoit trop grand philosophe pour ne ...
... seems to have thought it indispensible to the philosophical character to view it in that light . A l'égard de la métaphysique , says he , il paroit que Newton ne l'avoit pas entièrement négligée . Il étoit trop grand philosophe pour ne ...
Page 18
... seem to have duly attended to the fact , that the whole of philosophy has been purified of fundamental errors , and ... seems , as Mr. Bentham has remarked in one of his profound works up- on the subject of legislation , to be as ...
... seem to have duly attended to the fact , that the whole of philosophy has been purified of fundamental errors , and ... seems , as Mr. Bentham has remarked in one of his profound works up- on the subject of legislation , to be as ...
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