| Sir James Allan Park - 1787 - 660 páginas
...It is the obfervation of a profound modern hiflorian, that there is an ultimate point of depreffion, as well as of exaltation, from which human affairs naturally return in grefs, and beyond which they their advancement or decline, cafe with refpect to commerce. peated incurfions... | |
| David Hume - 1789 - 474 páginas
...fiupidity and fuperftition ; till the light of ancient fcienceand hiftory had very nearly fuffereda total extinction in all the European nations. BUT there is a point of depreflion , as well as of exaltation , from which human affairs naturally return in a contrary direction... | |
| James Allan Park - 1800 - 690 páginas
...the obfervation of a profound modern hifto- Hume, ran, that there is an ultimate point of deprtllion, as well as of exaltation, from which human affairs naturally return in a contrary progrefs, and beyond which they feldum pafs in their advancement or decline. This was the cafe with... | |
| David Hume - 1807 - 482 páginas
...deeper into ignorance, stupidity, and superstition ; till the light of ancient science and history had very nearly suffered a total extinction in all the...return in a contrary direction, and beyond which they seldom pass either in their advancement or decline. The period in which the people of Christendom were... | |
| James Allan Park - 1809 - 924 páginas
...^ 's tne obfervation of a profound modern hiftorian, that there is an ultimate point of dcpreffion, as well as of exaltation, from which human affairs naturally return in a contrary progrefs, and beyond which they feldom pafs in their advancement or decline. This was the cafe with... | |
| David Hume - 1810 - 514 páginas
...deeper into ignorance, stupidity, and superstition; till the light of ancient science and history had very nearly suffered a total extinction in all the...return in a contrary direction, and beyond which they seldom pass CH.VP. either in their advancement or decline. The period iu XXIII. wn ich the people of... | |
| William Robertson - 1812 - 526 páginas
...to the obfervation of an elegant and profound hiftorian% there is an ultimate point of depreffion, as well as of exaltation, from which human affairs naturally return in a conand manners * )»gin to trary progrefs, and beyond which they never pafs either in their advancement... | |
| David Benedict - 1813 - 624 páginas
...precedents, and could not be taxed with even the paltry plea of novelty. " There is," says Hume, "an ultimate point of depression, as well as of exaltation, from...which human affairs naturally return in a contrary progress, and beyond which they seldom pass, either in advancement or decline." The German peasants... | |
| William Robertson - 1817 - 366 páginas
...belief. But, according to the observation of an elegant and profound historian *, there is an ultimate point of depression, as well as of exaltation, from...which- human affairs naturally return in a contrary progress, and beyond which they never pass either in their advancement or decline. When defects, either... | |
| James Allan Park - 1817 - 848 páginas
...ofVcontention and tumult. It is the observation of a profound modern historian, that there is an ultimate point of depression, as well as of exaltation, from...which human affairs naturally return in a contrary progress, and beyond which they seldom pass in their advancement or decline. This was the case with... | |
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