Essays on Historical TruthLongmans, 1871 - 468 páginas |
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Página 1
... things . Whatever difference of opinion may exist respecting the value of history , there can be no difference of opinion about the value of historical truth . For historical truth will be found to be nearly allied to philosophical ...
... things . Whatever difference of opinion may exist respecting the value of history , there can be no difference of opinion about the value of historical truth . For historical truth will be found to be nearly allied to philosophical ...
Página 11
... thing to be done ; and as he shares with only one other name the honour of having given his impress to the whole character of the modern speculative movement , the consequences of his error have been most calamitous . All reflecting ...
... thing to be done ; and as he shares with only one other name the honour of having given his impress to the whole character of the modern speculative movement , the consequences of his error have been most calamitous . All reflecting ...
Página 13
... thing as historical truth . In regard to the question whether the main agent in the progress of mankind is their intellectual or their moral development , M. Comte regarded the intellectual as the main element , and Mr. Buckle regarded ...
... thing as historical truth . In regard to the question whether the main agent in the progress of mankind is their intellectual or their moral development , M. Comte regarded the intellectual as the main element , and Mr. Buckle regarded ...
Página 24
... things which always cha- racterises the infancy of the human mind . . . . Meta- physics itself is the transition stage from theology to positive science ; but a secondary transition is also ne- cessary , as we see by the fact - a ...
... things which always cha- racterises the infancy of the human mind . . . . Meta- physics itself is the transition stage from theology to positive science ; but a secondary transition is also ne- cessary , as we see by the fact - a ...
Página 34
... things ? And how do the necessary relations which flow from the nature of things differ from those relations which originate in other sources ? The terms of the definition are incomparably more ob- scure than the term which it affects ...
... things ? And how do the necessary relations which flow from the nature of things differ from those relations which originate in other sources ? The terms of the definition are incomparably more ob- scure than the term which it affects ...
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Términos y frases comunes
Alexander Ruthven Amos Amy Robsart appears Author Bacon brother brought to Light Cæsar called character Charles Coke Commonwealth Comte conclusion Council Countess Countess of Somerset court Cromwell Crown 8vo death deponer deposition Earl of Gowrie Earl of Northampton Edinburgh England English essay evidence examination facts gallery chamber Gowrie Conspiracy Gowrie House Gowrie's Hobbes Hobbes's Hume Hume's Ibid idea Illustrations J. S. Mill James Mill John Justice King James King James's king's letters Leviathan Lobell Logan London Lord Macaulay Majesty Mayerne metaphysical Mill's mind murder narrative observed opinion Overbury's Oyer of Poisoning Paper Office parliament passage persons philosophy Pitcairn plot political Post 8vo Prince Henry proved quoted Ramsay reason remarkable Restalrig Robert says Second Edition Sir Thomas Erskine Sir Thomas Monson Sir Thomas Overbury Sir Walter Scott Sprot story Stuart tion trial Truth brought Weldon William witness Woodcuts words writer
Pasajes populares
Página 107 - That gravity should be innate, inherent, and essential to matter, so that one body may act upon another at a distance, through a vacuum, without the mediation of...