| John Stuart Mill - 1850 - 616 páginas
...they may, so far as we are concerned, be regarded as infinite. There is no impropriety in saying that of these two classifications, the one answers to a much more radical distinction in the things them* selves, than the other does. And if any one even chooses to say that the one classification is... | |
| John Stuart Mill - 1858 - 666 páginas
...concerned, be regarded as infinite. There is no impropriety in saying that of these two classifications, one answers to a much more radical distinction in the things themselves, than the other does. And if any one even chooses to say that the one classification is made by nature, the other by us for... | |
| James McCosh - 1870 - 252 páginas
...which were by no means implied in those we previously knew." " There is no impropriety in saying that of these two classifications, the one answers to a...distinction in the things themselves than the other does, etc." (Mill's Logic, B. I, C. VII.) 128. These groupings of nature, while they are a help, are at the... | |
| James McCosh - 1873 - 244 páginas
...which were by no means implied in those we previously knew." " There is no impropriety in saying that of these two classifications, the one answers to a...distinction in the things themselves than the other does, etc." (Mill's Logic, BI, C. VII.) 128. These groupings of nature, while they are a help, are at the... | |
| James McCosh - 1881 - 272 páginas
...which were by no means im plied in those we previously knew." " There is no impropriety in Baying that of these two classifications, the one answers to a...distinction in the things themselves than the other does, etc." (Mill's Logic, BI, C. VII.) 128. These groupings of nature, while they are a Jielp, are at the... | |
| James McCosh - 1881 - 252 páginas
...which were by no means im plied in those we previously knew." " There is no impropriety in saying that of these two classifications, the one answers to a...distinction in the things themselves than the other does, etc." (Mill's Logic, B. L, C. VII.) 128. These groupings of nature, while they are a help, are at the... | |
| Noah Porter - 1886 - 716 páginas
...previously knew." "There is no impropiiety in saying, that of these two classifications, the one answers to much more radical distinction in the things themselves, than the other does." "Now these dosses, distinguished by unknown multitudes of properties, and not solely by a few determinate... | |
| John Locke - 1894 - 588 páginas
...generations have not exhausted the common properties of animals or of plants, of sulphuror of phosphorus. ... Of these two classifications the one answers to a...distinction in the things themselves than the other does. . . . Now these classes, distinguished by unknown multitudes of properties, and not solely by a few... | |
| John Locke - 1894 - 516 páginas
...properties of an1mals or of plants, of sulpf1uror of phosphorus. . . . Of these two classif1cations the one answers to a much more radical distinction in the things themselves than the other does. . . . Now these classes, distinguished by unknown multitudes of properties, and not solely by a few... | |
| Leslie Stephen - 1900 - 542 páginas
...belief and whatever consequences may follow from having that belief.1 One classification, as he says, ' answers to a much more radical distinction in the things themselves, than the other does ' ; and a man may thus fairly say, if he chooses, that one classification is made ' by Nature ' and... | |
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