| Samuel Latham Mitchill - 1802 - 514 páginas
...shall not we unite our efforts to fill up that dreary blank left in science by the ancients ? And ' as man, who is the servant and interpreter of nature, can act and understand no farther than he has, either in operation or in contemplation, observed of the method and order of nature.f... | |
| Francis Bacon - 1815 - 270 páginas
...APHORISMS FOB INTERPRETING NATURE, AND EXTENDING THE EMPIRE OP MAN OVER T«E CREATION. APHORISM I. jViAN, who is the servant and interpreter of nature, can act and understand no farther than he has, either in operation, or in contemplation, observed of the method and order of... | |
| Edward William Grinfield - 1818 - 634 páginas
...man as he actually exists in civil society. Hence, * See Part II. Sect. 28. as Bacon expresses it, " Man, who is the servant and interpreter of nature, can act and understand no farther than he has either in operation or in contemplation observed the method and order of nature."... | |
| 1821 - 398 páginas
...in the year 1620, when Bacon was Chancellor. It is written in aphorisms, and thus begins : — " 1. Man, who is the servant and interpreter of nature, can act and understand no farther than he has, either in operation or in contemplation, observed of the method and order of nature,... | |
| Henry Southern, Sir Nicholas Harris Nicolas - 1821 - 402 páginas
...in the year 1620, when Bacon was Chancellor. It is written in aphorisms, and thus begins : — " 1. 'Man, who is the servant and interpreter of nature, can act and understand no farther than he has, either in operation or in contemplation, observed of the method and order of nature,... | |
| Henry Southern - 1821 - 398 páginas
...in the year 1620, when Bacon was Chancellor. It is written in aphorisms, and thus begins : — " 1. Man, who is the servant and interpreter of nature, can act and understand no farther than he has, either in operation or in contemplation, observed of the method and order of nature,... | |
| 1821 - 400 páginas
...in the year 1620, when Bacon was Chancellor. It is written in aphorisms, and thus begins : — " 1. Man, who is the servant and interpreter of nature, can act and understand no farther than he has, either in operation or in contemplation, observed of the method and order of nature,... | |
| 1837 - 770 páginas
...aphorism with which the great father of modern philosophy opens his " Novum Organum," runs thus : — " Man, who is the servant and interpreter of nature, can act and understand no farther than he has, either in operation or in contemplation, observed of the method and order of nature.*1... | |
| Cuthbert William Johnson - 1840 - 84 páginas
...The often-quoted first aphorism of Bacon, in his Novum Organum, here applies with the greatest force: "Man, who is the servant and interpreter of nature, can act, and understand no farther than he has, either in operation or contemplation, observed of the method and order of nature."... | |
| Sir William Snow Harris - 1843 - 278 páginas
...rods. For, as it has been beautifully remarked by Lord Bacon, the great father of inductive science, " Man, who is the servant and interpreter of nature,...contemplation observed of the method and order of nature." Whether Lightning Rods and other Metallic Conductors haw effectually guarded Buildings, %c. against... | |
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