The National Quarterly Review, المجلد 4Edward Isidore Sears, David Allyn Gorton, Charles H. Woodman Pudney & Russell, 1862 |
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الصفحة 44
... fact , that the way in which generally - received truths are under- stood varies as the complexity of the sciences to which they belong , results from the obvious circumstance that the more complex a science is , the less we know about ...
... fact , that the way in which generally - received truths are under- stood varies as the complexity of the sciences to which they belong , results from the obvious circumstance that the more complex a science is , the less we know about ...
الصفحة 46
... fact that moral truths receive fewer additions than intellectual truths is of no logical value , because it compares one class of truths with several ; and fifthly , that the circum- stance that moral science advances with a slower pace ...
... fact that moral truths receive fewer additions than intellectual truths is of no logical value , because it compares one class of truths with several ; and fifthly , that the circum- stance that moral science advances with a slower pace ...
الصفحة 55
... fact of the earth's motion . It was the skepticism of Co- pernicus and Galileo that overthrew the old notion of its ... facts and laws . A truth once established remains forever a truth . We cannot choose but accept it . And science , as ...
... fact of the earth's motion . It was the skepticism of Co- pernicus and Galileo that overthrew the old notion of its ... facts and laws . A truth once established remains forever a truth . We cannot choose but accept it . And science , as ...
الصفحة 56
... fact . He shows that government and legislation are in- competent to direct the affairs of men . He shows that poli- ticians have injured trade by interfering with it ; that legis- lators have caused smuggling , with its attendant ...
... fact . He shows that government and legislation are in- competent to direct the affairs of men . He shows that poli- ticians have injured trade by interfering with it ; that legis- lators have caused smuggling , with its attendant ...
الصفحة 60
... fact that our desires and impulses influence us strongly in the acceptance and defence of opin- ions . In speaking of the Scotch clergy , he attributes their tyrannical enforcement of superstitious notions to an inordi- nate desire for ...
... fact that our desires and impulses influence us strongly in the acceptance and defence of opin- ions . In speaking of the Scotch clergy , he attributes their tyrannical enforcement of superstitious notions to an inordi- nate desire for ...
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