The Contemporary Review, Volume 16A. Strahan, 1871 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 85
Page 3
... things rests , not with the Government , but with the legislature , which exhibited a singular disposition to accumulate power in the hands of the future Minister of Education , and to evade the more troublesome difficulties of the ...
... things rests , not with the Government , but with the legislature , which exhibited a singular disposition to accumulate power in the hands of the future Minister of Education , and to evade the more troublesome difficulties of the ...
Page 16
... things are more astonishing in the history of philosophy than the slowness with which ideas , which are now the common pro- perty and the life of mankind , worked their way in the world . If it be true that only in some indefinite ...
... things are more astonishing in the history of philosophy than the slowness with which ideas , which are now the common pro- perty and the life of mankind , worked their way in the world . If it be true that only in some indefinite ...
Page 22
... thing , the mind with its functions is another . When the mind is freed from the body , it is thus not wonderful that it ... things , which , accord- ing to the view of Descartes , have not only nothing in common , but are absolute ...
... thing , the mind with its functions is another . When the mind is freed from the body , it is thus not wonderful that it ... things , which , accord- ing to the view of Descartes , have not only nothing in common , but are absolute ...
Page 24
... thing which we have to bear in mind , in order to explain the theory of a soul , is the fact of this unity of action ... things , so " all unlike each other " as thought and brain , which calls so loudly for a unity lying deeper down in ...
... thing which we have to bear in mind , in order to explain the theory of a soul , is the fact of this unity of action ... things , so " all unlike each other " as thought and brain , which calls so loudly for a unity lying deeper down in ...
Page 36
... things by judging them , and we judge them by the most independent conceivable judgments . What can be more inde- pendent than the very declaration of nescience by which we pronounce that we do not know things as they are in reality ...
... things by judging them , and we judge them by the most independent conceivable judgments . What can be more inde- pendent than the very declaration of nescience by which we pronounce that we do not know things as they are in reality ...
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Common terms and phrases
action admit army authority become believe Bismarck body brain called character Christ Christian Church Church of England civilization colonies common Council of Trent creation Descartes divine doctrine dogmas doubt duty Ellesmere emotion Empire England English Europe evil existence expression fact faith favour feeling force France French German give Government Gulf stream hand human idea Imperial independent influence intellectual labour less living Lord Lord Granville Louis XIV matter means ment military militia Milverton mind moral nation nature never Nonconformists object opinion organization Parliament peace persons philosophy political prayers present principle Protestantism Prussia quarrel question race Ralahine reason regard relation religious seems sensation sense Sir Arthur society soldiers soul spirit stratum supposed Theism theology theory things thought tion true truth Ultramontane W. R. GREG whole words