The North-American Review and Miscellaneous Journal, Volume 4Jared Sparks, Edward Everett, James Russell Lowell, Henry Cabot Lodge Wells and Lilly., 1965 Vols. 277-230, no. 2 include Stuff and nonsense, v. 5-6, no. 8, Jan. 1929-Aug. 1930. |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 25
Page 89
... experience and analogy , which are equally applicable to analogy and induc- tion . He says that although the difference between the two sorts of evidence , which are commonly referred to the separate heads of experience and analogy , be ...
... experience and analogy , which are equally applicable to analogy and induc- tion . He says that although the difference between the two sorts of evidence , which are commonly referred to the separate heads of experience and analogy , be ...
Page 91
... experience . The monk , who ( according to popular tradition ) having observed the salutary effects of antimony upon some of the lower animals , ventured to prescribe the use of it to some of his own fraternity , might be justly said to ...
... experience . The monk , who ( according to popular tradition ) having observed the salutary effects of antimony upon some of the lower animals , ventured to prescribe the use of it to some of his own fraternity , might be justly said to ...
Page 92
... experience , and they are but one kind of reason- ing . We establish a fact by ordinary experience , a regu- larly instituted experiment or by what is called reasoning on facts - we then inquire for other similar or analogous cases ; we ...
... experience , and they are but one kind of reason- ing . We establish a fact by ordinary experience , a regu- larly instituted experiment or by what is called reasoning on facts - we then inquire for other similar or analogous cases ; we ...
Contents
Adams President letter from | 48 |
Harvard University | 140 |
British Bible Society Letter | 295 |
3 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
admiration amongst ancient appear Babylon beautiful Berosus bitumen Boston Boston Athenĉum bricks called cause characters classick course Don Paul effect eloquence England English errour Euphrates favour feeling Fort Osage French friends Garrick genius give Goethe heart hundred Indians Italy Jacob Bigelow labour land language learned Leo X less letters live logick Mably manner means ment miles mind musick nature never NORTH-AMERICAN o'er observed octave Ogilvie opinion orator oratory passed passion perhaps Persepolis Persia person philosophical poem poet poetry present principles publick racters readers reason remarks rhyme river Rostrum Rubens ruins seems seen semitones shew society sounds specimens spirit talent taste thing thou thought tion town truth Van Dyck verse vibrations Werther whole writing young