The North American Review, Volume 4Jared Sparks, Edward Everett, James Russell Lowell, Henry Cabot Lodge University of Northern Iowa, 1826 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 65
Page 400
... effect . ' If we understood him just now , these very subjects and modifications of con- sciousness ' constitute knowledge , or the known . ' The defi- nition then brings us to the important truth , that know- ledge is the arrangement ...
... effect . ' If we understood him just now , these very subjects and modifications of con- sciousness ' constitute knowledge , or the known . ' The defi- nition then brings us to the important truth , that know- ledge is the arrangement ...
Page 401
... effect . If this is what Mr. Ogilvie means , when he says , that we owe to Hume the first satisfac- tory elucidation of the fact , that our knowledge of cause and effect includes nothing more than a perception and belief of the uniform ...
... effect . If this is what Mr. Ogilvie means , when he says , that we owe to Hume the first satisfac- tory elucidation of the fact , that our knowledge of cause and effect includes nothing more than a perception and belief of the uniform ...
Page 412
... effect , independent of the sentiments , shall prepare the mind for their reception . This is the only legiti- mate object of verse to please the ear is a trivial task , if it be not made subservient to higher purposes . Versification ...
... effect , independent of the sentiments , shall prepare the mind for their reception . This is the only legiti- mate object of verse to please the ear is a trivial task , if it be not made subservient to higher purposes . Versification ...
Contents
sion | 47 |
Ancient Persian Bricks 328 422 | 48 |
Ancient Persian Bricks 328 422 | 57 |
7 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
admiration ancient antiquity appear Atalantis Babylon beautiful bitumen Boston bricks Bückeburg called character classick Count Rumford course Don Paul effect England English Euphrates favour feeling Fort Osage French friends Garrick genius give Goethe heart honour hundred Indians inscriptions Italian literature Italy labour land language learned Leo X letters live logick Luther Mably manner Matthew Carey means ment miles mind musick nature never NORTH-AMERICAN JOURNAL observed octave Ogilvie opinion orator oratory passed passion perhaps Persepolis Persia person philosophical Plato poem poetry present produced Professor publick reader reason reeds remarkable rhyme river Rostrum ruins seems seen semitones shew society soon sounds specimens spirit talents taste thing thou thought tion town truth verse vibrations Werther whole writing young