| John Mason Good - 1826 - 536 páginas
...schools of philosophy, amidst an infinite variety of jarring opinions in other respects, we find them, 21 perhaps without an exception, concurring in a belief...corpuscles, and unintelligent in the rest, as was taught by Democritus ; sometimes intelligent as a whole, though unintelligent' in its separate parts,... | |
| John Mason Good - 1826 - 526 páginas
...schools of philosophy, amidst an infinite variety of jarring opinions in other respects,we find them, 21 perhaps without an exception, concurring in a belief...corpuscles, and unintelligent in the rest, as was taught by Democritus ; sometimes intelligent as a whole, though unintelligent in its separate parts,... | |
| John Mason Good - 1828 - 540 páginas
...search into the systems of all the ancient schools of philosophy, amidst an infinite variety of jarring opinions in other respects, we find them, perhaps...corpuscles, and unintelligent in the rest, as was taught by Democritus ; sometimes intelligent as a whole, though unintelligent in its separate parts,... | |
| John Mason Good - 1834 - 492 páginas
...search into the systems of all the ancient schools of philosophy, amid an infinite variety of jarring opinions in other respects, we find them, perhaps...which was sometimes conceived to be intelligent in типу of its corpuscles, and unintelligent in the rest, as was taught by Democritus ; sometimes... | |
| Isaac Dowd Williamson - 1836 - 264 páginas
...search into the systems of all the ancient schools of philosophy, amid an infinite variety of jarring opinions in other respects, we find them, perhaps,...substance which constitutes the visible world around us." Farther on, the same author says: " Under some modification or other, however, the doctrine of the... | |
| Isaac Dowd Williamson - 1836 - 266 páginas
...ancient schools of philosophy, amid APPENDIX. 237 an infinite variety of jarring opinions in olher respects, we find them, perhaps, without an exception,...•which constitutes the visible world around us." Farther on, the same author says: " Under some modification or other, however, the doctrine of the... | |
| 1836 - 330 páginas
...philosophers, in other respects, in regard to matter. Democritus, an ancient Grecian philosopher, believed it to be intelligent in many of its corpuscles, and unintelligent in the rest. Aristotle and Plato believed it to be intelligent as a whole, but unintelligent in its separate parts.... | |
| John Mason Good - 1837 - 488 páginas
...search into the systems of all the ancient schools of philosophy, amid an infinite variety of jarring opinions in other respects, we find them, perhaps...corpuscles, and unintelligent in the rest, as was taught by Democritus ; sometimes intelligent as a whole, though unintelligent in its separate parts,... | |
| 1843 - 534 páginas
...search into the systems of all the ancient schools of philosophy, amidst an infinite variety of jarring opinions in other respects, we find them, perhaps...corpuscles, and unintelligent in the rest, as was taught by Democritus; sometimes intelligent as a whole, though unintelligent in its separate parts,... | |
| Isaac Dowd Williamson - 1849 - 266 páginas
...systems of all the ancient schools of philosophy, amid APPENDIX. 237 ftn infinite variety of jarring opinions in other respects, we find them, perhaps,...substance which constitutes the visible world around us." Farther on, the same author says: " Under some modification or other, however, the doctrine of the... | |
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