The Edinburgh Review1872 |
Des de l'interior del llibre
Resultats 1 - 5 de 90.
Pàgina 7
... characters and events are alike unreal . The result is a kind of paralysis of intellectual and volitional effort ... character would thus discredit the myth , apart from Mrs. Berkeley's express testimony that her husband at all times ...
... characters and events are alike unreal . The result is a kind of paralysis of intellectual and volitional effort ... character would thus discredit the myth , apart from Mrs. Berkeley's express testimony that her husband at all times ...
Pàgina 21
... character of Cartesian thought less thoroughly con- genial to Berkeley's dominant impulses and aims . The great writers of the school have a deep and pervading sense of the intimate connexion between speculation and practice ; of the ...
... character of Cartesian thought less thoroughly con- genial to Berkeley's dominant impulses and aims . The great writers of the school have a deep and pervading sense of the intimate connexion between speculation and practice ; of the ...
Pàgina 28
... character ; and to the admiration he excited in the minds of accomplished women such as Vanessa and the Princess Caroline , he owed much of his advancement in life . The greater part of the next seven years Berkeley spent on the ...
... character ; and to the admiration he excited in the minds of accomplished women such as Vanessa and the Princess Caroline , he owed much of his advancement in life . The greater part of the next seven years Berkeley spent on the ...
Pàgina 34
... character and pure life , but reproaches him for his virtues , suggesting that it would be far better if he were a man of dissolute man- ners and profligate habits . The ground of this intense and unreasonable feeling against Collins ...
... character and pure life , but reproaches him for his virtues , suggesting that it would be far better if he were a man of dissolute man- ners and profligate habits . The ground of this intense and unreasonable feeling against Collins ...
Pàgina 36
... character . But when his argument touches on the Church or the Clergy , on Shaftesbury or Collins , he loses all command over himself , and , as Sir James Mackintosh most truly says , sinks to the level of a railing polemic . ' The ...
... character . But when his argument touches on the Church or the Clergy , on Shaftesbury or Collins , he loses all command over himself , and , as Sir James Mackintosh most truly says , sinks to the level of a railing polemic . ' The ...
Altres edicions - Mostra-ho tot
Frases i termes més freqüents
Admiral appears Aristotle Aristotle's Athens attack battle Berkeley Berkeley's blood body British cause century character Chinese Christian Church Colebrooke connexion Corean corpuscles cotton Court CXXXVI death Descartes dialogues disease doctrine doubt Duke enemy England English Eudemus existence exoteric fact favour Fiji fleet force foreign French give Government Greek Grote Hermeias honour human important influence interest islands James II Japan Japanese Jesuits King knowledge labour less living Lord Majesty's Government manœuvre Marquis of Pombal Mary of Modena matter means ment mind Minister nation nature naval tactics never observation operation opinion passage patient period person philosophy Plato political Pombal Portugal position present Prince Princess principles Queen question regard Rome Royal Sanskrit says Scotch College seems sense ships Sir James Simpson soul Stockmar surgeon syllogism things thought tion treatises Tyrannion whilst whole word