| Samuel Taylor Coleridge - 1830 - 296 pàgines
...the thing meant, than the term which the usus et norma loquendi forces on me), the clerisy, I say, or national church, in its primary acceptation and...original intention comprehended the learned of all denominations;—the sages and professors of law and jurisprudence; of medicine and physiology; of... | |
| David Thorburn - 1847 - 76 pàgines
...of the thing meant than the term which the usus et norma loquendi forces on me), the clerisy, I say, or national Church, in its primary acceptation and...of all denominations; the sages and professors of law and jurisprudence, of medicine and physiology, of music, of military and civil architecture, of... | |
| 1887 - 678 pàgines
...269).— The word will be found in Coleridge's ' Church and State,' part i. ch. v. : — " The Clerity of the nation, or national Church, in its primary...and original intention, comprehended the learned of nil denominations, the sages and professors of law and jurisprudence, of medicine and physiology, of... | |
| John Stuart Mill - 1859 - 500 pàgines
...Church ; a name which, in its best sense, is exclusively appropriate to the Church of Christ The derisy of the nation, or national church in its primary acceptation...physiology, of music, of military and civil architecture, with the mathematical_as the common organ of the preceding] in short, all the so-called liberal arts... | |
| John Stuart Mill - 1859 - 496 pàgines
...Church; a name which, in its best sense, is exclusively appropriate to the Church of Christ The derisy of the nation, or national church in its primary acceptation...physiology, of music, of military and civil architecture, with the mathematical as the common organ of the preceding; in short, all the so-called liberal arts... | |
| John Stuart Mill - 1864 - 174 pàgines
...Church ; a name which, in its best sense, is exclusively appropriate to the Church of Christ. . . . The clerisy of the nation, or national church in its...physiology, of music, of military and civil architecture, with the mathematical as the common organ of the preceding ; in short, all the so-called liberal arts... | |
| Samuel Sidwell Randall - 1871 - 508 pàgines
...religion, and remain blended with it — this, I say, will, in all ages, be the course of things. * * * * The clerisy of the nation, or national church, in...original intention, comprehended the learned of all donominations — the sages and professors of the law and jurisprudence, of medicine and physiology,... | |
| Alan W. Bellringer, C. B. Jones - 1980 - 176 pàgines
...of the thing meant, than the term which the usus norma loquendi forces on me1, the clerisy, I say, or national church, in its primary acceptation and...all denominations; — the sages and professors of law and jurisprudence; of medicine and physiology; of l05 music; of military and civil architecture;... | |
| Ninian Smart, John Clayton, Patrick Sherry, Steven T. Katz - 1988 - 372 pàgines
...of that term, but draws rather on the 'original and proper sense' of 'clergy'. Clerisy comprehends 'the learned of all denominations, the sages and professors...and civil architecture, of the physical sciences... in short, of all the so-called liberal arts and sciences, the possession and application of which constitute... | |
| Maurice Cowling - 1990 - 220 pàgines
...education, and all the influences of formal education, always rest. The clerisy, he says, quoting Coleridge 'in its primary acceptation and original intention...physiology, of music, of military and civil architecture, with the mathematical as the common organ of the preceeding ; in short, all the so-called liberal arts... | |
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