A Philosophical Dictionary (Complete)Library of Alexandria, 28 de set. 2020 - 316 pàgines |
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... truth, to the opera, where nothing is to be heard but the charming object of my adoration, etc. The Greeks and Romans, at least,didnotfallinto this extravagant profanation. Horace does not say that he adores Lalage; Tibullus does not ...
... truth, to the opera, where nothing is to be heard but the charming object of my adoration, etc. The Greeks and Romans, at least,didnotfallinto this extravagant profanation. Horace does not say that he adores Lalage; Tibullus does not ...
Pàgina
... truth." I wish, then,that Cardinal Polignac had pitied while he condemned Epicurus; it would have been no detriment to fine poetry. With regard tophysicsit appears tomethat the author has lostmuch time andmany versesin refuting the ...
... truth." I wish, then,that Cardinal Polignac had pitied while he condemned Epicurus; it would have been no detriment to fine poetry. With regard tophysicsit appears tomethat the author has lostmuch time andmany versesin refuting the ...
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... truth isworth morethan the discovery of athousand falsehoods. Notall these errors,not all the crowd of apocryphal books havebeen sufficientto injure the Christian religion, because, as we allknow, itis founded upon immutable truths ...
... truth isworth morethan the discovery of athousand falsehoods. Notall these errors,not all the crowd of apocryphal books havebeen sufficientto injure the Christian religion, because, as we allknow, itis founded upon immutable truths ...
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... truth is allthatishere sought for. APOSTLES. Their Lives, their Wives, their Children. After the article "Apostle" inthe Encyclopædia, which is as learnedasit is orthodox, verylittle remains to be said. But we often hear it asked—Were ...
... truth is allthatishere sought for. APOSTLES. Their Lives, their Wives, their Children. After the article "Apostle" inthe Encyclopædia, which is as learnedasit is orthodox, verylittle remains to be said. But we often hear it asked—Were ...
Pàgina
... which distinguishes any being from all thosethingswhich are not in it. Matter may, indifferently, become aroseoran apple; but, when itis anappleor a roseitisdeprived ofall that would make it silver or lead. Perhaps this truth was not.
... which distinguishes any being from all thosethingswhich are not in it. Matter may, indifferently, become aroseoran apple; but, when itis anappleor a roseitisdeprived ofall that would make it silver or lead. Perhaps this truth was not.
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Abraham afterwards allthe ancient andthat andthe angels antiquity apostles appear Aristotle assassinate astonishing atheists atthe barbarous beautiful believe bishops Brahmins bythe Cæsar called Chaldæans Christians Church Cicero circumcised condemned confessed Constantine Constantinople consubstantial council crime death didnot Diocletian dispute divine earth Egypt Egyptians emperor empire Essenians eternal Eusebius fables father France fromthe Gaul gospel Greek havebeen heaven Hebrew hehad hewas Holy honor hundred inhis inthe inwhich Irenæus isnot isthe itis itwas Jansenists Jerusalem Jesuit Jesus Christ Jewish Jews king learned Lord Louis Louis XIV Mahomet Manichæans monks nations nature Nestorius never ofhis ofSt ofthe onthe persecution philosophers Photius Plutarch pope possessed pretended priests prince prodigious punished reason religion ridiculous Roman Rome signifies soul speak temple Tertullian thatit thatof thatthe thatthey thefirst thesame things thou thousand tobe tothe truth wasa wasthe whichis withthe word