From this wonderful hope, however, my friend, I was speedily thrown down, when, as I advance and read over his works, I meet with a man who makes no use of intelligence, nor assigns any causes for the ordering of all things, but makes the causes to consist... The works of Plato: a new and literal version, by H. Cary (H. Davis, G. Burges). - Página 104por Plato - 1848Visualização integral - Acerca deste livro
| Plato, Henry Cary - 1877 - 566 páginas
...read through them as quickly as I could, that I might as soon as possible know the best and the worst. water, and many other things equally absurd. And he...the bones, together with the flesh and skin which contain them. The bones, therefore, being suspended in their sockets, the nerves, relaxing and tightening,... | |
| Plato - 1881 - 546 páginas
...should make all this clear to me, I was prepared no longer to require any other species of cause. 107. I was in like manner prepared to enquire respecting...together with the flesh and skin which contains them. The boues, therefore, being suspended in their sockets, the nerves relaxing and tightening enahle me to... | |
| Plato, Henry Cary - 1882 - 590 páginas
...prepared no longer to require any other species of cause. 107. I was in like manner prepared to inquire respecting the sun and moon and the other stars, with...the bones, together with the flesh and skin which contain them. The bones, therefore, being suspended in their sockets, the nerves, relaxing and tightening,... | |
| Plato, Harold North Fowler - 1913 - 648 páginas
...he does, and then, in trying to give the causes of the particular thing I do, should say first that I am now sitting here because my body is composed of bones and sinews, and the bones are hard and have joints which divide them and the sinews can be contracted and relaxed and,... | |
| Karl Raimund Popper - 1998 - 356 páginas
...intelligence; and then, in trying to explain the causes of what I am doing now, should assert that I am now sitting here because my body is composed of bones and sinews . . . and that the sinews, by relaxing and contracting, make me bend my limbs now, and that this is the cause of my sitting... | |
| William A. Dembski - 2002 - 316 páginas
...argues that it is absurd to reduce "the cause of my sitting here in a bent position" to the fact that my body is composed of bones and sinews, and that the bones are rigid and separated at the joints, [and that] the sinews are capable of contraction and relaxation,... | |
| Nicholas Maxwell - 2001 - 338 páginas
...intelligence; and then, in trying to explain the causes of what I am doing now, should assert that I am now sitting here because my body is composed of bones and sinews; . . . and that the sinews, by relaxing and contracting, make me bend my limbs now, and that this is the cause of my sitting... | |
| Keith E. Yandell - 2001 - 280 páginas
...and then, in trying to give the causes (aitias) of the particular thing I do should say first that I am now sitting here because my body is composed of bones and sinews . . and so, as the bones are hung loose in their ligaments, the sinews, by relaxing and contracting, make me... | |
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