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... France . Par ERNEST NOVILLE . OUR ELECTORAL MACHINERY V. TAINE'S PHILOSOPHY VI . • · PAGE 251 319 . 341 383 . 401 On Intelligence . By H. TAINE , D. C. L. , Oxon . Translated from the French by T. D. HAYE , and revised with Additions by ...
... France . Par ERNEST NOVILLE . OUR ELECTORAL MACHINERY V. TAINE'S PHILOSOPHY VI . • · PAGE 251 319 . 341 383 . 401 On Intelligence . By H. TAINE , D. C. L. , Oxon . Translated from the French by T. D. HAYE , and revised with Additions by ...
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... France and America , but never , we believe , in Germany or England , found no better occupation for their faculties than the inconsequent tabulations and the fatuous arithmetic of this happily effete substitute for medical observation ...
... France and America , but never , we believe , in Germany or England , found no better occupation for their faculties than the inconsequent tabulations and the fatuous arithmetic of this happily effete substitute for medical observation ...
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... France that , in Becquerel and others , Dr. Duchenne finds his most persistent opponents . In England and America both currents are employed : in general practice the Faradic , with specialists the galvanic , more or less exclusively ...
... France that , in Becquerel and others , Dr. Duchenne finds his most persistent opponents . In England and America both currents are employed : in general practice the Faradic , with specialists the galvanic , more or less exclusively ...
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... France . The report on the action of mercury by Dr. Hughes Bennett and the committee appointed by the British Medical Association must have greatly astonished the average British practitioner . Although a few medical men now profess to ...
... France . The report on the action of mercury by Dr. Hughes Bennett and the committee appointed by the British Medical Association must have greatly astonished the average British practitioner . Although a few medical men now profess to ...
Página 39
... France and in England , together with his parents . In 1809 , he went to Göttingen to study natural history and history , a strange and characteristic combination of studies . The Professor of Philosophy at that University was G. E. ...
... France and in England , together with his parents . In 1809 , he went to Göttingen to study natural history and history , a strange and characteristic combination of studies . The Professor of Philosophy at that University was G. E. ...
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action animal become Béguinage body buildings called candidates cause cent cerebrum character civilized College companies condition Congress Constitution correspondence Crédit Mobilier CXVII dipsomania disease dollars election electors engines England evil evolution exchange existence experience fact Faradic feelings Fichte fire fire apparatus force France French give hand highest human idea increase Indian Intellect intelligence interest Kaiserswerth labor less matter means ment mental method mind moral Napoleon Napoleon III nation natural selection nature never Oakes Ames object objectivations observation ophthalmoscope organized pain phenomena philosophy physical political present President progress psychical question race rates reason relations result savage Schopenhauer Schopenhauer's Second Empire sensation sense Sir William Gull sphygmograph Taine telegraph theory things Tibet tion vote Western Union whole words
Passagens conhecidas
Página 33 - Holds such an enmity with blood of man, That, swift as quicksilver, it courses through The natural gates and alleys of the body ; And, with a sudden vigour, it doth posset And curd, like eager droppings into milk, The thin and wholesome blood...
Página 480 - What beast was't then That made you break this enterprise to me? When you durst do it, then you were a man; And, to be more than what you were, you would Be so much more the man. Nor time nor place Did then adhere, and yet you would make both: They have made themselves, and that their fitness now Does unmake you.
Página 392 - It will not be too strong to say, that there will be a constant probability of seeing the station filled by characters preeminent for ability and virtue.
Página 169 - After God had carried us safe to New England, and we had builded our houses, provided necessaries for our livelihood, reared convenient places for God's worship, and settled the civil government, one of the next things we longed for and looked after was to advance learning and perpetuate it to posterity; dreading to leave an illiterate ministry to the churches, when our present ministers shall lie in the dust.
Página 290 - ... if the states of consciousness which a creature endeavours to maintain are the correlatives of injurious actions, and if the states of consciousness which it endeavours to expel are the correlatives of beneficial actions, it must quickly disappear through persistence in the injurious and avoidance of the beneficial.
Página 302 - The prolonged helplessness of the offspring must keep the parents together for longer and longer periods in successive epochs ; and when at last the association is so long kept up that the older children are growing mature while the younger ones still need protection, the family relations begin to become permanent. The parents have lived so long in company that to seek new companionships involves some disturbance of ingrained habits...
Página 172 - And by the side of the College a fair Grammar School for the training up of young Scholars and fitting of them for Academical Learning, that still as they are judged ripe, they may be received into the College of this School. Master Corlet is the Mr., who hath very well approved himself for his abilities, dexterity, and painfulness in teaching and education of the youth under him.
Página 172 - Pupills in the tongues and Arts, and so seasoned them with the principles of Divinity and Christianity, that we have to our great comfort, (and in truth) beyond our hopes, beheld their progresse in Learning and godlinesse also...
Página 242 - But surely, if there be anything with which metaphysics have nothing to do, and where a plain man, without skill to walk in the arduous paths of abstruse reasoning, may yet find himself at home, it is religion. For the object of religion is conduct ; and conduct is really, however men may overlay it with philosophical disquisitions, the simplest thing in the world.