... it is certain that the conception of some more real and intimate connection is quite as strongly impressed upon the human mind as that of the existence of an external world — the vindication of whose reality has (strange to say) been regarded as... Astronomy - Page 232by John Frederick William Herschel - 1833 - 422 pagesFull view - About this book
| sir John Frederick W. Herschel (1st bart.) - 1833 - 500 pages
...reader has now been made acquainted with die chief phenomena of the motions of the earth in its orbit round the sun, and of the moon about the earth. —...effort, when we exert * See Cab. Cyc. MECHANICS, chap, ill. + See Brown " On Cause and Effect," — a work of great acuteness and subtlety of reasoning on... | |
| 1834 - 596 pages
...connexion of cause and effect, and fritter it down into the unsatisfactory relation of habitual sequence,* it is certain that the conception of some more real and intimate connexion is quite as strongly impressed upon the human mind, as that of the existence of an external... | |
| Thomas Lockerby - 1839 - 566 pages
...connexion of cause and effect, and flitter it down into the unsatisfactory relation of habitual sequence, it is certain that the conception of some more real and intimate connexion is quite as strongly impressed upon the human mind, as that of the existence of an external... | |
| Antoine Claude Gabriel Jobert - 1848 - 162 pages
...to him, cot to Dr. Brown. and fritter it down into the unsatisfactory relation of habitual sequence, it is certain that the conception of some more real and intimate connexion is quite as strongly impressed upon the human mind as that of the existence of an external... | |
| John Frederick William Herschel - 1849 - 672 pages
...connection of cause and effect, and fritter it down into the unsatisfactory relation of habitual sequence,! it is certain that the conception of some more real...human mind as that of the existence of an external world,—the vindication of whose reality has (strange to say) been regarded as an • Princip. Lei.... | |
| j. stevenson bushnan, m.d. - 1851 - 206 pages
...connection of cause and effect, and fritter it down into the unsatisfactory relation of habitual sequence, it is certain that the conception of some more real...own immediate consciousness of effort, when we exert force to put matter in motion, or to oppose and neutralize force, which gives us this internal conviction... | |
| John Frederick William Herschel - 1851 - 706 pages
...connection of cause and effect, and fritter it down into the unsatisfactory relation of habitual sequence f, it is certain that the conception of some more real...— the vindication of whose reality has (strange • Princip. Lex. i. f See Brown "On Cause and Effect," — a work of great acuteness and subtlety... | |
| John Frederick William Herschel - 1851 - 744 pages
...contraction of nuisi'les on the other. Brown, 3d edit. Edin. 1818, p. 47. (Note to edition of 1833.) to say-) been regarded as an achievement of no common...own immediate consciousness of effort, when we exert force to put matter in motion, or to oppose and neutralize force, which gives us this internal conviction... | |
| John Frederick William Herschel - 1853 - 608 pages
...connection of cause and effect, and fritter it down into the unsatisfactory relation of habitual sequence,2 it is certain that the conception of some more real...own immediate consciousness of effort, when we exert force to put matter in motion, or to oppose and neutralize force, which gives us this internal conviction... | |
| John Frederick William Herschel - 1857 - 608 pages
...connection of cause and effect, and fritter it down into the unsatisfactory relation of habitual sequence,2 it is certain that the conception of some more real...philosophy. It is our own immediate consciousness of >forl, when we exert force to put matter in motion, or to oppose and neutralize force, which gives... | |
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