The Quarterly Review, Volume 68J. Murray, 1841 |
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Page 212
... cause suggested by such pha- nomena can hardly be other than crude , imperfect , and even perhaps erroneous . For example , invariable antecedence of cause and consequence of effect is laid down by writers on this subject as an ...
... cause suggested by such pha- nomena can hardly be other than crude , imperfect , and even perhaps erroneous . For example , invariable antecedence of cause and consequence of effect is laid down by writers on this subject as an ...
Page 214
... cause - not that this rela- tion is not to be considered equally involved in other sciences , but emphatically , because in these we have succeeded , in those not , in tracing phænomena up to one of those causes of whose existence our ...
... cause - not that this rela- tion is not to be considered equally involved in other sciences , but emphatically , because in these we have succeeded , in those not , in tracing phænomena up to one of those causes of whose existence our ...
Page 215
... cause , which we can no how bring ourselves to conceive . It seems to lead direct to the conclusion , with no escape , that a cause can cause itself . For if A be the cause of R , and R , by the rule of mutual- ity , the cause of A ...
... cause , which we can no how bring ourselves to conceive . It seems to lead direct to the conclusion , with no escape , that a cause can cause itself . For if A be the cause of R , and R , by the rule of mutual- ity , the cause of A ...
Contents
No | 1 |
Notes on the United States By the Right Hon | 20 |
in the British Colonies Ordered by the House | 88 |
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acres Adams admitted afford Akber American appears axiom Belgium believe body Brahminical British British peerage called Captain cause character Church colony convicts corn corn-laws doubt Duke Duke of Orleans duty Earl editor England English existence experience fact favour feeling foreign friends give ground head honour House human idea important inductive interest Ireland Irish King Knights labour Lady land least less Lord John Russell Lord Melbourne Lord-in-Waiting LXVIII Madame Mahometan manner means ment mind ministers ministry moral nature never Norfolk Island object observed opinion party peerage perhaps persons philosophy political present priest principle produce racter readers religion religious respect seems Sir Augustus Sir Robert Sir Robert Peel society South Wales spirit supposed Swinburne Tennent thou thought tion truth Van Diemen's Land Whewell Whigs whole