The Works of Francis Bacon, Volumen9Hurd and Houghton, 1872 |
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Página v
... give an English reader a complete view of Bacon's philosophy . The selection does , in fact , include all the Latin works belonging to the first and second parts , and as many of those belong- ing to the third as are not to be found in ...
... give an English reader a complete view of Bacon's philosophy . The selection does , in fact , include all the Latin works belonging to the first and second parts , and as many of those belong- ing to the third as are not to be found in ...
Página 34
... give up so many to death ; of whom nevertheless numbers es- cape with less difficulty than they did in the Roman ... gives a legal sanction as it were to neglect and inat- tention , and exempts ignorance from discredit . Again , to go a ...
... give up so many to death ; of whom nevertheless numbers es- cape with less difficulty than they did in the Roman ... gives a legal sanction as it were to neglect and inat- tention , and exempts ignorance from discredit . Again , to go a ...
Página 40
... give both admonitions , and directions , and pre- cepts . My first admonition is , that of the writers upon this argument there is none who has discovered anything great , not to say anything sound . Aristotle has indeed published a ...
... give both admonitions , and directions , and pre- cepts . My first admonition is , that of the writers upon this argument there is none who has discovered anything great , not to say anything sound . Aristotle has indeed published a ...
Página 47
... give this notice in passing ; that whereas so many things come into consideration in the human body , parts , humours , functions , faculties , and accidents ; and that ( if it were a new matter ) it would be fit that there should be a ...
... give this notice in passing ; that whereas so many things come into consideration in the human body , parts , humours , functions , faculties , and accidents ; and that ( if it were a new matter ) it would be fit that there should be a ...
Página 53
... gives it the fuller benefit of its own na- ture , and makes it the more susceptible of divine in- fluxions ; save that in divinations by influxion the mind is seized with a kind of fervency and impatience as it were of the present Deity ...
... gives it the fuller benefit of its own na- ture , and makes it the more susceptible of divine in- fluxions ; save that in divinations by influxion the mind is seized with a kind of fervency and impatience as it were of the present Deity ...
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