The Works of Francis BaconBrown and Taggard, 1861 |
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Página 10
... method of Induction as Bacon understood it , Mr. Ellis's be not likewise im- perfect from not taking sufficient account of the novelty contained in the Natural History as Bacon intended it to be employed ; and whether there be not room ...
... method of Induction as Bacon understood it , Mr. Ellis's be not likewise im- perfect from not taking sufficient account of the novelty contained in the Natural History as Bacon intended it to be employed ; and whether there be not room ...
Página 13
... method , you would find some of the very best among the works of Gilbert and Galileo . What was it then that Bacon did which entitles him to be called the Regenerator of Philosophy ? or what was it that he dreamt he was doing which made ...
... method , you would find some of the very best among the works of Gilbert and Galileo . What was it then that Bacon did which entitles him to be called the Regenerator of Philosophy ? or what was it that he dreamt he was doing which made ...
Página 14
... method . Tales , traditions , and all that has hitherto been ac- counted most authentic in our knowledge of past times , must be set aside as doubtful ; and the whole story must be spelt out anew from charters , names , inscriptions ...
... method . Tales , traditions , and all that has hitherto been ac- counted most authentic in our knowledge of past times , must be set aside as doubtful ; and the whole story must be spelt out anew from charters , names , inscriptions ...
Página 17
... method was as unskilful as that of the boy who in doing a long - division sum would first guess at the quotient and then multiply it into the divisor to see whether it were true , and if it came out wrong would make another guess and ...
... method was as unskilful as that of the boy who in doing a long - division sum would first guess at the quotient and then multiply it into the divisor to see whether it were true , and if it came out wrong would make another guess and ...
Página 19
... method of the man who runs his single head against a fortress , and the man who raises a force strong enough to storm it , because each uses the force he has in the same way , only one wants more of it than the other : or between ...
... method of the man who runs his single head against a fortress , and the man who raises a force strong enough to storm it , because each uses the force he has in the same way , only one wants more of it than the other : or between ...
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Términos y frases comunes
absque Advancement aliæ altera Anima Animæ aquæ Archimedes Aristoteles artium Astrologia Astronomia Augmentis Bacon Bacon's book certe Cicero circa corporis cujus Democritus Deus different divina Doctrinam doubt duæ Epicurus Etenim Experimenti fere first found fuerit given great hæc haud have Historia history homines hujus hujusmodi humana iis quæ illa illæ illud inquisitio ipsa ipsum Itaque licet Logica made magis make materia Mathematica Medicinæ memoriæ Metaphysica method motum motus natura naturæ Naturalis Neque nihil Novum Organum omnibus order Organum original Parmenides partes Partitio Doctrinæ passage phantasia philosophy Physica Plato possit potius præ præcipue præsertim præter probably prorsus quæ quædam quæque quemadmodum question Quinetiam quis rebus remark rerum Rhetorica sæpe sæpius same scientia scientiarum scientiis scilicet second seems sine sint siquidem sive Sophisma suæ tanquam tantum terræ theory think Thomas Aquinas time used veluti verum vitæ word work years καὶ
Pasajes populares
Página 227 - This other hath to name William Shakespeare, and they are both of one county, and, indeed, almost of one town ; both are right famous in their qualities, though it longeth not of your lordship's gravity and wisdom to resort unto the places where they are wont to delight the public ear.
Página 78 - Tenison) sent him a specimen, but " of such superfine Latinity, that the Lord Bacon did not encourage him to labour further in that work, in the penning of which he desired not so much neat and polite, as clear masculine and apt expression.
Página 419 - Ita enim et linguae mutuo commercio locupletari possint; et fiet ex iis, quae in singulis linguis pulchra sunt (tanquam Venus Apellis) orationis ipsius quaedam formosissima imago, et exemplar quoddam insigne. ad sensus animi rite exprimendos.
Página 12 - ... the Baconian philosophy, but his keen perception, and his broad and spirit-stirring, almost enthusiastic, announcement of its paramount importance, as the alpha and omega of science, as the grand and only chain for the linking together of physical truths, and the eventual key to every discovery and every application.
Página 133 - Ils sont comme le lierre, qui ne tend point à monter plus haut que les arbres qui le soutiennent...
Página 17 - ... a great thing but it turned out nothing. If not, I still think it would be worth your while to try it." A. I partly comprehend your meaning ; but I should prefer it in a less dramatic form. You think that the difference between what Galileo did and what Bacon wanted to be done, lay in this — that Bacon's plan presupposed a history (or dictionary as you call it) of Universal Nature, as a storehouse of facts to work upon ; whereas Galileo was content to work upon such facts and observations as...
Página 403 - Dedimus ei uomen ei usu, quia verus ejus usus est plane redargutio, et cautio circa usum verborum. Quinimo partem illam de praedicamentis, si recte instituatur, circa cautiones de non confundendis aut transponendis definitionum et divisionum terminis, praecipuum usum sortiri existimamus, et hucetiam referri malumus.
Página 227 - Revels that we find any notices of the publication or acting of Shakespeare's plays. In the long series of letters from John Chamberlain to Dudley Carleton, scattered over the whole period from 1598 to 1623, — letters full of the news of the month; news of the court, the city, the pulpit, and the bookseller's shop; in which court-masques are described in minute detail, author, actors, plot, performance, reception and all; — we look in vain for the name of Shakespeare or of any one of his plavs.
Página 16 - And since you have done me the honour to think so very highly of my precepts, I am a little surprised that you have not thought it worth while in so very essential a point to follow them. And to say the truth, I could wish for my own reputation (if that were of any consequence) that you had either honoured me a little more in that way, or not honoured me quite so much in other ways. You call me the Father of your Philosophy, meaning it for the greatest compliment you can pay. I thank you for the...
Página 48 - In historia quam requirimus et animo destinamus, ante omnia videndum est ut late pateat et facta sit ad mensuram universi. Ñeque enim arctandus est mundus ad angustias intellectus (quod adhuc factum est), sed expandendus intellectus et laxandus ad mundi imaginem recipiendam, qualis invenitur.