Twelve Lectures on the Connexion Between Science and Revealed Religion, Volumen1C. Dolman, 1851 |
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Página 7
... essential / part of my task will therefore be , to show how the very sciences , whence objections have been drawn against religion , have themselves , in their progress , entirely removed them ; and hence my method of treating each ...
... essential / part of my task will therefore be , to show how the very sciences , whence objections have been drawn against religion , have themselves , in their progress , entirely removed them ; and hence my method of treating each ...
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... essential faults may be ob- * Josephus , Archæolog . lib . i . c . i . tom . i . p . 6 , ed . Haverc . Targumin on Gen. xi . 1 . + De Lingua Primæva . Wittemb . 1800 . Not + Philosophie der Geschichte , oder über die Tradition . having ...
... essential faults may be ob- * Josephus , Archæolog . lib . i . c . i . tom . i . p . 6 , ed . Haverc . Targumin on Gen. xi . 1 . + De Lingua Primæva . Wittemb . 1800 . Not + Philosophie der Geschichte , oder über die Tradition . having ...
Página 23
... bowed to the authority of the man who possessed sufficient genius to embrace them all , and make them con- tribute to their mutual advantage . From such a man we might expect essential im- provements LECTURE THE FIRST . 23.
... bowed to the authority of the man who possessed sufficient genius to embrace them all , and make them con- tribute to their mutual advantage . From such a man we might expect essential im- provements LECTURE THE FIRST . 23.
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Nicholas Patrick Wiseman. From such a man we might expect essential im- provements in any science , where this combination of varied acquirements was singularly necessary . Such was Ethnography , and to Leibnitz , therefore , does it owe ...
Nicholas Patrick Wiseman. From such a man we might expect essential im- provements in any science , where this combination of varied acquirements was singularly necessary . Such was Ethnography , and to Leibnitz , therefore , does it owe ...
Página 67
... essential inborn element of a language ; and that a new grammar cannot be separately imposed upon a people ; but that if they accept the forms , they must adopt also the matter of a language . Having thus stated the opinions , or rather ...
... essential inborn element of a language ; and that a new grammar cannot be separately imposed upon a people ; but that if they accept the forms , they must adopt also the matter of a language . Having thus stated the opinions , or rather ...
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Twelve Lectures on the Connexion Between Science and Revealed Religion ... Nicholas Patrick 1802-1865 Wiseman Sin vista previa disponible - 2021 |
Términos y frases comunes
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Pasajes populares
Página 307 - And surely it must be gratifying thus to see a science, formerly classed, and not, perhaps, unjustly, among the most pernicious to faith, once more become her handmaid; to see her now, after so many years of wandering from theory to theory, or rather, from vision to vision, return once more to the home where she was born, and to the altar at which she made her first simple offerings; no longer, as she first went forth, a wilful, dreamy, empty-handed child, but with a matronly dignity, and a priest-like...
Página 315 - As a huge stone is sometimes seen to lie Couched on the bald top of an eminence ; Wonder to all who do the same espy, By what means it could thither come, and whence; So that it seems a thing endued with sense : Like a sea-beast crawled forth, that on a shelf Of rock or sand reposeth, there to sun itself...
Página 209 - The great difference in colour between different natives struck me much : of the crowd by whom we were surrounded, some were black as negroes, others merely copper-coloured, and others little darker than the Tunisines whom I have seen at Liverpool. Mr. Mill, the principal of Bishop's College, who, with Mr.
Página 276 - Recupero tells me he is exceedingly embarrassed by these discoveries, in writing the history of the mountain. That Moses hangs like a dead weight upon him, and blunts all his zeal for inquiry ; for that really he has not the conscience to make his mountain so young as that prophet makes the world.
Página 278 - Herculaneum was swallowed up: but we are informed by unquestionable authority, that the matter which covers the ancient town of Herculaneum is not the produce of one eruption only ; for there are evident marks that the matter of six eruptions has taken its course over that which lies immediately above the town, and was the cause of its destruction. The strata are either of lava or burnt matter, with veins of good soil between them...
Página 217 - It is remarkable, however, to observe how surely all these classes of men in a few generations, even •without any intermarriage with the Hindoos, assume the deep olive tint, little less dark than a negro, which seems natural to the climate. The Portuguese natives form unions among themselves alone, or if they can, with Europeans. Yet the Portuguese have, during a three hundred years' residence in India, become as black as Caffres.
Página 212 - Tuckey, speaking of the natives of Congo, says that they 'are evidently a mixed nation, having no national physiognomy, and many of them perfectly south European in their features. This, one would naturally conjecture, arises from the Portuguese having intermarried with them, and yet there are very few mulattoes among them.
Página 146 - ... writers and from monuments, and it is no wonder that learned men should have differed widely in opinion on the subject. I should think the best solution is, that Egypt was the country where the Greeks most easily saw the inhabitants of interior Africa...
Página 101 - Klaproth maintains, that by his investigations, "the universal affinity of languages is placed in so strong a light, that it must be considered by all as completely demonstrated. This does not appear explicable on any other hypothesis, than that of admitting fragments of a primary language yet to exist through all the languages of the old and new world.
Página 217 - Portuguese colonist shows no symptom of approximation, and which undoubtedly do not appear to follow so naturally from the climate as that swarthiness of complexion which is the sole distinction between the Hindoo and the European. But if heat produces one change, other peculiarities of climate may produce other and additional changes, and when such peculiarities have three or four thousand years to operate in, it is not easy to fix any limits to their power.