Works of Francis Bacon: 2, Volumen3Longman [etc.[, 1857 - 692 páginas |
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Página 122
... effect of accidental diseases , it may be answered that death from mere decay in the strict sense of the word is a phenomenon very seldom observed . When it does occur , it does not appear to take place at any precise age . Again , the ...
... effect of accidental diseases , it may be answered that death from mere decay in the strict sense of the word is a phenomenon very seldom observed . When it does occur , it does not appear to take place at any precise age . Again , the ...
Página 230
... effect of capillary attrac- tion on the surface of the water , which makes it difficult to know when the vessel , into which the crown or other substance to be examined is introduced , is only just full . Ghetaldus's remark , that the ...
... effect of capillary attrac- tion on the surface of the water , which makes it difficult to know when the vessel , into which the crown or other substance to be examined is introduced , is only just full . Ghetaldus's remark , that the ...
Página 232
... effect a table of specific gravities . For some reason or other , they almost all err in the same direction , making the substances to which they relate appear lighter than they really are . Probably Porta forgot that the scale in which ...
... effect a table of specific gravities . For some reason or other , they almost all err in the same direction , making the substances to which they relate appear lighter than they really are . Probably Porta forgot that the scale in which ...
Página 235
... effect maintained that any given portion of water might possibly become any quantity of air . He remarks , that if any one asserts that one measure of water can be transmuted into an equal measure of air , he in reality asserts that ...
... effect maintained that any given portion of water might possibly become any quantity of air . He remarks , that if any one asserts that one measure of water can be transmuted into an equal measure of air , he in reality asserts that ...
Página 326
... The habit of asking how effects are produced had then no existence , and conse- quently the à priori difficulty which hinders men from believing in wonderful stories , except on commensurate evidence , was 326 PREFACE TO.
... The habit of asking how effects are produced had then no existence , and conse- quently the à priori difficulty which hinders men from believing in wonderful stories , except on commensurate evidence , was 326 PREFACE TO.
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Términos y frases comunes
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