The Works of Francis Bacon ...: Philosophical worksHoughton, Mifflin, 1909 |
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Página 118
... doubt ) by an higher Providence , but in discourse of reason finding what a province he had undertaken against the Bishop of Rome and the degenerate traditions of the church , and finding his own solitude , being no ways aided by the ...
... doubt ) by an higher Providence , but in discourse of reason finding what a province he had undertaken against the Bishop of Rome and the degenerate traditions of the church , and finding his own solitude , being no ways aided by the ...
Página 133
... doubt , and haste 1 to assertion without due and mature suspension of judgment . For the two ways of contemplation are not unlike the two ways of action commonly spoken of by the ancients ; the one plain and smooth in the beginning ...
... doubt , and haste 1 to assertion without due and mature suspension of judgment . For the two ways of contemplation are not unlike the two ways of action commonly spoken of by the ancients ; the one plain and smooth in the beginning ...
Página 232
... Doubt . These doubts or non liquets are of two sorts , Particular and Total . For the first , we see a good example thereof in Aristotle's Problems , which deserved to have had a better continuance , but so nevertheless as there is one ...
... Doubt . These doubts or non liquets are of two sorts , Particular and Total . For the first , we see a good example thereof in Aristotle's Problems , which deserved to have had a better continuance , but so nevertheless as there is one ...
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according action Advancement of Learning ancient Aristotle Augmentis Augustus Cæsar axioms Bacon better body Cæsar Callisthenes causes chapter Cicero civil conceit deficient deflexions Democritus Demosthenes discourse diversity divine doctrine doth doubt effect error excellent fable former fortune FRANCIS BACON give handled hath heaven honour human humour inquiry invention judgment Julius Cæsar kind king knowl knowledge labour light likewise Majesty maketh man's manner matter mean men's Metaphysic method mind moral motion natural philosophy nevertheless Novum Organum observation omitted opinion original particular passage perfect persons Plato pleasure precept princes propound quæ quod reason religion rest saith sapience sciences Scriptures seemeth sense shew Socrates Sophisms sort speak speech spirit subtile Tacitus things tion touching Trajan translation true truth unto Valerius Terminus virtue whereby wherein whereof wisdom wise wits words writing Xenophon