| Agnes Sophia Semple - 1812 - 332 páginas
...wisdom which we see equally displayed in the exquisite 'Struct ture and just motions of the greatest and subtilest parts. These, with perfect goodness by Which...concludes his principal works with Thoughts of God, sublime in proportion to the objects which fille.d bis mind, and the clearness with which he viewed... | |
| John Herman Randall (Jr.) - 1926 - 672 páginas
...which we see equally displayed in the exquisite structure and just motions of the greatest and the subtilest parts. These, with perfect goodness, by...animated to correspond with the general harmony of Nature.18 With distinguished scientists, from Newton down, voicing such worship of the perfection of... | |
| A. A. Long - 1986 - 294 páginas
...Pyrrhonism on historiography, cf. A. Momigliano, Studies in Historiography (London 1966) pp. toff. constitute the supreme object of the speculations...animated to correspond with the general harmony of Nature.1 Today such optimism seems out of place, but it was a reasonable attitude to hold in the eighteenth... | |
| Thomas A. Spragens - 1990 - 304 páginas
...wisdom which we see equally displayed in the exquisite structure and just motions of the greatest and subtilest parts. These, with perfect goodness, by...animated to correspond with the general harmony of Nature.62 The truths of Newtonian empiricism are in this way infused with Platonic moral substance.... | |
| Arthur P. Mendel - 1999 - 364 páginas
...which we see equally displayed in the exquisite structure and just motions of the greatest and subtlest parts. These, with perfect goodness, by which they...to correspond with the general harmony of nature. 18 Had this new religion of mathematical order been limited to the mathematicians, astronomers, and... | |
| Carl Lotus Becker - 2003 - 200 páginas
...wisdom which we see equally displayed in the exquisite structure and just motions of the greatest and subtilest parts. These, with perfect goodness, by...animated to correspond with the general harmony of nature.*1 The closing words of this passage may well be taken as a just expression of the prevailing... | |
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