The Works of Francis Bacon: Philosophical worksLongmans, 1887 |
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Página 40
... mean to assert that there is any discontinuity in the progress of the tide along the shores of France and the Netherlands . The tide gets pro- gressively later and later until we come to a place where there is high water about one in ...
... mean to assert that there is any discontinuity in the progress of the tide along the shores of France and the Netherlands . The tide gets pro- gressively later and later until we come to a place where there is high water about one in ...
Página 42
... means easy . Scaliger however might have learned from Cardan , notwithstanding the arrogance with which he treats him , to distinguish between them . For Cardan , after saying that high water follows the moon , inquires why the motion ...
... means easy . Scaliger however might have learned from Cardan , notwithstanding the arrogance with which he treats him , to distinguish between them . For Cardan , after saying that high water follows the moon , inquires why the motion ...
Página 69
... mean that as yet the earth was unadorned and in disorder ; a solution in which we see how far they were from ... means of affirmatives are , so to speak , brought forth by Light : whereas those which are obtained by negatives and ...
... mean that as yet the earth was unadorned and in disorder ; a solution in which we see how far they were from ... means of affirmatives are , so to speak , brought forth by Light : whereas those which are obtained by negatives and ...
Página 71
... means of magnitude , figure , and motion . This opinion he ascribes to all the reformers of the seventeenth century , mentioning by name Bacon and several others.2 Thirty years afterwards , in giving some account of the history of his ...
... means of magnitude , figure , and motion . This opinion he ascribes to all the reformers of the seventeenth century , mentioning by name Bacon and several others.2 Thirty years afterwards , in giving some account of the history of his ...
Página 73
... mean that all phe- nomena must be referred to the fundamental and originally inherent properties of matter as the first ground of their pro- duction , Bacon goes on to say that next to the error of those who make formless matter an ...
... mean that all phe- nomena must be referred to the fundamental and originally inherent properties of matter as the first ground of their pro- duction , Bacon goes on to say that next to the error of those who make formless matter an ...
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absque adeo aër aërem aëris alia aliis aliquid aliud aqua aquæ aquarum Aristotle atque autem Bacon calore calorem certe circa cœli cœlo cœlum corporis corporum corpus cujus Democritus divers divine doth ejus enim eorum esset etiam fere fieri flamma fluxus globi hæc hath homines hominum hujusmodi illa illis illud instar inter ipsa ipsis ipsum ista Itaque knowledge learning licet magis materiæ mind minus modo modum motion motum motus multo naturæ natural philosophy naturalis nature Neque enim nihil nisi nobis Novum Organum omnia omnino omnis omnium opinion philosophy posse possit postquam potest primo principiis prorsus quæ quædam qualia quam quia quibus quin quis quod rebus rerum rursus scilicet secundum sibi sint sive sunt tamen tanquam tantum Telesius terræ terram things tion translation unto veluti vero Verum videtur virtue whereof