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" That when the arts and sciences come to perfection in any state, from that moment they naturally, or rather necessarily, decline, and seldom or never revive in that nation where they formerly flourished. "
Monthly Review; Or Literary Journal Enlarged - Page 476
edited by - 1824
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Essays and Treatises on Several Subjects, Volume 1

David Hume - Philosophy - 1804 - 592 pages
...advance it as a fourth observation on this subject, of the rise and progress of the arts and sciences, That when the arts and sciences come to perfection...revive in that nation, where they formerly flourished. It must be confessed, that this maxim, though conformable to experience, may at first sight be esteemed,...
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Essays, moral, political, and literary

David Hume - Philosophy - 1809 - 868 pages
...advance it as a fourth observation on this subject, of the rise and progress of the arts and sciences, That when the arts and sciences come to perfection...they naturally or rather necessarily decline, and teldom or never revive in that nation, where they formerly flourished. It must be confessed, that this...
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Essays, moral, political, and literary

David Hume - Philosophy - 1817 - 564 pages
...advance it as a fourth observation on this subject, of the rise and progress of the arts and sciences, That "when the arts and sciences come to perfection...decline) and seldom or never revive in that nation, inhere they formerly Jlourished. It must be confessed, that this maxim, though conformable to experience,...
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On the Origin and Vicissitudes of Literature, Science and Art,: And Their ...

William Roscoe - Art and society - 1817 - 88 pages
...highest excellence, they, in the course of human affairs, perish and decay. Thus Mr. Hume asserts, that " when the arts and sciences come to perfection in any state, they naturally, or rather necessarily, * ' ' " ' 7 ' • "" * Sir JE Smith's Review of the Modem State...
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The Pamphleteer, Volume 11

Abraham John Valpy - Great Britain - 1818 - 580 pages
...and decay. Thus Mr. Hume asserts, that " whe:i the arts and sciences come to perfection in any state, they naturally, or rather necessarily, decline, and seldom or never revive in that nation where they have formerly nourished ;" and the judicious Tiraboschi admits, that " it is common to all the studies...
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The Pamphleteer, Volume 11

Abraham John Valpy - Great Britain - 1818 - 544 pages
...and decay. Thus Mr. Hume asserts, that " when the arts and sciences come to perfection in any state, they naturally, or rather necessarily, decline, and seldom or never revive in that nation where they have formerly flourished ;" and the judicious Tiraboschi admits, that " it is common to all the studies...
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The Quarterly Journal of Literature, Science, and the Arts, Volume 7

Arts - 1819 - 452 pages
...their elevation and declension ; and further, that when they come to perfection in any state, they necessarily decline, and seldom or never revive in that nation where they had formerly flourished. To the general truth of these remarks, history and experience oblige us to...
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The Quarterly Journal, Volume 7

1819 - 452 pages
...their elevation and declension ; and further, that when they come to perfection in any state, they necessarily decline, and seldom or never revive in that nation where they had formerly flourished. To the general truth of these remarks, history and experience oblige us to...
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Questions in Political Economy, Politics, Morals, Metaphysics, Polite ...

Samuel Bailey - Economics - 1823 - 424 pages
...an imitator." Hume too, in his Essay on the Rise and Progress of the Arts and Sciences, maintains, " that when the arts and sciences come to perfection...revive in that nation where they formerly flourished." The principal reason he assigns for this effect is, the discouragement, which the possession of models...
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The British Essayists: The Lounger

English essays - 1823 - 354 pages
...the taste and genius of that elegant people. It is for these reasons, as has been justly observed, that when the arts and sciences come to perfection in any state, they from that moment naturally and necessarily decline; and if this be the case, then surely the more...
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