Religion and Science as Allies: Or, Similarities of Physical and Religious Knowledge |
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Page 17
... known with reasonable certain- ty , and affiliated with previous knowledge into a con- sistent whole . In its narrower and more special sense , science , in modern times , has come to be re- stricted to that portion of systematized and ...
... known with reasonable certain- ty , and affiliated with previous knowledge into a con- sistent whole . In its narrower and more special sense , science , in modern times , has come to be re- stricted to that portion of systematized and ...
Page 26
... known little of . Physicists speak familiarly of scientific method , but " they could not , " says Prof. Jevons , 1 " readily describe what they mean by that expres- sion . Profoundly engaged in the study of particu- lar classes of ...
... known little of . Physicists speak familiarly of scientific method , but " they could not , " says Prof. Jevons , 1 " readily describe what they mean by that expres- sion . Profoundly engaged in the study of particu- lar classes of ...
Page 46
... known as the Vatican Council , it was defined to be " a doc- trine divinely revealed , that when the Roman Pontiff speaks ex cathedra .... he possesses that in- fallibility with which the Divine Rdeeemer willed his Church to be endowed ...
... known as the Vatican Council , it was defined to be " a doc- trine divinely revealed , that when the Roman Pontiff speaks ex cathedra .... he possesses that in- fallibility with which the Divine Rdeeemer willed his Church to be endowed ...
Page 57
... known to all scholars . For an accurate test , there is no single manuscript that we can resort to . We must rely upon the criti- cal judgment of certain fallible men to select , out of many codexes , the particular word which in each ...
... known to all scholars . For an accurate test , there is no single manuscript that we can resort to . We must rely upon the criti- cal judgment of certain fallible men to select , out of many codexes , the particular word which in each ...
Page 80
... known ? By sense - ob- servation ? No skill and care would ever enable us to learn or prove experimentally any one geometrical proposition in the absolute way in which we know them all . Any finite amount of difference vastly less than ...
... known ? By sense - ob- servation ? No skill and care would ever enable us to learn or prove experimentally any one geometrical proposition in the absolute way in which we know them all . Any finite amount of difference vastly less than ...
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Common terms and phrases
551 Broadway absolute accept animal antagonism APPLETON astronomy atoms attractive Auguste Comte authority believe body cause cern chemical Chemistry Christian Church claim conceivable conception Dean of Canterbury divine doctrines earth ence ether evidence existence experience external fact faith finite force Fragments of Science gion give gravitation heat Herbert Spencer human Huxley hypotheses idea inconceivable induction infallible inference infinite inquiry intellectual intuitive Jevons John Stuart Mill knowl knowledge laws light ligion limit material matter ment mental metaphysical method mind molecule moral motion Nature never objects observation Owens College particles phenomena philosophy physical investigation planets possible present principles proof reason religion and science religious revelation says Prof scientific scientific method sense sidereal day soul space spiritual substance supposed teleological argument theism theology theories things thought tific tion true truth Tyndall universe University of Erlangen verification vibrations volume
Popular passages
Page 138 - That gravity should be innate, inherent, and essential to matter, so that one body may act upon another at a distance through a vacuum, without the mediation of anything else...
Page 69 - If we take in our hand any volume; of divinity or school metaphysics, for instance; let us ask, Does it contain any abstract reasoning concerning quantity or number'} No. Does it contain any experimental reasoning concerning matter of fact and existence? No. Commit it then to the flames: for it can contain nothing but sophistry and illusion.
Page 199 - Whereas the main Business of Natural Philosophy is to argue from Phenomena without feigning Hypotheses, and to deduce Causes from Effects, till we come to the very first Cause, which certainly is not mechanical; and not only to unfold the Mechanism of the World, but chiefly to resolve these and such like Questions.
Page 196 - The scientific imagination, which is here authoritative, demands, as the origin and cause of a series of ether-waves, a particle of vibrating matter . quite as definite, though it may be excessively minute, as that which gives origin to a musical sound.
Page 102 - Every body continues in its state of rest, or of uniform motion in a straight line, except so far as it may be compelled by force to change that state.
Page 171 - There is no such science. There are no rules on these subjects so fixed and invariable as that their aggregate constitutes a science. I believe I have recently ran over twenty volumes, from Adam Smith to Professor Dew, of Virginia, and from the whole, if I were to pick out with one hand all the mere truisms, and with the other all the doubtful propositions, little would be left On Monday we propose to take up Kendall and Noah.