| Francis Bacon - 1881 - 292 pages
...Nature of things which is more precious than anything on earth,1 and claims to have established for ever lawful marriage between the empirical and the rational...into confusion all the affairs of the human family. We have here, not the prosaic realisable schemes of a low utilitarianism aiming at nothing more, as... | |
| Francis Bacon - 1886 - 304 pages
...Nature of things which is more precious than anything on earth,1 and claims to have established for ever lawful marriage between the empirical and the rational...into confusion all the affairs of the human family. We have here, not the prosaic realisable schemes of a low utilitarianism aiming at nothing more, as... | |
| Nathaniel Holmes - 1886 - 480 pages
...following translation : " I have established forever a true and lawful marriage between the empirical and rational faculty, the unkind and ill-starred divorce...into confusion all the affairs of the human family." 8 i Ibid., IX. 82. t Hut. of Mod. Phil., transl. by 0. W. Wight, II. 81. In an emphatic way, this passage... | |
| William Gay Ballantine - Logic - 1896 - 202 pages
...means I suppose that I have established forever a true and lawful marriage between the empirical and rational faculty, the unkind and ill-starred divorce...which has thrown into confusion all the affairs of the common family." 1 The claim of Bacon to be the very first cannot be allowed, but he remains the great... | |
| Edwin Reed - 1902 - 468 pages
...true and lawful marriage between the empirical and the rational faculties, the unkind and ill-starv'd divorce and separation of which has thrown into confusion all the affairs of the human family. " The true relation between the nature of things and the nature of the mind is as the strewing and... | |
| 1905 - 958 pages
...as if invention were nothing more than an exercise of thought, to invoke their own spirits to give them oracles. I, on the contrary, dwelling purely...and fervently pray to God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Ghost, that remembering the sorrows of mankind and the pilgrimage of this our life... | |
| Books - 1910 - 482 pages
...as if invention were nothing more than an exercise of thought, to invoke their own spirits to give them oracles. I, on the contrary, dwelling purely...and fervently pray to God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Ghost, that remembering the sorrows of mankind and the pilgrimage of this our life... | |
| William Caxton, Jean Calvin, Nicolaus Copernicus, Francis Bacon, John Knox, Edmund Spenser, Sir Walter Raleigh, Henry Condell, John Heminge, Isaac Newton, John Dryden, Henry Fielding, Samuel Johnson, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, William Wordsworth, Victor Hugo, Walt Whitman, Hippolyte Taine - Literature - 1910 - 634 pages
...For I do not endeavour either by triumphs of confutation, or pleadings of antiquity, or asItimption of authority, or even by the veil of obscurity, to...and fervently pray to God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Ghost, that remembering the sorrows of mankind and the pilgrimage of this our life... | |
| William Caxton, Jean Calvin, Nicolaus Copernicus, Francis Bacon, Edmund Spenser, Sir Walter Raleigh, Isaac Newton, Henry Fielding, Samuel Johnson, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, William Wordsworth, Walt Whitman - Prefaces - 1910 - 458 pages
...confutation, or pleadings of an-. tiquity, or assumption of authority, or even by the veil of obscurity, ' , i to invest these inventions of mine with any majesty;...and fervently pray to God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Ghost, that remembering the sorrows of mankind and the pilgrimage of this our life... | |
| Norman Kemp Smith - Causation - 1918 - 716 pages
...what they have, what they can dispute, what they can add and contribute to the common stock. . . . And by these means I suppose that I have established...into confusion all the affairs of the human family." DEDICATION TO FREIHERR VON ZEDLITZ KARL ABRAHAM, FREIHERR VON ZEDLITZ had been entrusted, as Minister... | |
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