Southern Quarterly Review, Volume 29Daniel Kimball Whitaker, Milton Clapp, William Gilmore Simms, James Henley Thornwell Wiley & Putnam, 1967 |
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Page 175
... mind . But when the mind has been developed , and its habits established , its energies are not without a purpose , nor is that purpose an increase of their own intensity . They are designed for the apprehension and discovery of truth ...
... mind . But when the mind has been developed , and its habits established , its energies are not without a purpose , nor is that purpose an increase of their own intensity . They are designed for the apprehension and discovery of truth ...
Page 313
... mind , even of a superior class , is very little ; the greatest part of mankind must owe all their knowledge , and all must owe by far the larger part of it , to the information of others . " If the Eleusinian solemnities were called ...
... mind , even of a superior class , is very little ; the greatest part of mankind must owe all their knowledge , and all must owe by far the larger part of it , to the information of others . " If the Eleusinian solemnities were called ...
Page 328
... mind in dreaming appears to be referable to two heads- 1st . The impressions which arise in the mind are believed to have a real and present existence , and this belief is not corrected , as in the waking state , by comparing the ...
... mind in dreaming appears to be referable to two heads- 1st . The impressions which arise in the mind are believed to have a real and present existence , and this belief is not corrected , as in the waking state , by comparing the ...
Contents
ARTICLE PAGE I THEORY OF THE BEAUTIFUL | 3 |
THE SIX DAYS OF CREATION | 21 |
IIILA BORDES INTRODUCTION TO PHYSIOLOGY | 51 |
Copyright | |
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