Southern Quarterly Review, Volume 29Daniel Kimball Whitaker, Milton Clapp, William Gilmore Simms, James Henley Thornwell Wiley & Putnam, 1967 |
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Page 9
... things to a person , on account of the felt analogy in their effects on the soul . Akenside has personified the ... thing is associated with another , whether by a felt analogy or by mere accident , it is indiscriminately referred , by ...
... things to a person , on account of the felt analogy in their effects on the soul . Akenside has personified the ... thing is associated with another , whether by a felt analogy or by mere accident , it is indiscriminately referred , by ...
Page 421
... things which the eye sees , the ear hears , and the hands handle ? So far from it , that these were the things which kept the mind from the embrace of truth . Real truth , that which alone was worthy of the name , and which could be ...
... things which the eye sees , the ear hears , and the hands handle ? So far from it , that these were the things which kept the mind from the embrace of truth . Real truth , that which alone was worthy of the name , and which could be ...
Page 428
... things - the real point at which philosophy should aim - but rather investigating the conditions which were indispensable to the operation of causes , and absurdly mistook these conditions for the causes themselves . He soon perceived ...
... things - the real point at which philosophy should aim - but rather investigating the conditions which were indispensable to the operation of causes , and absurdly mistook these conditions for the causes themselves . He soon perceived ...
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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