Southern Quarterly Review, Volume 30, Issue 2Daniel Kimball Whitaker, Milton Clapp, William Gilmore Simms, James Henley Thornwell Wiley & Putnam, 1967 |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 40
Page 275
... truth , and is willing to go wherever it may lead him . Though history and biography are technically distinguished , and in truth constitute different departments of knowledge and inqui- ry , yet practically there seems to be a ...
... truth , and is willing to go wherever it may lead him . Though history and biography are technically distinguished , and in truth constitute different departments of knowledge and inqui- ry , yet practically there seems to be a ...
Page 399
... truth and monstrous errors , these can have only a short- lived career , and a narrow influence . Truth ever in the end over- comes , and the equilibrium is restored after every disturbance , to greater stability . We might notice , in ...
... truth and monstrous errors , these can have only a short- lived career , and a narrow influence . Truth ever in the end over- comes , and the equilibrium is restored after every disturbance , to greater stability . We might notice , in ...
Page 405
... truth , each is necessarily more antagonistic to every other than even to truth itself ; hence , errors must , in the end , neutralize each other , and truth will remain - triumphant . Amid all our changing experi- ences , as a people ...
... truth , each is necessarily more antagonistic to every other than even to truth itself ; hence , errors must , in the end , neutralize each other , and truth will remain - triumphant . Amid all our changing experi- ences , as a people ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
absolute admiration Africa American Bishop of Arras Brooks called cause century character Christian civil colonies colonists Congress Constitution Count of Egmont Duchess of Parma Dutch Republic Egmont energy England equal evil exhibited existence fact favour feeling Fichte force France freedom French friends give gospel Granvelle heat heathen Hegel honour House human idea ideal individual influence institutions interest King labour lectures Liberia liberty living matter mechanical ment mind mission missionaries moral motion Motley nations natives nature negro Netherlands never noble object occasion opinion pantheism party perpetual motion Philip philoso philosophy political position present Prince of Orange principle produced question race Randolph reason religion religious remarks rendered result Schelling Schelling's Senate sentiment slavery slaves society South Carolina Spain speculations speech spirit thought thousand tion true truth universal volume whole William of Orange