Southern Quarterly Review, Volume 2Daniel Kimball Whitaker, Milton Clapp, William Gilmore Simms, James Henley Thornwell Wiley & Putnam, 1967 |
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Page 216
... mind , for which we admit that no full and satisfactory explanation can be found , according to the theory of " all knowledge through the senses ; " but the difficulty is only removed one step , to be increased in the end , by supposing ...
... mind , for which we admit that no full and satisfactory explanation can be found , according to the theory of " all knowledge through the senses ; " but the difficulty is only removed one step , to be increased in the end , by supposing ...
Page 280
... mind , the powers of sensation , per- ception , memory and reflection ; the state of the mind in volition ; in short , all the modes in which the intellectual thinking principle developes itself . Modern theorists have undertaken to ...
... mind , the powers of sensation , per- ception , memory and reflection ; the state of the mind in volition ; in short , all the modes in which the intellectual thinking principle developes itself . Modern theorists have undertaken to ...
Page 286
... mind with godlike wisdom , beautifying his character with the richest fruits of virtue , and adorning his whole life ... Mind is the aggregate of the functions of the brain ; the greater the brain , and the more powerful the exercise of ...
... mind with godlike wisdom , beautifying his character with the richest fruits of virtue , and adorning his whole life ... Mind is the aggregate of the functions of the brain ; the greater the brain , and the more powerful the exercise of ...
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