The Book of NatureJ. & J. Harper, 1831 - 467 sivua |
Kirjan sisältä
Tulokset 1 - 5 kokonaismäärästä 77
Sivu iii
... Greek , and French languages , and thus laid the foundation for his subsequent high attainments as a linguist . When he was a little more than twelve years of age , his indefatigable studies began very seriously to impair his health ...
... Greek , and French languages , and thus laid the foundation for his subsequent high attainments as a linguist . When he was a little more than twelve years of age , his indefatigable studies began very seriously to impair his health ...
Sivu ix
... Greek word ( povoyevns ) which conveyed an erroneous notion , from want of knowledge of the term they ought to have employed : he never contended that St. Paul did not mean to teach the doctrine of the resurrection of the body in the ...
... Greek word ( povoyevns ) which conveyed an erroneous notion , from want of knowledge of the term they ought to have employed : he never contended that St. Paul did not mean to teach the doctrine of the resurrection of the body in the ...
Sivu 25
... Greeks and Romans , is clear , since the poem of Empedocles on " Nature , " and that of Lucretius , on " the Nature of Things , " the two most complete physiological works of which we have any account in antiquity , were ex- pressly ...
... Greeks and Romans , is clear , since the poem of Empedocles on " Nature , " and that of Lucretius , on " the Nature of Things , " the two most complete physiological works of which we have any account in antiquity , were ex- pressly ...
Sivu 27
... Greeks it passed to the Romans , and appears as follows in Lucretius : - ubi viderimus nihil posse creari De nihilo , tum ... Greek instead of in Hebrew , and hereby proving his own era as well as the school in which he had studied ...
... Greeks it passed to the Romans , and appears as follows in Lucretius : - ubi viderimus nihil posse creari De nihilo , tum ... Greek instead of in Hebrew , and hereby proving his own era as well as the school in which he had studied ...
Sivu 29
... Greek and Roman phi- losophers , it is not to be wondered at that it captivated still more of their poets ; and hence we find it , with perhaps the exception of Empedocles and Lucretius , more or less pervading all of them , from ...
... Greek and Roman phi- losophers , it is not to be wondered at that it captivated still more of their poets ; and hence we find it , with perhaps the exception of Empedocles and Lucretius , more or less pervading all of them , from ...
Muita painoksia - Näytä kaikki
Yleiset termit ja lausekkeet
action adverted already observed animals appears Aristotle birds blood body brain called capable carbonic acid character chiefly colour common consequence consists constitutes Cuvier degree denominated derived distinct doctrine earth Epicurus equally existence external senses fact faculty farther feeling fishes fluid former gastric juice genus glottis Greek happiness heart heat hence hippopotamus human hypothesis ideas important innate ideas insects instances instinct intelligence kind knowledge lacteals language larynx Lect lecture less Lucretius mankind manner material matter means mind Misor moral muscles nature never objects occasionally organs origin oxygen passions peculiar perfect perhaps perpetually petrifactions philosophers physiologists plants Plato possess present principle produced proof prove Pythagoras quadrupeds racters reason respect sensation solid soul species stomach substance supposed taste term theory thing tion traced tribes truth variety various vegetable ventriloquism whence whole words worms zoophytes