The Edinburgh Review: Or Critical Journal, Volume 3A. Constable, 1804 |
From inside the book
Page 19
... circumstances to the public as he has detailed them ; premifing that we are forry we can fee no immediate reafons for doubting his accuracy , while we rely most implicitly on his veracity and candour .. Dr Black never published his own ...
... circumstances to the public as he has detailed them ; premifing that we are forry we can fee no immediate reafons for doubting his accuracy , while we rely most implicitly on his veracity and candour .. Dr Black never published his own ...
Page 20
... circumstances forces us to draw , -that both the one and the other of these gentlemen , in all probability , owed their knowledge of the abforption of heat to the diffufion of Dr Black's difcovery , through the medium of his Lectures ...
... circumstances forces us to draw , -that both the one and the other of these gentlemen , in all probability , owed their knowledge of the abforption of heat to the diffufion of Dr Black's difcovery , through the medium of his Lectures ...
Page 36
... circumstances of horror which accompanied the fate of many eminent individuals , can no long- er be read with curiofity , and could fcarcely ever be read with pleasure . They have been founded fo long in the ears of all Europe , that ...
... circumstances of horror which accompanied the fate of many eminent individuals , can no long- er be read with curiofity , and could fcarcely ever be read with pleasure . They have been founded fo long in the ears of all Europe , that ...
Page 43
... circumstance that gives a decided fuperiority to those verses in which M. de Lille must be admitted , we are afraid , to have recorded his own defertion from the cause of his patrons , is the fingular adaptation of the fubject to his ...
... circumstance that gives a decided fuperiority to those verses in which M. de Lille must be admitted , we are afraid , to have recorded his own defertion from the cause of his patrons , is the fingular adaptation of the fubject to his ...
Page 68
... circumstances totally unconnected with that fcience they feem to have forgotten what the term Geography means and comprehends . We fhall in vain look in them for an account and defcription of the different productions of the earth ; of ...
... circumstances totally unconnected with that fcience they feem to have forgotten what the term Geography means and comprehends . We fhall in vain look in them for an account and defcription of the different productions of the earth ; of ...
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Common terms and phrases
Addrefs againſt alfo almoſt Amadis Amadis de Gaul appears becauſe cafe caufe cauſe character Chaucer circumftances compofition confequence confiderable confidered confifts courfe defcribed defcription difcovered difcovery difcuffion difplay diftinct diftinguished divifion eſtabliſhed exift exprefs faid fame fays fcarcely fcience fecond feems feen fenfe fentiments ferve feveral fhall fhort fhould fimilar fince fingular firft firſt fmall fociety fome fometimes fpecies fpeculations French ftate ftill ftones ftudy ftyle fubftances fubject fuch fufficient fuppofed fyftem Galaor hernia hiftorian hiftory himſelf hornblende Iceland illuftrate important increaſe inftance inftruction intereft itſelf labour laft language lefs meaſure moft moſt muft muſt nation nature neceffary Nennius neral obfervations occafion Odin original paffage paffed perfons philofopher pleaſure poffeffed poffible prefent profe Profeffor progrefs propofed queftion racter readers reafon refpect refults remarks Sierra Leone ſtate thefe themſelves theſe thofe thoſe tion tranflation uſe whofe whole
Popular passages
Page 281 - Its most prominent features were, — intrepid and inflexible rectitude ; — a pure and devoted attachment to truth ; — and an entire command (acquired by the unwearied exertions of a long life) over all his passions.
Page 281 - ... perseverance of thought ; and by habits of the most fixed and concentrated attention to his own mental operations; — endowments which, although not the most splendid in the estimation of the multitude, would seem entitled, from the history of science, to rank among the rarest gifts of the mind.
Page 269 - It would be want of candour not to own, that I think there is some merit in what you are pleased to call my philosophy ; but I think it lies chiefly in having called in question the common theory of ideas or images of things in the mind being the only objects of thought; a theory founded on natural prejudices, and so universally received as to be interwoven with the structure of language.
Page 269 - I to give you a detail of what led me to call in question this theory, after I had long held it as self-evident and unquestionable, you would think, as I do, that there was much of chance in the matter. The discovery was the birth of time, not of genius; and Berkeley and Hume did more to bring it to light than the man that hit upon it. I think there is hardly any thing that can be called mine in the philosophy of the mind, which does not follow with ease from the detection of this prejudice.
Page 419 - Life of GEOFFREY CHAUCER, the early English Poet ; including Memoirs of his near Friend and Kinsman, JOHN OF GAUNT, Duke of Lancaster ; with Sketches of the Manners, Opinions, Arts, and Literature of England in the 14th century.
Page 269 - ... uneasiness than the want of a material world, it came into my mind more than forty years ago. to put the question, What evidence have I for this doctrine, that all the objects of my knowledge are ideas in my own mind '! From that time to the present, I have been candidly and impartially, as I think, seeking for the evidence of this principle ; but can find none, excepting the authority of philosophers.
Page 155 - ... there was nothing produced by arbitrary or accidental causes; that no great change, institution, custom, or occurrence, could be ascribed to the character or exertions of an individual, to the temperament or disposition of a nation, to occasional policy, or peculiar wisdom or folly ; every thing, on the contrary, he held, arose spontaneously from the situation of the society...
Page 126 - Ah, knight, thou hast asked a great thing ;' and all who were present were greatly grieved. But the King, who was the most loyal man in the world, bade them not trouble themselves. * It is better...
Page 481 - Hiftory of Man ; with a comparative View of the Structure and Functions of Animated Beings in general.
Page 281 - The studies in which he delighted, were little calculated to draw on him the patronage of the great ; and he was unskilled in the art of courting advancement, by ' fashioning his doctrines to the varying hour.