The Critical Review, Or, Annals of LiteratureW. Simpkin and R. Marshall, 1810 |
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Page 123
... truths were adamantine , how could they be spread ? We may spread mould , but we cannot , in the same sense , spread a substance harder than Portland stone . Besides , if these truths were ' adamantine and imperishable , ' as the author ...
... truths were adamantine , how could they be spread ? We may spread mould , but we cannot , in the same sense , spread a substance harder than Portland stone . Besides , if these truths were ' adamantine and imperishable , ' as the author ...
Page 157
... truth will be always , more or less , benefited by the result . The mere exercise of the intellectual faculty on ... truth . Truth is not reconcileable with contradiction ; and If the two contradictory opinions cannot both be true ...
... truth will be always , more or less , benefited by the result . The mere exercise of the intellectual faculty on ... truth . Truth is not reconcileable with contradiction ; and If the two contradictory opinions cannot both be true ...
Page 428
... truth of the inferences , when he is told that a quantity has the same ratio to a part of a given quan- tity that it has to the whole , because the difference may be made infinitely small , and the whole is the limit to which the part ...
... truth of the inferences , when he is told that a quantity has the same ratio to a part of a given quan- tity that it has to the whole , because the difference may be made infinitely small , and the whole is the limit to which the part ...
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ancient aneurism appears army artery attention battle of Talavera Belisarius British Builth Buonaparte called cardinal Fleury cause character Charmilly christianity church church of England circumstances common contains death doctrine duke duke of Orleans effect enemy England English Erasmus Euclid eyes favour feel France French Gelimer genius give honour horses interest king labours lady land laws London Lord Louis XIV manner means ment merit mind mode moral nation nature never night object observed opinion original Ozoro passage passed perhaps persons Philopatris poem poet political Portugal Portuguese possessed present prince principal produced professor quantity racter reader reason reign remarks respect Russia Salt says seems sentiments Sir John Moore Spain species spirit supposed thing thou tion translation truth volume whole wish words writer