Readings in Western Civilization, Volum 2George Harmon Knoles, Rixford Kinney Snyder, Rixford Snyder Lippincott, 1960 - 922 pàgines |
Des de l'interior del llibre
Resultats 1 - 3 de 81.
Pàgina 53
... nature of a thing is its end . For what each thing is when fully de- veloped , we call its nature , whether we are speaking of a man , a horse , or a family . Be- sides , the final cause and end of a thing is the best , and to be self ...
... nature of a thing is its end . For what each thing is when fully de- veloped , we call its nature , whether we are speaking of a man , a horse , or a family . Be- sides , the final cause and end of a thing is the best , and to be self ...
Pàgina 147
... nature made us just that we might share our goods with each other , and supply each other's wants . You ob- serve in this discussion , whenever I speak of nature , I mean nature in its genuine purity , but that there is , in fact , such ...
... nature made us just that we might share our goods with each other , and supply each other's wants . You ob- serve in this discussion , whenever I speak of nature , I mean nature in its genuine purity , but that there is , in fact , such ...
Pàgina 454
... nature revealed by Newton . Pope had sung : Nature and Nature's laws lay hid in night : God said , Let Newton be ! and all was Light . In addition to voicing the veneration of nature and of Newton , Pope phrased into familiar maxims ...
... nature revealed by Newton . Pope had sung : Nature and Nature's laws lay hid in night : God said , Let Newton be ! and all was Light . In addition to voicing the veneration of nature and of Newton , Pope phrased into familiar maxims ...
Continguts
The Ancient Near East | 1 |
From The Books of the Kings | 12 |
Greek Civilization | 29 |
Copyright | |
No s’hi han mostrat 54 seccions
Altres edicions - Mostra-ho tot
Readings in Western Civilization, Volum 2 George Harmon Knoles,Rixford Kinney Snyder,Rixford Snyder Visualització de fragments - 1960 |
Frases i termes més freqüents
according Ahab anathema ANTISTROPHE apostles behold body Cæsar called Carloman cause Cebes cerned Christ Christian Church citizens common Corinth Creon Crito Cunegonde death divine Durendal earth equal eral eternal evil existence eyes faith father Faust fear friends frontier gave give Glaucon God's gold hand hath heart heaven holy honour hour human Italy Jahweh Jesus Jocasta judge justice kind King labour Laius land liberty live Lord matter means ment Mephistopheles mind nations nature never opinion Pangloss peace perfect persons pleasure political Polybus Pope priests prince principle reason received Roland Roman Rome rule sacrament sacred saith Shep Simmias society Socrates soul sovereign speak spirit Thebes thee things thou shalt thought tion Tiresias true truth unto usury virtue whole words