Great Books of the Western World, Band 12Robert Maynard Hutchins Encyclopædia Britannica, 1952 |
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Seite 18
... fall through water and thin air , they must quicken their descents in proportion to their weights , because the body of water and subtle nature of air cannot retard everything in equal degree , but more readily give way , overpowered by ...
... fall through water and thin air , they must quicken their descents in proportion to their weights , because the body of water and subtle nature of air cannot retard everything in equal degree , but more readily give way , overpowered by ...
Seite 65
... fall and rocks moulder away , that shrines and idols of gods are worn out with decay , and that the holy divinity cannot prolong the bounds of fate or struggle against the fixed laws of na- ture ? Then see we not the monuments of men ...
... fall and rocks moulder away , that shrines and idols of gods are worn out with decay , and that the holy divinity cannot prolong the bounds of fate or struggle against the fixed laws of na- ture ? Then see we not the monuments of men ...
Seite 140
... fall into the things which you would avoid : but as to these long and la- boured sentences , you will take them and blot them out . " What then did not Socrates write ? " And who wrote so much ? But how ? As he could not always have at ...
... fall into the things which you would avoid : but as to these long and la- boured sentences , you will take them and blot them out . " What then did not Socrates write ? " And who wrote so much ? But how ? As he could not always have at ...
Inhalt
On the Nature of Things Page | 1 |
The Discourses of Epictetus Page | 105 |
The Meditations of Marcus Aurelius Page | 253 |
Urheberrecht | |
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
able according allow animal appearances bear become begin belongs body born bring carried cause CHAPTER choose clouds comes common consider death desire earth everything evil exercise exist eyes faculty fall father fear feel fire first-beginnings fixed follow force formed give given gods hand happen hast hear heat heaven hold keep kind light limbs live look man's manner matter means mind motion move nature never observe once opinion pain pass person philosopher pleasure possess possible present principles produced proper reason receive rest round ruling seeds seek seen sense slave soul speak suppose tell thee things thou thoughts thyself tion true truth turn understand universe whole wilt winds wish