Great Books of the Western World, Band 12Robert Maynard Hutchins Encyclopædia Britannica, 1952 |
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Seite 47
... seen in the bright light of day , touch and sight must be excited by a quite similar cause . Well then if we handle a square thing and it excites our attention in the dark , in the daylight what square thing will be able to fall on our ...
... seen in the bright light of day , touch and sight must be excited by a quite similar cause . Well then if we handle a square thing and it excites our attention in the dark , in the daylight what square thing will be able to fall on our ...
Seite 50
... seen which have not been seen by the senses . For nothing is harder than to separate manifest facts from doubtful which straightway the mind adds on of itself . 469 ] Again if a man believe that nothing is known , he knows not whether ...
... seen which have not been seen by the senses . For nothing is harder than to separate manifest facts from doubtful which straightway the mind adds on of itself . 469 ] Again if a man believe that nothing is known , he knows not whether ...
Seite 93
... seen to stream through this passage , heat through that , and one thing is seen to pass through by the same way more quickly than other things . The nature of the passages , you are to know , compels it so to be , varying in manifold ...
... seen to stream through this passage , heat through that , and one thing is seen to pass through by the same way more quickly than other things . The nature of the passages , you are to know , compels it so to be , varying in manifold ...
Inhalt
On the Nature of Things Page | 1 |
The Discourses of Epictetus Page | 105 |
The Meditations of Marcus Aurelius Page | 253 |
Urheberrecht | |
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