| New Church gen. confer - 1868 - 602 pages
...observation and classification of laws which regulate effects. The highest condition of this stage would be to represent all phenomena as the various particulars of one general view. The First or supernatural stage is said to commence with the unknowable. It has to learn its impotence... | |
| 1843 - 452 pages
...applies itself to the observation and classification of the laws which regulate effects ; that is to say, the invariable relations of succession and similitude...stage would be, to be able to represent all phenomena but as the various particulars of one general law or fact, such as gravitation." In closing these various... | |
| English periodicals - 1843 - 652 pages
...applies itself to the observation and classification of the laws which regulate effects ; that is to say, the invariable relations of succession and similitude...of this stage would be, to be able to represent all phaenomena but as the various particulars of one general law or fact, such as gravitation. Such is... | |
| 1847 - 556 pages
...applies itself to the observation and classification of laws which regulate effects ; that is to say, the invariable relations of succession and similitude...phenomena as the various particulars of one general view." Now let us grant all this ; what prove we ? That, according to this law, this fundamental law of mental... | |
| George Henry Lewes - Philosophers - 1853 - 282 pages
...applies itself to the observation and classification of laws which regulate effects ; that is to s_ay, the invariable relations of succession and similitude...phenomena as the various particulars of one general view. Thus in Astronomy we may trace the gradual evolution from Apollo and his chariot, to the Pythagorean... | |
| George Henry Lewes - Philosophers - 1857 - 846 pages
...applies itself to the observation and classification of laws which regulate effects : that is to say, the invariable relations of succession and similitude...phenomena as the various particulars of one general view. Thus, in Astronomy we may trace the gradual evolution from Apollo and his chariot, through the Pythagorean... | |
| John James Drysdale, Robert Ellis Dudgeon, Richard Hughes, John Rutherfurd Russell - Homeopathy - 1862 - 722 pages
...essences, applies itself to the observation and classification of laws which regulate effects, ie, the invariable relations of succession and similitude...highest condition of this stage would be, to be able to present all phenomena as the various particulars of one general view." Do we not feel as if here, Comte's... | |
| 1862 - 722 pages
...essences, applies itself to the observation and classification of laws which regulate effects, te, the invariable relations of succession and similitude...highest condition of this stage would be, to be able to present all phenomena as the various particulars of one general view." Do we not feel as if here, Comte's... | |
| Andrew Kennedy Hutchison Boyd - Philosophy, English - 1865 - 432 pages
...applies itself to the observation and classification of laws which regulate effects : that is to say, the invariable relations of succession and similitude...phenomena as the various particulars of one general view. These three stages do not always occur in strictly chronological order. Some sciences arrive more rapidly... | |
| Edward Garbett - 1867 - 428 pages
...applies itself to the observation and classification of laws which regulate effects; that is to say, the invariable relations of succession and similitude...as the various particulars of one general view/'' (Lewes' Biographical History of Philosophy, art. Augusts Comte.) LECTUEE VI NOTE 1, p. 200. " CIVILISATION... | |
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