| Francis Bacon - 1858 - 540 lapas
...actually deal with it. Hence it follows that the order of demonstration is likewise inverted. For hitherto the proceeding has been to fly at once from the sense...though it offers an easy and ready way to disputation. Now my plan is to proceed regularly and gradually from one axiom to another, so that the most general... | |
| Francis Bacon - 1858 - 516 lapas
...actually deal with it. Hence it follows that the order of demonstration is likewise inverted. For hitherto the proceeding has been to fly at once from the sense...though it offers an easy and ready way to disputation. Now my plan is to proceed regularly and gradually from one axiom to another, so that the most general... | |
| Francis Bacon - 1861 - 578 lapas
...actually deal with it. Hence it follows that the order of demonstration is likewise inverted. For hitherto the proceeding has been to fly at once from the sense...though it offers an easy and ready way to disputation. Now my plan is to proceed regularly and gradually from one axiom to another, so that the most general... | |
| Francis Bacon - 1864 - 528 lapas
...actually deal with it. Hence it follows that the order of demonstration is likewise inverted. For hitherto the proceeding has been to fly at once from the sense...though it offers an easy and ready way to disputation. Now my plan is to proceed regularly and gradually from one axiom to another, so that the most general... | |
| 1870 - 974 lapas
...book i., aph. 104. He says: — " Hitherto the proceeding lias been to fly at once from the sense to particulars, up to the most general propositions as...rest by middle terms : a short way, no doubt, but precipi'ate, and one which will never lead to nature, though it offers an easy and ready way to disputation.... | |
| 1870 - 492 lapas
...book i., aph. 104. He says : — " Hitherto the proceeding lias been to fly at once from the sense to partic-ulars, up to the most general propositions...-upon, and from these to derive the rest by middle terme : a short way, no doubt, but precipi'ate, and one which will never lead to nature, though it... | |
| John Edwin Nixon - 1885 - 256 lapas
...neutrum est, sed quaedam observatio constans atque diuturna est, quum quid visual - 13* (9) Hitherto the proceeding has been to fly at once from the sense...and particulars up to the most general propositions, and from these to derive the rest by middle terms. Now my plan is to proceed regularly and gradually... | |
| Florian Cajori - 1899 - 340 lapas
...I., p. 87. (To be quoted hereafter as WHEWELL.) answered, why did people of such great penetration " fly at once from the sense and particulars up to the most general propositions," or why did they come to apply ideas "not distinct and appropriate to the facts " ? What causes led... | |
| 1905 - 958 lapas
...leads to no result. Hence it follows that the order of demonstration is likewise inverted. For hitherto the proceeding has been to fly at once from the sense...though it offers an easy and ready way to disputation. Now my plan is to proceed regularly and gradually from one axiom to another, so that the most general... | |
| William Caxton, Jean Calvin, Nicolaus Copernicus, Francis Bacon, John Knox, Edmund Spenser, Sir Walter Raleigh, Henry Condell, John Heminge, Isaac Newton, John Dryden, Henry Fielding, Samuel Johnson, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, William Wordsworth, Victor Hugo, Walt Whitman, Hippolyte Taine - 1910 - 634 lapas
...actually deal with it. Hence it follows that the order of demonstration is likewise inverted. For hitherto the proceeding has been to fly at once from the sense...though it offers an easy and ready way to disputation. Now my plan is to proceed regularly and gradually from one axiom to another, so that the most general... | |
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