| Herbert Spencer - 1862 - 528 lapas
...Universe, cannot really be conceived as diminished, any more than it can be conceived as increased. Our inability to conceive Matter becoming non-existent, is immediately consequent on the very nature of thought. Thought consists in the establishment of relations. There can be no relation... | |
| Herbert Spencer - 1864 - 664 lapas
...compressed into nothing; which is no more possible than to imagine compression of the whole into nothing. Our inability to conceive Matter becoming non-existent,...that it is impossible to think of nothing becoming something the reason, namely, that nothing cannot become an object of consciousness. The annihilation... | |
| Herbert Spencer - 1864 - 538 lapas
...Universe, cannot really be conceived as diminished, any more than it can be conceived as increased. Our inability to conceive Matter becoming non-existent, is immediately consequent on the very nature of thought. Thought consists in the establishment of relations. There can be no relation... | |
| 1865 - 912 lapas
...universe cannot really be conceived as diminished, any more than it can be conceived as increased. ... It is impossible to think of something becoming nothing,...that it is impossible to think of nothing becoming something the reason, namely, that nothing can become an object of consciousness. The annihilation... | |
| Herbert Spencer - 1867 - 608 lapas
...increased. Our inability to conceive Matter becoming non-existent, is immediately consequent on the very nature of thought. Thought consists in the establishment...that it is impossible to think of nothing becoming something the reason, namely, that nothing cannot become an object of consciousness. The annihilation... | |
| Herbert Spencer - 1870 - 588 lapas
...compressed into nothing; which is no more possible than to imagine compression of the 12 whole into nothing. Our inability to conceive^ Matter becoming non-existent,...therefore no thought framed, when one of the related I terms is absent from consciousness. Hence it is impossible. to think of something becoming nothing,... | |
| Herbert Spencer - 1870 - 600 lapas
...Universe, cannot really be conceived as diminished, any more than it can bo conceived as increased. Our inability to conceive Matter becoming non-existent, is immediately consequent on the very nature of thought. Thought consists in the establishment of relations. There can be no relation... | |
| Edward Royall Tyler, William Lathrop Kingsley, George Park Fisher, Timothy Dwight - 1873 - 812 lapas
...establishment of relations. There can be no relation, and, therefore, no thought framed, when one of the terms is absent from consciousness. Hence it is impossible...that it is impossible to think of nothing becoming something the reason, namely, that nothing cannot become an object of consciousness. The annihilation... | |
| Edward Royall Tyler, William Lathrop Kingsley, George Park Fisher, Timothy Dwight - 1873 - 958 lapas
...conceive matter becoming non-existent is immediately consequent upon the nature of thought itself. Thought consists in the establishment of relations. There can be no relation, and, therefore, no thought framed, when one of the terms is absent from consciousness. Hence it is... | |
| 1873 - 808 lapas
...conceive matter becoming non-existent is immediately consequent upon the nature of thought itself. Thought consists in the establishment of relations. There can be no relation, and, therefore, no thought framed, when one of the terms is absent from consciousness. Hence it is... | |
| |