| 1924 - 414 lapas
...disregard of intermediate species and genera. Cf. Bacon, Ellis, and Spedding, VIII, 42: " For hitherto the proceeding has been to fly at once from the sense and the particulars to the most general propositions, etc."; and Emerson's Plato: "A too rapid unification... | |
| Francis Bacon - 1928 - 494 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...never lead to nature, though it offers an easy and read}7 way to disputation. Now my plan is to proceed regularly and gradually from one axiom to another,... | |
| 1909 - 498 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, Rose-Mary Sargent - 1999 - 340 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... | |
| Roland Omnès - 2002 - 324 lapas
...was "to fly at once from the senses and particulars up to the most general propositions. [This was] a short way, no doubt, but precipitate; and one which...offers an easy and ready way to disputation." The instauration of science will be "by no means forgetful of the conditions of mortality and humanity... | |
| Amélie Oksenberg Rorty - 2003 - 544 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... | |
| Anthony O'Hear - 2004 - 562 lapas
...prove and frame the middle axioms by reference to them, (ibid., I, civ; my italics) Similarly: Hitherto the proceeding has been to fly at once from the sense...certain fixed poles for the argument to turn upon. ( The Plan of the Work, p. 25; my italics) Also: From a few examples and particulars . . . they [the... | |
| Dennis Desroches - 2006 - 208 lapas
...obtains in philosophical demonstration. Bacon immediately goes on to suggest that, now, the tendency to 'fly at once from the sense and particulars up to the most general propositions' must be replaced by a more patient consideration of precisely those particulars, proceeding 'regularly... | |
| Francis Bacon - 1928 - 506 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. Nnw_jny plan is to proceed regularly and gradually from one, axiom to another,_so that the most general__are_riot_... | |
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