Proceedings of the British Academy, Volume 5British Academy - Humanities |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 43
Page 73
... supposed ideas as these , being strictly incon- ceivable , because self - contradictory , give us no positive knowledge what- ever of the Universe , though appearing as if they might possibly do so . They simply indicate that we have ...
... supposed ideas as these , being strictly incon- ceivable , because self - contradictory , give us no positive knowledge what- ever of the Universe , though appearing as if they might possibly do so . They simply indicate that we have ...
Page 192
... supposed to have taken place , and we have no reason for thinking that Aristotle would have rejected his explanation , which obviously implies that the value of the coins was lessened . ( 3 ) Commentators have commonly sup- posed that ...
... supposed to have taken place , and we have no reason for thinking that Aristotle would have rejected his explanation , which obviously implies that the value of the coins was lessened . ( 3 ) Commentators have commonly sup- posed that ...
Page 247
... supposed to have been borrowed from the Arabians.'1 Thomas Percy , who had treated the subject of the Romances before Warton , took an entirely different view of their origin , but , like him , thought of Romance as a ' peculiar and ...
... supposed to have been borrowed from the Arabians.'1 Thomas Percy , who had treated the subject of the Romances before Warton , took an entirely different view of their origin , but , like him , thought of Romance as a ' peculiar and ...
Contents
LIST OF FELLOWS 1912 | 7 |
NINTH ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING JULY 5 1911 ADDRESS BY | 8 |
WARTON LECTURE ON ENGLISH POETRY | 8 |
21 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Academy Aegina Aeginetan ancient appears Athenian Athens bards beginning belong borrowed days British bronze Brythonic called celt Celtic century Chalcis character coinage coins Coligny Calendar compositions connexion consciousness dative declension Delisle derived didrachm drachm early electrum empirical English Eretria Ériu Euboea Euboic existence experience fact genitive give Goidelic grains Greek Hittite Holder Ibid idea inscription instance Ireland Irish Irish Poetry knowledge later Latin letters literary Lord Macgr meaning mentioned Museum nature O'Conor Don's Book O'Daly O'Grady object objectified obol original Parmenides Peisistratus perceived perception Pheidon poem poet poetry present Prize Law probably Professor question real condition Reality regard relation represented Roman seems sensations Shakespeare silver Solon stanzas stater stone suggested supposed Syriac Tadhg Óg tetradrachms things thought tion truth Ucuetis verse weight Welsh whole word writing καὶ