Proceedings of the British Academy, Volume 30British Academy - Humanities |
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Page 25
... nature are called causes , particularly the more arresting and subtle processes , such as fire and wind and magnetism ; but are they entitled to the name ? What do they cause ? Where does the cause end , and the effect begin ? Ask these ...
... nature are called causes , particularly the more arresting and subtle processes , such as fire and wind and magnetism ; but are they entitled to the name ? What do they cause ? Where does the cause end , and the effect begin ? Ask these ...
Page 49
... Nature . I doubt if they were ; but they certainly did not give Nature a large place in their poetry , nor did they - for reasons which seemed good to them - describe Nature in detail . We are apt to forget that in this it was the ...
... Nature . I doubt if they were ; but they certainly did not give Nature a large place in their poetry , nor did they - for reasons which seemed good to them - describe Nature in detail . We are apt to forget that in this it was the ...
Page 66
... nature may have seemed to Johnson to be conjectural and irrelevant , but when he made it clear that by the law of nature he meant a moral law derived from God , Johnson was more ready to listen to him . Politically , Johnson was no more ...
... nature may have seemed to Johnson to be conjectural and irrelevant , but when he made it clear that by the law of nature he meant a moral law derived from God , Johnson was more ready to listen to him . Politically , Johnson was no more ...
Contents
ANNUAL REPORT 19434 | 3 |
PRESIDENTIAL ADDRESS By J H Clapham | 13 |
IMMATERIALISM Philosophical Lecture By A A Luce Read | 19 |
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