Toward Today: A Collection of English and American Essays Presenting the Earlier Development of Ideas Fundamental in Modern Life and LiteratureErich Albert Walter Scott, Foresman, 1938 - Всего страниц: 495 |
Результаты поиска по книге
Результаты 1 – 3 из 81
Стр. 128
... matter must either be in- finitely divisible or must consist of small particles incapable of further division . Now you cannot conceive a piece of matter divided into an in- finite number of parts , while , on the other hand , you ...
... matter must either be in- finitely divisible or must consist of small particles incapable of further division . Now you cannot conceive a piece of matter divided into an in- finite number of parts , while , on the other hand , you ...
Стр. 129
... matter in this way . We may ask if there is any piece of matter so small that its properties as matter de- pend upon its remaining all in one piece . This question is reasonable ; but we cannot answer it at present , though we are not ...
... matter in this way . We may ask if there is any piece of matter so small that its properties as matter de- pend upon its remaining all in one piece . This question is reasonable ; but we cannot answer it at present , though we are not ...
Стр. 140
... matter could not act on another piece of matter " at a dis- tance . " Motion , particularly on the Car- tesian philosophy , was regarded as communicated wholly by contact . The ether , which filled all space not oc- cupied by matter ...
... matter could not act on another piece of matter " at a dis- tance . " Motion , particularly on the Car- tesian philosophy , was regarded as communicated wholly by contact . The ether , which filled all space not oc- cupied by matter ...
Содержание
Sir Thomas More | 1 |
Concerning the Government of England | 11 |
from PAST AND PRESENT | 28 |
Авторские права | |
Не показаны другие разделы: 2
Часто встречающиеся слова и выражения
artist beauty believe better body Byron called cause century chalk character Christian common criticism Deerslayer doctrine Domrémy E. V. Lucas earth emotion English essay evil existence experience eyes fact feel fire Francis Bacon give Goethe Greek ground hand happy hath Henry Watson Fowler human John Milton Joseph Addison kind knowledge labor language learned less light live look mankind mathematical matter Matthew Arnold means ment Michel de Montaigne mind modern moral nation nature ness never observed opinion passion perhaps person philosophy Plato pleasure poems poet poetry present produce reader reason Samuel Johnson scientific sense soul speak species spirit supposed tell Theophrastus things Thomas Carlyle Thomas Henry Huxley thou thought tion true truth ture virtue whole words writing