| Samuel Taylor Coleridge - Religion - 1816 - 298 pages
...manners, and civil government of a country ever taking some bias from its philosophy, which affects not only the minds of its professors and students, but also the opinions of ( 80 ) all the better sort, and the practice of the whole people, remotely and consequentially indeed,... | |
| Samuel Taylor Coleridge - 1817 - 184 pages
...manners, and civil government of a country ever taking some bias from its philosophy, which affects not only the minds of its professors and students,,...consequentially indeed, though not inconsiderably. Have not the doctrines of Necessity and Materialism, with the consequent denial of men's responsibility, of his... | |
| Samuel Taylor Coleridge - Religion - 1817 - 190 pages
...manners, and civil government of a country ever taking some bias from its philosophy, which affects not only the minds of its professors and students,...consequentially indeed, though not inconsiderably. Have not the doctrines of Necessity and Materialism, with the consequent denial of men's responsibility, of his... | |
| George Berkeley - 1820 - 496 pages
...manners, and civil government, of a country, ever taking some bias from its philosophy, which affects not only the minds of its professors and students,...the corpuscularian and mechanical philosophy, which hath prevailed for about a century ? This indeed might usefully enough have employed some share of... | |
| George Berkeley - 1820 - 496 pages
...government, of a country, ever taking some bias from its philosophy, which affects not only the rninds of its professors and students, but also the opinions...the corpuscularian and mechanical philosophy, which hath prevailed for about a century ? This indeed might usefully enough have employed some share of... | |
| Theology - 1834 - 692 pages
...state; the religion, manners,civil government, ever taking some bias from its philosophy, which affects not only the minds of its professors and students,...consequentially indeed, though not inconsiderably. * * * * Certainly, had the philosophy of Socrates and Pythagoras prevailed in this age, among those... | |
| Samuel Taylor Coleridge - 1832 - 244 pages
...manners, and civil government of a country ever taking some bias from its philosophy, which affects not only the minds of its professors and students,...consequentially indeed, though not inconsiderably. Have not the doctrines of Necessity and Materialism, with the consequent denial of men's responsibility, of his... | |
| John Campbell Colquhoun - Animal magnetism - 1836 - 520 pages
...seemed disposed to give an undue bias to the principles of materialism ; and Bishop Berkeley asks, " Have not Fatalism and Sadducism gained ground during...the corpuscularian and mechanical philosophy, which hath prevailed for about a century 7" The later facts and speculations of Lord Monboddo, otherwise... | |
| Samuel Taylor Coleridge - 1839 - 490 pages
...manners, and civil government of a country ever taking some bias from its philosophy, which affects not only the minds of its professors and students,...consequentially indeed, though not inconsiderably. Have not the doctrines of necessity and materialism, with the consequent denial of man's responsibility, of his... | |
| Samuel Taylor Coleridge - 1839 - 468 pages
...manners, and civil government of a country ever taking- some bias from its philosophy, which affects not only the minds of its professors and students,...consequentially indeed, though not inconsiderably. Have not the doctrines of necessity and materialism, with the consequent denial of man's responsibility, of his... | |
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