| William Banks - English language - 1823 - 462 pages
...are not fallacious. 6. There is life and intelligence in our fellow-men, with whom we converse. 7. Certain features of the countenance, sounds of the...indicate certain thoughts and dispositions of mind. 8. There is a certain regard due to human testimony in matters of fact, and even to human authority... | |
| Thomas Reid - Act (Philosophy). - 1827 - 706 pages
...hath given us this belief antecedently to all reasoning. 9. Another first principle 1 take to be, That certain features of the countenance, sounds of the...indicate certain thoughts and dispositions of mind. That many operations of the mind have their natural signs in the countenance, voice, and gesture, I... | |
| Alfred Lyall - Truth - 1830 - 682 pages
...obnoxious to their little heads. • § 16. "Another First Principle," says Reid, " I take to be, that certain features of the countenance, sounds of the...indicate certain thoughts and dispositions of mind," —a principle which would seem to belong to the class of physiological, rather than metaphysical truths.... | |
| Johann Eduard Erdmann - Philosophy, Modern - 1842 - 720 pages
...intelligence in our fellow-men with whom we converse. — 9. Another first principle I take to be, that certain features of the countenance , sounds of the...indicate certain thoughts and dispositions of mind. — 10. Another first principle appears to me to be, that there is a certain regard due to human testimony... | |
| Thomas Reid - 1846 - 1080 pages
...hath given us this belief antecedently to all reasoning. 9. Another first principle I take to be, That certain features of the countenance, sounds of the...the body, indicate certain thoughts and dispositions if mind. [597] That many operations of the mind have their natural signs in the countenance, voice,... | |
| 1852 - 132 pages
...fallacious. 8. That there is life and intelligence in our fellow beings with whom we converse. 9. That certain features of the countenance, sounds of the...indicate certain thoughts and dispositions of mind. 10. That there is a certain regard due to human testimony in matters of fact, and even to human authority... | |
| Portia Young - Logic - 1852 - 140 pages
...fallacious. 8. That there is life and intelligence in our fellow beings with whom we converse. 9. That certain features of the countenance, sounds of the...indicate certain thoughts and dispositions of mind. 10. That there is a certain regard due to human testimony in matters of fact, and even to human authority... | |
| Thomas Reid - Intellect - 1855 - 528 pages
...others.* 7. Another first principle I take to be, that certain features of the countenance, sounds of tile voice, and gestures of the body, indicate certain thoughts and dispositions of mind. That many operations of the mind have their natural signs in the countenance, voice, and gesture, I... | |
| William Robinson Pirie - Brain - 1858 - 668 pages
...following passage, where he assumes, as a first I 100 SCOTTISH PHILOSOPHY — KEI1X principle, " that certain features of the countenance, " sounds of the...body, " indicate certain thoughts and dispositions of the "mind."a From this it would follow that the operations of other men's minds, their feelings, and... | |
| James McCosh - History - 1860 - 512 pages
...experiential element. Thus, for example, " that there is life and intelligence in our fellowmen," " that certain features of the countenance, sounds of the...body, indicate certain thoughts and dispositions of the mind" (p. 448), and that "there is a certain regard due to human testimony in matters of fact,... | |
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