| William Duncan - Logic - 1748 - 380 pages
...Perception in my Mind as in theirs. For we I we are naturally led to imagine, that the fame Obje&s operate alike upon the Organs of the human Body, and produce an Uniformity of Senfations. No Man fancies, that the Idea railed in him by the Tafte cf Sugar, and which he calls Sweetneft,... | |
| Robert Dodsley - Education - 1758 - 586 pages
...denotes the fame Perception in my Mind as in theirs. For we are naturally led to imagine, that the fame Objects operate alike upon the Organs of the human Body, and produce an Uniformity of Senfations. No Man fancies, that the Idea raifed in him by the Tafte of Sugar, and which he calls Swettneft,... | |
| William Duncan - Logic - 1770 - 380 pages
...denotes the fame Perception in my Mind as in theirs. For we are naturally led to imagine, that the fame Objects operate alike upon the Organs of the human Body, and produce an Uniformity of Senfations. No Man fancies, that the Idea raifed in him by the Tafte of Sugar, and which he calls Sweetnefs,... | |
| Colin Macfarquhar, George Gleig - Encyclopedias and dictionaries - 1797 - 422 pages
...denotes the fame perception in my mind as in theirs. For we are naturally led to imagine, that the fame objects operate alike upon the organs of the human body, and produce an uniformity of ("dilations. NO man fancies, that the idea raifed in him by the tafte oí fugar, and which he calls... | |
| William Duncan - Logic - 1802 - 258 pages
...men agree in their names of , the simple ideas, seeing they cannot view the tio»s in one inother's minds, nor make known these ^perceptions by words...that excited in another by the like means ; or that isormivood, to whose relish he has given the epithet bitter, produces in others the sensation which... | |
| Encyclopaedia Britannica - 1810 - 816 pages
...fame perception in my mind as in theirs. For we are naturally led to imagine, that the fame objeeb operate alike upon the organs of the human body, and produce an uniformity of fenfations. No man fancies, that the idea raifcd in him by the tafte of Jitgar, and which he C3\\<ifweel»tfs,... | |
| Encyclopedias and dictionaries - 1816 - 746 pages
...denotes the fame perception in my mind as in theirs. For we are naturally led to imagine, that the fame objects operate alike upon the organs of the human body, and produce an uniformity of fer.fations. lions : for every ftep we take, leading us into new beyond his own imagination, or give... | |
| Encyclopedias and dictionaries - 1823 - 856 pages
...same perception in my mind as in them. For we are naturally led to imagine, that the same oU» jects operate alike upon the organs of the human body, and...fancies, that the idea raised in him by the taste of .• .• gar, and which he calls sweetness, diHcrs from that excited in another by the like means... | |
| Adventure and adventurers - 1825 - 840 pages
...his fate, as he himself had often done to some of their relations at their cost. That the same things operate alike upon the organs of the human body, and produce an uniformity of sensations, yet weakness, or constancy of mind derived from habit, helps in a great measure either to heighten... | |
| Thomas Curtis (of Grove house sch, Islington) - 412 pages
...by such an approach, nor have any doubt but it denotes the same perception in my mind as in theirs. For we are naturally led to imagine, that the same...alike upon the organs of the human body, and produce a uniformity of sensations. No man fancies that the idea raised in him by the taste of sugar, and which... | |
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