| William Hazlitt - 1836 - 526 pages
...free will, or any free but free from being hindered by opposition ; I should not say he were in an error, but that his words were without meaning, that is to say, absurd." — Chap. iv. v., pp. 15, 18, &c. The account of the passions and affections which follows next in... | |
| William Hazlitt - 1836 - 530 pages
...free will, or any free but free from being hindered by opposition ; I should not say he were in an error, but that his words were without meaning, that is to say, absurd." — Chap. iv. v., pp. 15, 18, &c. The account of the passions and affections which follows next in... | |
| William Hazlitt - Authors, English - 1836 - 538 pages
...free will, or any free but free from being hindered by opposition ; I should not say he were in an error, but that his words were without meaning, that is to say, absurd." — Chap. iv. v., pp. 15, 18, &c. The account of the passions and affections which follows next in... | |
| Thomas Hobbes - Philosophy, English - 1839 - 766 pages
...free will ; or any free, but free from being hindered by opposition, I should not say he were in an error, but that his words were without meaning, that is to say, absurd. I have said before, in the second chapter, that a man did excel all other animals in this faculty,... | |
| Thomas Hobbes - Philosophy, English - 1839 - 766 pages
...; or any free, but free from being hindered by opposi- PART i. tion, I should not say he were in an error, but that . •*• . his words were without meaning, that is to say, absurd. I have said before, in the second chapter, that a man did excel all other animals in this faculty,... | |
| Christianity - 1846 - 588 pages
...free will, or any/ree, but being free from being hindered by opposition, I should not say he was in an error, but that his words were without meaning ; that is to say, absurd.' Lee. ch. v. ' [A cause of insignificant words is] when men make a name of two names, whose significations... | |
| Henry George Atkinson, Harriet Martineau - Psychology - 1851 - 430 pages
...free will ; or any free, but free from being hindered by opposition ; I should not say he was in an error ; but that his words were without meaning ; that is to say, absurd." — Hobbes : Leviathan. " And indeed it may almost be asserted that all intemperance in any kind of... | |
| Henry George Atkinson, Harriet Martineau - Psychology - 1851 - 430 pages
...free will ; or any free, but free from being hindered by opposition ; I should not say he was in an error ; but that his words were without meaning ; that is to say, absurd." — Hobbes : Leviathan. " And indeed it may almost be asserted that all intemperance in any kind of... | |
| Henry Hallam - Literature, Modern - 1854 - 620 pages
...substances, or of a free subject, a free will, or any free, but free from being hindered by opposition, I should not say he were in error, but that his words...definition which he who employs them does not admit. It may be observed here, as we have done before, that Hobbes does not confine reckoning, or reasoning,... | |
| Thomas Hobbes - Political science - 1889 - 932 pages
...will ; " or any "free," but free from being hindered by opposition, I should not say he were in an error, but that his words were without meaning, that is to say, absurd. I have said before, in the second chapter, that a man did excel all other animals in this faculty,... | |
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