The Intellectual Tradition of the West: Copernicus to KafkaMorton Donner, Kenneth Eugene Eble, Robert E. Helbling Scott, Foresman, 1967 - Civilization, Western |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 79
Page 10
... remain unshaken . Moreover , freely falling bodies would not arrive at the places appointed them , and certainly not along the perpendicular line which they assume so quickly . And we would see clouds and other things floating in the ...
... remain unshaken . Moreover , freely falling bodies would not arrive at the places appointed them , and certainly not along the perpendicular line which they assume so quickly . And we would see clouds and other things floating in the ...
Page 73
... remain after this change ? We must confess that it remains ; none would judge otherwise . What then did I know so distinctly in this piece of wax ? It could certainly be nothing of all that the senses brought to my notice , since all ...
... remain after this change ? We must confess that it remains ; none would judge otherwise . What then did I know so distinctly in this piece of wax ? It could certainly be nothing of all that the senses brought to my notice , since all ...
Page 125
... remains always similar and immovable . Relative space is some movable dimension or measure of the absolute spaces ... remain always numerically the same . For if the earth , for instance , moves , a space of our air , which relatively ...
... remains always similar and immovable . Relative space is some movable dimension or measure of the absolute spaces ... remain always numerically the same . For if the earth , for instance , moves , a space of our air , which relatively ...
Contents
Revolutions of Heavenly Spheres | 3 |
JOHANNES KEPLER | 18 |
GALILEO GALILEI | 26 |
Copyright | |
33 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
absolute action animals appear Aristotle astronomical BASIL WILLEY believe Bertrand Russell body bourgeois bourgeoisie called categorical imperative cause century Charles Darwin conceive conception consciousness consider contrary Copernicus course determined doctrine doubt earth effect existence existentialism existentialist experience fact faculty Faust feeling force Franz Kafka freedom give Goethe hand happiness heavens human ideas imagination individual John Stuart Mill kind knowledge laws of nature living man's mankind mathematics matter means ment MEPHISTO mind moral motion movement natural selection never object observed particular perceive perfect person philosophy physical planets possible present principle produce proletariat Ptolemaic system question rational reason regard relation religion scientific seems sense sentiment sexual selection social society species sphere Spirit stars suppose theory things Thou thought tion true truth understanding universe utilitarian virtue whole words