| William Melmoth - English prose literature - 1758 - 474 pages
...than diffonance, with fome few other axioms upon which the fcience is built ; are truths which ftrike at once upon the mind with the fame force of conviction,...which reft upon thefe plain and obvious maxims, ;feem equallycapable of the fame evidence of demoji-, ftration, BUT as every intellectual^ • as \vcl! .is... | |
| William Melmoth - English letters - 1758 - 478 pages
...di|Tonance, with fome few other :ixiorns:tipon which the fcience is built; arc truths which ftrike at once upon the mind with the fame force of conviction,...or, that if from equals you take away equals, the the remainder will be equal. And in both cafes, the proppfitions which reft upon thefe plain and obvious... | |
| John Walter - 1785 - 258 pages
...than diflbnance, with fome few other axioms upon which the fcience is built, are truths which ftrike at once upon the mind with the fame force of conviction,...will be equal. And in both cafes, the propofitions \vhich reft upon thefe plain and obvious maxims, feem equally capable of the fame evidence of demonftration.... | |
| 1787 - 528 pages
...once upon the mind with the lame force of conviflion, as that the whole is greater than any of it's parts, or, that if from equals you take away equals, the remainder will be equal. And in both calés, the proportions which reft upon thefe plain and obvious maxims, feem equally capable uf the... | |
| Vicesimus Knox - English prose literature - 1790 - 1058 pages
...than diifonance, with fome few other axioms upon which the fcience is built ; are truths which ftrike at once upon the mind with the fame force of conviction,...maxims, feem equally capable of the fame evidence of demonllration. But as every intellectual, as well as animal faculty is improved and flrengthened by... | |
| English literature - 1797 - 680 pages
...than diflbnance, with fome few other axioms upon which the fclence is built; are truths which ftrike at once upon the mind with the fame force of conviction, as that the whole is greater than any of its parts, cv, that if from equals you take away equils, the remainder will be equal. And in both cafes,... | |
| William Melmoth - English letters - 1815 - 314 pages
...axioms upon which the science is built, are truths which strike at once upoa the mind with the same force of conviction, as that the whole is greater...equals, the remainder will be equal. And, in both cases, the propositions which rest upon these plain and obvious maxims, seem equally capable of the... | |
| British prose literature - 1821 - 336 pages
...axioms upon which the science is built, are truths which strike at once upon the mind with the same force of conviction, as that the whole is greater...equals, the remainder will be equal. And, in both cases, the propositions which rest upon these plain and obvious maxims seem equally capable of the... | |
| Philip Skelton - 1824 - 1044 pages
...may sound like allegories, they are the farthest from hyperboles of any thing in the world, as far as that the whole is greater than any of its parts, or as far, as that duration without end will outlast a moment, or seventy years if you please. The mathematician... | |
| Philip Skelton - 1824 - 500 pages
...may sound like allegories, they are the farthest from hyperboles of any thing in the world, as far as that the whole is greater than- any of its parts, or as far, as that duration without end will outlast a moment, or seventy years if you please. The mathematician... | |
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