we start from an axiom or principle whose truth is absolutely necessary and conscious, freedom no longer exists; truths once established are immutable. Geometricians are not free to question whether the three angles of a triangle are or are not equal... An Introduction to the Study of Experimental Medicine - Sida 37efter Claude Bernard - 1927 - 226 sidorObegränsad förhandsgranskning - Om den här boken
| Aristotle, Walter Mooney Hatch - 1879 - 640 sidor
...conduct; for instance, they do not destroy the idea of the mind upon such a question as whether the angles of a triangle are or are not equal to two right angles, but they do destroy the ideas of right and wrong. The principles which should regulate conduct are... | |
| Aristotle, Walter Mooney Hatch - 1879 - 660 sidor
...conduct ; for instance, they do not destroy the idea of the mind upon such a question as whether the angles of a triangle are or are not equal to two right angles, but they do destroy the ideas of right and wrung. The principles which should regulate conduct are... | |
| Herbert Spencer - 1892 - 450 sidor
...lines, angles, squares, circles, and the like, by the geometric sense—if they had tried to discover whether the three angles of a triangle are, or are not, equal to two right angles, and whether the areas of similiar polygons are, or are not, in the duplicate ratio of their homologous... | |
| Herbert Spencer - 1892 - 448 sidor
...lines, angles, squares, circles, and the like, by the geometric sense—if they had tried to discover whether the three angles of a triangle are, or are not, equal to two right angles, and whether the areas of similiar polygons are, or are not, in the duplicate ratio of their homologous... | |
| Herbert Spencer - 1892 - 448 sidor
...lines, angles, squares, circles, and the like, by the geometric sense—if they had tried to discover whether the three angles of a triangle are, or are not, equal to two right angles, and whether the areas of similiar polygons are, or are not, in the duplicate ratio of their homologous... | |
| Herbert Spencer - 1892 - 596 sidor
...lines, angles, squares, circles, and the like, by the geometric sense—if they had tried to discover whether the three angles of a triangle are, or are not, equal to two right angles, and whether the areas of similiar polygons are, or are not, in the duplicate ratio of their homologous... | |
| Aristotle - 1897 - 432 sidor
...the Greek. destroy or distort every opinion ; they do not eg destroy or distort the opinion that the angles of a triangle are, or are not, equal to two right angles, but only such opinions as relate to practice. For the first principles of actions are the ends for... | |
| Aristotle - 1908 - 448 sidor
...the Greek. destroy or distort every opinion; they do not eg destroy or distort the opinion that the angles of a triangle are, or are not, equal to two right angles, but only such opinions us relate to practice. For the first principles of actions are the ends for... | |
| Aristotle - 1908 - 442 sidor
...the Greek. destroy or distort every opinion ; they do not eg destroy or distort the opinion that the angles of a triangle are, or are not, equal to two right angles, but only such opinions as relate to practice. For the first principles of actions are the ends for... | |
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