The Spectator, Svazek 6Alexander Chalmers D. Appleton, 1853 |
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Strana 7
... seems to have in- creased his disposition to seriousness ; the proportion of his religious to his comic papers is greater than in the former series . The Spectator , from its recommencement , was published only three times a - week ...
... seems to have in- creased his disposition to seriousness ; the proportion of his religious to his comic papers is greater than in the former series . The Spectator , from its recommencement , was published only three times a - week ...
Strana 15
... seems very probable , from the analogy of reason , that if no part of matter , which we are acquainted with , lies waste and useless , those great bodies , which are at such a distance from us , should not be desert and unpeo- pled ...
... seems very probable , from the analogy of reason , that if no part of matter , which we are acquainted with , lies waste and useless , those great bodies , which are at such a distance from us , should not be desert and unpeo- pled ...
Strana 16
... seems almost of a different nature . If after this we look into the several inward perfections of cunning and sagacity , or what we generally call instinct , we find them rising after the same manner imperceptibly one above another ...
... seems almost of a different nature . If after this we look into the several inward perfections of cunning and sagacity , or what we generally call instinct , we find them rising after the same manner imperceptibly one above another ...
Strana 17
... seems very naturally dedu- cible from the foregoing considerations . If the scale of being rises by such a regular progress so high as man , we may , by a parity of reason , suppose that it still proceeds gradually through those beings ...
... seems very naturally dedu- cible from the foregoing considerations . If the scale of being rises by such a regular progress so high as man , we may , by a parity of reason , suppose that it still proceeds gradually through those beings ...
Strana 18
... seem to have as much knowledge and reason as some that are called men : and the animal and vegetable kingdoms are so nearly joined , that if will take the lowest of one , and the highest of the other , there will scarce be perceived any ...
... seem to have as much knowledge and reason as some that are called men : and the animal and vegetable kingdoms are so nearly joined , that if will take the lowest of one , and the highest of the other , there will scarce be perceived any ...
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