If beings of the same nature, but whose affections and passions are, at present, in different proportions to each other, be exposed for an indefinite time to the same impressions and associations, all their particular differences will, at last, be overruled,... Observations on Man, His Frame, His Duty, and His Expectations - Strana 52autor/autoři: David Hartley - 1834 - 604 str.Úplné zobrazení - Podrobnosti o knize
| John Herman Randall (Jr.) - 1926 - 672 str.
...all ages, so it is particularly true, and worthy of consideration, in respect of children and youth. If beings of the same nature, but whose affections...They may also be made perfectly similar, in a finite tune, by a proper adjustment of the impressions and associations.1" THE OMNIPOTENCE OF ENVIRONMENT... | |
| Paul Monroe - 1912 - 738 str.
...as we please." " If two beings whose affections and passions are at present in different proportions be exposed for an indefinite time to the same impressions and associations, they will at last become perfectly similar and even equals." The application of this as a means of... | |
| Samuel Taylor Coleridge - 1969 - 1278 str.
...and does itself actually exist in the mind". W Prose I 149. 1 i 82, cropped 1 1 I ii prop xiv cor 6 If beings of the same nature, but whose affections...indefinite time to the same impressions and associations . . . they will become perfectly similar, or even equal. What a very [? apjt phrase, this! — [the]... | |
| Julie Candler Hayes - 1991 - 208 str.
...associationism, whereby the self is a sort of compilation of the impressions it has received, to the extent that If Beings of the same Nature, but whose Affections...over-ruled, and they will become perfectly similar, or even equal.7 Condillac, too, would eventually reduce identity to little more than the addition of sensate... | |
| N. Capaldi - 1998 - 553 str.
...all ages, so it is particularly true, and worthy of consideration, in respect of children and youth. If beings of the same nature, but whose affections...time to the same impressions and associations, all of their particular differences will, at last, be overruled, and they will become perfectly similar,... | |
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