Siris: A Chain of Philosophical Reflexions and Inquiries Concerning the Virtues of Tar Water ...Gunne, 1744 - 174 pages |
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Page 80
... understanding , prudence , growth , motion , diminution , change , fleep and waking . This is what governs all ... understands all 66 things , which fees and knows both what is pre- " fent , and what is to come . " 175. This fame heat is ...
... understanding , prudence , growth , motion , diminution , change , fleep and waking . This is what governs all ... understands all 66 things , which fees and knows both what is pre- " fent , and what is to come . " 175. This fame heat is ...
Page 112
... understand no more , than that bodies are moved according to a certain order , and that they do not move themselves . 237. So likewife , how to explain all those vari- ous motions and effects , by the denfity and elafti- city of æther ...
... understand no more , than that bodies are moved according to a certain order , and that they do not move themselves . 237. So likewife , how to explain all those vari- ous motions and effects , by the denfity and elafti- city of æther ...
Page 120
... understanding of na- ture , or that series of effects in the vifible world , whereby we are enabled to foresee what will come to pafs , in the natural courfe of things . Plotinus obferves , in his third Ennead , that the art of pre ...
... understanding of na- ture , or that series of effects in the vifible world , whereby we are enabled to foresee what will come to pafs , in the natural courfe of things . Plotinus obferves , in his third Ennead , that the art of pre ...
Page 121
... understand it : and we understand it , when we can interpret or tell what it fignifies . Strictly the fenfe knows nothing . We perceive indeed sounds by hearing , and charac- ters by fight but we are not therefore said to un- derstand ...
... understand it : and we understand it , when we can interpret or tell what it fignifies . Strictly the fenfe knows nothing . We perceive indeed sounds by hearing , and charac- ters by fight but we are not therefore said to un- derstand ...
Page 122
... understands nothing . 255. Nature , faith the learned Doctor Cud- worth , is not master of art or wifdom : Nature is ratio merfa & confufa , reafon immerfed and plung- ed into matter , and as it were fuddled in it and con- founded with ...
... understands nothing . 255. Nature , faith the learned Doctor Cud- worth , is not master of art or wifdom : Nature is ratio merfa & confufa , reafon immerfed and plung- ed into matter , and as it were fuddled in it and con- founded with ...
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Common terms and phrases
abfolute acid æther æthereal againſt alfo alſo ancient animal fpirit anſwer Ariftotle attraction balfam becauſe beſt blood bodies cafes caufe cauſe confequently confidered conftitute cure diffolved diftempers diftinct diuretic divine doctrine doth effects elaftic Ennead exift exiſtence fafe faid falts fame fcurvy fecreted feem feemeth felf fenfe fenfible feveral fhall fhew fhould firft firſt foap folar fome fometimes fomewhat force foul fpecific ftill ftomach fubftance fubject fubtile fuch fulphur fuppofed fupreme fyftem gout greateſt groffer grofs hath heat Heraclitus himſelf intellect invifible itſelf juices lacteals laws of attraction lefs medicine mind moft moſt motion muft muſt nature neceffary nevertheleſs obferved Parmenides particles perfons phænomena philofophers plants Plato Plotinus Plutarch prefent prefervative principle produce pure reafon refiding ſeem Sir Ifaac Newton ſpace tar-water thefe themſelves Theophraftus theſe things thofe thoſe Timæus turpentine underſtand underſtood univerfe uſe veffels vegetable virtues volatile whereof whofe