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" The faculty peculiar to man, in his primitive state, by which every impression from without received its vocal expression from within, must be accepted as an ultimate fact. "
Proceedings of the Royal Society of London - Seite 462
von Royal Society (Great Britain) - 1876
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Lectures on the science of language delivered at the Royal ..., Band 2

Friedrich Max Müller - 1861 - 422 Seiten
...struck, vibrate and ring, can, of course, be used as an illustration onk, and not as an explanation. The faculty peculiar to man, in his primitive state,...vocal expression from within, must be accepted as a fact. That faculty must have existed in man, because its effects continue to exist. Analogies from...
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Lectures on the Science of Language: Delivered at the Royal ..., Band 1

Friedrich Max Müller - 1862 - 452 Seiten
...struck, vibrate and ring, can, of course, be used as an illustration only, and not as an explanation. The faculty peculiar to man, in his primitive state,...from within, must be accepted as an ultimate fact. That faculty must have existed in man, because its effects continue to exist. Analogies from the inanimate...
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Lectures on the Science of Language: Delivered at the Royal ..., Band 1

Friedrich Max Müller - 1862 - 454 Seiten
...by a period of unrestrained growth, — the spring of speech — to be followed by many an autumn. man, in his primitive state, by which every impression...from within, must be accepted as an ultimate fact That faculty must have existed in man, because its effects continue to exist. Analogies from the inanimate...
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The Christian Review, Band 28

1863 - 734 Seiten
...was an instinct, an instinct of the miad as irresistible as any other instinct." Again he says : " The faculty peculiar to man, in his primitive state,...by which every impression from without received its voc;il expression from within, must be accepted as an ultimate fact. That faculty must have existed...
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Lectures on the Science of Language: Delivered at the Royal ..., Band 1

Friedrich Max Müller - 1864 - 452 Seiten
...struck, vibrate and ring, can, of course, be used as an illustration only, and not as an explanation. The faculty peculiar to man, in his primitive state,...from within, must be accepted as an ultimate fact. That faculty must have existed in man, because its effects continue to exist. Analogies from the inanimate...
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Chapters on Language

Frederic William Farrar - 1865 - 358 Seiten
...this fact ' can of course be used as an illustration only, and not as an explanation.' Yet he adds, ' The faculty, peculiar to man in his primitive state,...vocal expression from within, must be accepted as a fact.' And in the text he continues, 'Man . . . was endowed not only, like the brute, with the power...
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Elements of Logic: Comprising the Doctrine of the Laws and Products of ...

Henry Noble Day - 1867 - 264 Seiten
...his primitive state possessed a faculty that has now become extinct, since its object is fulfilled, " by which every impression from without received its vocal expression from within." By this faculty man created these phonetic types to an almost infinite extent at the beginning, but...
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Philological Essays

Thomas Hewitt Key - 1868 - 362 Seiten
...instinct, an instinct of the mind as irresistible as any other instinct.' Further in a note he says : ' The faculty peculiar to man in his primitive state,...from within, must be accepted as an ultimate fact.' For myself, I can only look upon this last passage as a simple admission that he has no solution of...
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Language: Its Origin and Development

Thomas Hewitt Key - 1874 - 572 Seiten
...instinct, an instinct of the mind as irresistible as any other instinct." And again, in a note, ho adds : " The faculty peculiar to man in his primitive state,...from within, must be accepted as an ultimate fact." Let me add that in another page of the samo work he speaks of " the 400 or 500 roots," which are "...
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Universe of Language, Uniform Notation and Classification of Vowels: Adapted ...

George Watson (of Boston.) - 1878 - 360 Seiten
...adds, " The faculty peculiar to man, in his primitive state, by ivhich every impression from ivithout received its vocal expression from within, must be accepted as an ultimate fact."* That is, we would say in other words, whatever stimulus may be from without, it has its answering chord...
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