The Scots Magazine, Band 24Sands, Brymer, Murray and Cochran, 1762 |
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Seite 10
... sense, but also are more or less . The two Empresses have been all along otesting to all the powers and states of greatly animated against that monarch, r both disdaining to admit the thought that he was more than a match for either of ...
... sense, but also are more or less . The two Empresses have been all along otesting to all the powers and states of greatly animated against that monarch, r both disdaining to admit the thought that he was more than a match for either of ...
Seite 13
... sense, than the measure they have taken to prevent their enemies having it in their power to hurt them; the Jacobites themselves would have despised the weakness and folly of atting.9- C therwise. 1 4 Arguments in favour of a Scots ...
... sense, than the measure they have taken to prevent their enemies having it in their power to hurt them; the Jacobites themselves would have despised the weakness and folly of atting.9- C therwise. 1 4 Arguments in favour of a Scots ...
Seite 15
... sense of a public spirit, and became so unable for the duties, either of government or war, that they rejected the burden of a freedom, which they neither understood, nor knew how to defend. - These our Cappadocians however, according ...
... sense of a public spirit, and became so unable for the duties, either of government or war, that they rejected the burden of a freedom, which they neither understood, nor knew how to defend. - These our Cappadocians however, according ...
Seite 21
... senses agree in the following particular, that nothing external is perceived till it first make an impression upon the organ of sense; the impression, for example, made upon the hand by a stone, upon the. Palo. by sugar, and upQ: Elements ...
... senses agree in the following particular, that nothing external is perceived till it first make an impression upon the organ of sense; the impression, for example, made upon the hand by a stone, upon the. Palo. by sugar, and upQ: Elements ...
Seite 22
... sense, we, for that reafon, conceive them to be merely corporeal. We have a different apprehension of the pleasant and painful j. deriwed from seeing and hearing. Being infensible here of the organic impression, we are not misled to ...
... sense, we, for that reafon, conceive them to be merely corporeal. We have a different apprehension of the pleasant and painful j. deriwed from seeing and hearing. Being infensible here of the organic impression, we are not misled to ...
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