Publications of the Institute of the History of Medicine, the Johns Hopkins University: The Hideyo Noguchi lectures. Third series, Volumen7Johns Hopkins Press, 1957 |
Dentro del libro
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Página 113
... God's omnipotence , and that we cannot deny that God could , if He wanted to , divide the atoms into parts , is of no avail : the indivisibility of atoms means their indivisibility by any created power , and that is something that is ...
... God's omnipotence , and that we cannot deny that God could , if He wanted to , divide the atoms into parts , is of no avail : the indivisibility of atoms means their indivisibility by any created power , and that is something that is ...
Página 225
... God is not merely a " philosophical " God , the impersonal and uninterested First Cause of the Aris- totelians , or the - for Newton - utterly indifferent and world - absent God of Descartes . He is or , in any case , Newton wants him ...
... God is not merely a " philosophical " God , the impersonal and uninterested First Cause of the Aris- totelians , or the - for Newton - utterly indifferent and world - absent God of Descartes . He is or , in any case , Newton wants him ...
Página 243
... God whose eternal plan implied just such an intervention in the normal course of events . To forbid God to do that , or to declare all God's action in the world to be miraculous or supernatural , means excluding God from the government ...
... God whose eternal plan implied just such an intervention in the normal course of events . To forbid God to do that , or to declare all God's action in the world to be miraculous or supernatural , means excluding God from the government ...
Contenido
Introduction | 1 |
The New Astronomy and the New Metaphysics | 28 |
The New Astronomy against the New Metaphysics | 58 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 9 secciones no mostradas
Términos y frases comunes
absolute motion absolute space absolutely Infinite according admit appear Aristotelian assert astronomy atheism atoms attraction attribute believe Bentley bodies Cartesian cause celestial Clarke conceive conception contrary Copernican Copernicus course created Democritus demonstrated deny Descartes determined distance distinction divine duration earth essence eternal everywhere existence extension finite fixed stars forces Galileo Galileo Galilei Giordano Bruno God's gravity heavens Henry More's Ibid Ibidem imagine immaterial immense immovable impenetrability implies impossible indefinite infinite number infinite space infinity Joseph Raphson Kepler Leibniz limits Lucretius magnitude Malebranche material mathematical matter of fact means mechanical metaphysical moon moreover move natural philosophy never Newton Newtonian Nicholas of Cusa objects Palingenius particles perfect perfectly planets possible Principia principle properties pure Raphson rejection relative motion Scholium seems seen sense Sidereus nuncius soul sphere spirit spissitude substance tells things Thomas Digges tion transl true visible void space