Publications of the Institute of the History of Medicine, the Johns Hopkins University: The Hideyo Noguchi lectures. Third series, Volumen7Johns Hopkins Press, 1957 |
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Página 128
... properties , viz . Self - penetration , Self - motion , Self - contraction and Dilatation , and Indivisibility ; and these are those that I reckon more absolute : I will adde also what has relation to another and that is power of ...
... properties , viz . Self - penetration , Self - motion , Self - contraction and Dilatation , and Indivisibility ; and these are those that I reckon more absolute : I will adde also what has relation to another and that is power of ...
Página 150
... properties that Kant - who , however , with Descartes , missed the indivisibility — was to re- discover a hundred years later , and who , accordingly , was unable to connect space with God and had to put it into ourselves . But we must ...
... properties that Kant - who , however , with Descartes , missed the indivisibility — was to re- discover a hundred years later , and who , accordingly , was unable to connect space with God and had to put it into ourselves . But we must ...
Página 173
... properties of matter only those that are ( a ) empirically given to us , and ( b ) can be neither increased nor diminished . Thus he writes in the third of his Rules of Reasoning in Philosophy , by which he replaced the third ...
... properties of matter only those that are ( a ) empirically given to us , and ( b ) can be neither increased nor diminished . Thus he writes in the third of his Rules of Reasoning in Philosophy , by which he replaced the third ...
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
able according action actually admit appear assert attraction attribute believe bodies Bruno called Cartesian cause Clarke clear conceive conception consequence contrary Copernicus course created demonstrated deny Descartes determined distance distinction divine earth essential eternal everywhere existence explained express extension fact finite fixed stars follows forces God's gravity Henry Ibid Ibidem idea imagine immense implies impossible infinite infinite space infinity Kepler kind laws least Leibniz less light limits manner material mathematical matter means mechanical mind moreover motion move nature necessary never Newton Newtonian Nicholas of Cusa objects observed particles perfect perfectly philosophy physical planets position possible present principle properties pure question reason region rejection relation relative remain respect rest seems seen sense separated space sphere spirit substance suppose tells things thought tion true understand universe visible void whole