| Aristotle - 1908 - 348 sider
...from these additions and take it alone — that they thought the first substances to be gods, we 10 must regard this as an inspired utterance, and reflect...as possible and has again perished, these opinions have been preserved until the present, like relics of the ancient treasure. Only thus far, then, is... | |
| Aristotle - 1908 - 354 sider
...from these additions and take it alone — that they thought the first substances to be gods, we 10 must regard this as an inspired utterance, and reflect...as possible and has again perished, these opinions have been preserved until the present, like relics of the ancient treasure. Only thus far, then, is... | |
| Aristotle - 1908 - 340 sider
...art and science has often been developed as far as possible and has again perished, these opinions have been preserved until the present, like relics of the ancient treasure. Only thus far, then, is the opinion of our ancestors and our earliest predecessors clear to us. CHAPTER... | |
| Charles Irénée Castel de Saint-Pierre - 1927 - 392 sider
...point from these additions and take it alone — that they thought the first substances to be gods, we must regard this as an inspired utterance, and reflect...as possible and has again perished, these opinions have been preserved until the present, like relics of the ancient treasure. Only thus far, then, is... | |
| James Bennett - 1988 - 380 sider
...representations, is what determines the essential features of what they have to say. Michel Foucault Probably each art and science has often been developed as far as possible and has again perished. Aristotle Persuaded of the wholly human origin of everything human, a blind man eager to see who knows... | |
| Simo Knuuttila - 1980 - 346 sider
...point from these additions and take it alone . . . and reflect that, while probably each art and each science has often been developed as far as possible and has again perished, those opinions, with others, have been preserved with the present like the relics of an ancient treasure.... | |
| Paul Feyerabend - 1985 - 272 sider
...regard this as an inspired utterance and reflect that, while probably each art and each science has been developed as far as possible and has again perished, these opinions with others have been preserved like relics of the ancient treasure. [Metaphysics, 1074blff] Aristotle thus became the first and, perhaps,... | |
| Diogenes Allen, Eric O. Springsted - 1992 - 324 sider
...point from these additions and take it alone —that they thought the first substances to be gods—we must regard this as an inspired utterance, and reflect...as possible and has again perished, these opinions have been preserved like relics until the present. Only thus far, then, is the opinion of our ancestors... | |
| David Bidney - 596 sider
...point from these additions and take it alone — that they thought the first substances to be gods, we must regard this as an inspired utterance, and reflect...as possible and has again perished, these opinions have been preserved until the present, like relics of the ancient treasure. Only thus far, then, is... | |
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