Introduction to the Literature of Europe, in the Fifteenth, Sixteenth, and Seventeenth Centuries, Volume 3John Murray, 1872 |
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Common terms and phrases
admit ancient appears Aristotle authority Bouterwek called casuistry casuists cause chapter character chiefly civil comedy common conceive Descartes distinguished doubt Dugald Stewart English equal especially favour Fletcher Galileo genius Gondibert Grotius Hobbes human imagination inductive inductive philosophy instance Italian Jesuits jurisprudence justice knowledge language Latin latter law of nations law of nature learned least less Leviathan literature logic Lord Bacon mankind manner Marini means ment metaphysical method mind moral natural law Novum Organum object obligation observed opinion original Ovid passage passions perhaps phænomena philosophy physical Pindar poem poetry poets political praise principles probably proposition published quæ reason reckoned Religio Medici remarkable rendered Roman rules Salfi says seems sense Shakspeare sixteenth sometimes sonnets sophisms sovereign Spanish Spanish poetry spirit Stewart style Suarez syllogism taste theory things thought tion tragedy treatise truth words writers