| 1858 - 592 pages
...Buckle as a Buckleite, we must add two other passages from the same work which will need no comment. ' The human understanding is no dry light, but receives an infusion from the will and affections ' (Aphorism, 49). And again — ' If the matter be truly considered Natural Philosophy is, after the... | |
| William Jay Youmans - 1899 - 930 pages
...these Idols of the Tribe we must include the disturbance caused by the play of feeling upon the mind. " The human understanding is no dry light, but receives...sciences which may be called ' sciences as one would.' " We all know, to our cost, how passion will warp judgment; how difficult it is to see clearly when... | |
| Elizabeth Wells Gallup - 1899 - 302 pages
...from unexpected and unknown fields, if not in accord with accepted theories and long held beliefs. "For what a man had rather were true, he more readily believes," — is one of Bacon's truisms that finds many illustrations. I appreciate what it means to ask strong... | |
| Elizabeth Wells Gallup - 1900 - 530 pages
...from unexpected and unknown fields, if not in accord with accented theories and long held beliefs. ''For what a man had rather were true, he more readily believes," — is one of Bacon's truisms that finds many illustrations. I appreciate what it means to ask strong... | |
| John Locke - 1901 - 156 pages
...Above. See section 9, on Ideas. 8. By any of our passions. Cf. Bacon, " Novum Orgamim," Bk. I. Aph. 49: "The human understanding is no dry light, but receives...they narrow hope ; the deeper things of nature, from with a kind of authority, and will not be kept out or dislodged ; but, as if the passion that rules... | |
| Latham Davis - 1905 - 476 pages
...and search of particulars, as to reject old which were in the mind before.—Int. of A'ature, p. 67. The human understanding is no dry light, but receives...sciences which may be called "sciences as one would." Numberless in short are the ways, and sometimes imperceptible, which the affections color and infect... | |
| Sir Adolphus William Ward, Alfred Rayney Waller - 1909 - 608 pages
...limit without seeking to press beyond it, or hi an ultimate principle without asking for a cause ; it ' is no dry light, but receives an infusion from the will and affections ' ; it depends on the senses, and they are ' dull, incompetent and deceptive' ; and it is 'prone to... | |
| Elizabeth Wells Gallup - 1910 - 316 pages
...from imexpected and unknown fields, if not in accord with accented theories and long held beliefs. ''For what a man had rather were true, he more readily believes," — is one of Bacon's truisms that finds many illustrations. I appreciate what it means to ask strong... | |
| Elizabeth Wells Gallup - 1910 - 316 pages
...from unexpected and unknown fields, if not in accord with accented theories and long held beliefs. "For what a man had rather were true, he more readily believes," — is one of Bacon's truisms that finds many illustrations. I appreciate what it means to ask strong... | |
| James Seth - 1912 - 404 pages
...sensitiveness, affects even his intellectual life and seriously narrows his vision of truth. He tells us that ' the human understanding is no dry light, but receives an infusion from the will and affections ' ; but his own defect seems rather to have been a lack of emotion and affection which made him incapable... | |
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