| Karl Otfried Müller - 1840 - 420 páginas
...living and dying, like the other elements ; but of the igneous principle of life he speaks thus : " The unchanging order of all things was made neither...is kindled and extinguished in regular succession. "f Nevertheless, Heraclitus conceived this continual motion not to be the mere work of chance, but... | |
| Karl Otfried Müller - 1840 - 546 páginas
...living and dying, like the other elements ; but of the igneous principle of life he speaks thus : " The unchanging order of all things was made neither...fire, which is kindled and extinguished in regular succession."t Nevertheless, lleraclitus conceived this continual motion not to be the mere work of... | |
| Karl Otfried Müller - 1847 - 584 páginas
...as living and dying, like the other elements; hut of the igneous principle of life he speaks thus: " The unchanging order of all things was made neither...fire, which is kindled and extinguished in regular succession."f Nevertheless, Heraclitus conceived this continual motion not lo be the mere work of chance,... | |
| Abraham Mills - 1858 - 498 páginas
...fire as living and dying, like the other elements ; but of the igneous prineiple of life he remarks, ' The unchanging order of all things was made neither...is kindled and extinguished in regular succession.' But Heraclitus did not conceive this continual motion to be the work of mere chance, for he expressly... | |
| Samuel Fales Dunlap - 1858 - 424 páginas
...principle of life, like the principe igne of the Chinese philosophers and the American Indians.' " The unchanging order of all things was made neither...nor a man, but it has always been, is and will be 1 the Living Fire' which is kindled and extinguished in regular succession. This perpetual motion is... | |
| Samuel Fales Dunlap - 1858 - 450 páginas
...and the American Indians.1 "The unchanging order of all tilings was made neither by a god nor a rnan, but it has always been, is and will be ' the Living...is kindled and extinguished in regular succession. This perpetual motion is guided and directed by some power, which he called Fate. Ileraclitus considered... | |
| William Henry Robinson - 1893 - 78 páginas
...some of the early Greek philosophers, who are classified as the Ionic School. One of them, Heraclitus, says : " The unchanging order of all things was made...man, but it has always been, is, and will be, the everliving fire (irvp aei^coov), which is kindled and extinguished in regular succession." In this... | |
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