| 1904 - 126 páginas
...HYPOTHESIS AND THE KINETIC THEORY OF GASES. Generally, let this be a rule, that all partitions of hnowledges be accepted rather for lines and veins than for sections and separations ; and that the continuance and entireness of hnowledge be preserved. For the contrary hereof hath made... | |
| Francis Bacon - 1900 - 462 páginas
...philosophy in the continent of nature. And generally let this be a rule, that all partitions of knowledges be accepted rather for lines and veins, than for sections and separations ; and that the continuance and entireness of knowledge be preserved. For the contrary hereof hath made... | |
| Andrew Norman Meldrum - 1904 - 126 páginas
...THE KINETIC THEORY OF GASES. ! Generally• III this be a rule, that all partitions of lenowledges be accepted rather for lines and veins than for sections and separations; and that tie continuance and entireness of hnowledge be preserved. For the contrary tcrtaf hath made... | |
| 1905 - 958 páginas
...philosophy in the continent of nature. And generally let this be a rule, that all partitions of knowledges be accepted rather for lines and veins, than for sections and separations ; and that the continuance and entireness of knowledge be preserved. For the contrary hereof hath made... | |
| University of Calcutta - 1908 - 562 páginas
...all things that breathe or move. (c) Generally let this be a rule, that all partitions of knowledges be accepted rather for lines and veins than for sections and separations ; and that the continuance and entireness of knowledge be preserved. For the contrary hereof hath made... | |
| Sir Adolphus William Ward, Alfred Rayney Waller - 1909 - 608 páginas
...for some distance entire and continuous, before it divide itself into arms and boughs).' They are to be accepted ' rather for lines and veins, than for sections and separations.' The second of these leading ideas is the practical aim of knowledge. This is a constantly recurring... | |
| Columbia University - 1917 - 504 páginas
...neglected. As Francis Bacon once said : "Generally let this be a rule, that all partitions of knowledge be accepted rather for lines and veins than for sections and separations; and that the continuance and entireness of knowledge be preserved. For the contrary hereof hath made... | |
| Columbia University - 1917 - 502 páginas
...neglected. As Francis Bacon once said : "Generally let this be a rule, that all partitions of knowledge be accepted rather for lines and veins than for sections and separations; and that the continuance and entireness of knowledge be preserved. For the contrary hereof hath made... | |
| Basil Alfred Yeaxlee - 1925 - 346 páginas
...omission," etc., loc. cit. Cf. Bacon : " Generally let this be a rule, that all partitions of knowledge be accepted ; rather for lines and veins than for sections and separations ; and that the continuance and entireness of knowledge be preserved. For the More than fifty years... | |
| B. H. G. Wormald - 1993 - 436 páginas
...knowledge. '55 'And generally', Bacon argued, 'let this be a rule, that all partitions of knowledges be accepted rather for lines and veins than for sections and separations; and that the continuance and entireness of knowledge be preserved. '56 At the same time, as Macaulay... | |
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