| United States - 1864 - 350 pages
...antecedent and pre-existent, to all other things, but also exemplanatory and representative of them, as containing in it eminently, and after an intelligible...according to which it was made, and in conformity to which is all the Truth, Reality, Order, Beauty, and Perfection of nature does consist, aiAl is to be measured.... | |
| William Davis Furry - Aesthetics - 1908 - 434 pages
...the Ideal state of things I mean that state of them which is necessary, permanent and immutable . . containing in it eminently and after an Intelligible Manner, all that is in the Natural World . . whereof all things in the Natural World are but as the Prints and Impressions,... | |
| Flora Isabel MacKinnon - 1910 - 122 pages
...the Ideal state of things I mean that state of them which is necessary, permanent and immutable . . containing in it eminently and after an Intelligible Manner, all that is in the Natural World . . whereof all things in the Natural World are but as the Prints and Impressions,... | |
| 1916 - 440 pages
...the Ideal state of things I mean that state of them which is necessary, permanent and immutable . . containing in it eminently and after an Intelligible Manner, all that is in the Natural World . . whereof all things in the Natural World are but as the Prints and Impressions,... | |
| A. Robert Lee, W. M. Verhoeven - Literary Criticism - 1996 - 372 pages
...immutable, not only the antecedent and pre-existent to this, but also exemplary and representative of it, as containing in it eminently and after an...reality, order, beauty, and perfection of its nature does consist, and is to be measured. The system of things existing after ihis manner, is what we call the... | |
| United States - 1864 - 340 pages
...antecedent and pre-existent, to all other things, but also exemplauatory and representative of them, as containing in it eminently, and after an intelligible...according to which it was made, and in conformity to which is all the Truth, Reality, Order, Beauty, and Perfection of nature does consist, and is to be measured.... | |
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