The British Quarterly Review, Volume 28Henry Allon Hodder and Stoughton, 1858 - Christianity |
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Page 3
... manner of using it . It is long since any single volume has come before us characterized by so much learning , and , on the whole , by so much power . Nevertheless the book is , for the most part , a book of half - truths , and the ...
... manner of using it . It is long since any single volume has come before us characterized by so much learning , and , on the whole , by so much power . Nevertheless the book is , for the most part , a book of half - truths , and the ...
Page 5
... manner ; and we shall be forced to the further conclusion that such variations are the result of large and general causes , which , working upon the aggregate of society , must produce certain consequences , without regard to the ...
... manner ; and we shall be forced to the further conclusion that such variations are the result of large and general causes , which , working upon the aggregate of society , must produce certain consequences , without regard to the ...
Page 11
... manner , will hardly be supposed to have been altogether without the experience of such influences . Our ideas of a political millennium all centre in a perfect constitution ; the ideas of an Asiatic centre in a perfect prince . It ...
... manner , will hardly be supposed to have been altogether without the experience of such influences . Our ideas of a political millennium all centre in a perfect constitution ; the ideas of an Asiatic centre in a perfect prince . It ...
Page 19
... manner , never so dealt with them . They both knew , indeed , that it is only through a knowledge of our own mind that our knowledge of mind at all becomes possible . But such men have always known that in the condition and adjustment ...
... manner , never so dealt with them . They both knew , indeed , that it is only through a knowledge of our own mind that our knowledge of mind at all becomes possible . But such men have always known that in the condition and adjustment ...
Page 21
... manner in which , by the application of this method , the laws of mental progress may be most easily discovered , ' is the point to be settled . The following passage explains the comparative relation of this method to the two great ...
... manner in which , by the application of this method , the laws of mental progress may be most easily discovered , ' is the point to be settled . The following passage explains the comparative relation of this method to the two great ...
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almanac ancient Anglo-Catholicism Anne Boleyn appears believe Buckle Canterbury Hall century character Christ Christian Church civil Comte course Cromwell Ctesias Disraeli divine doctrine doubt ecclesiastical England English Erastianism existence fact faith favour feeling France French Froude give Government Guizot hand Henry Henry VIII heresy Herodotus honour House of Commons human idea India John kalendars king labour laws Lollards Lord Lord John Russell Louis Louis XVIII matter means ment mind minister Montaigne moral nation nature never opinion Oude Parliament party passage person philosophy political possessed present principles question reader Reformer Reformer's regard relation religion religious remarks revolution Scripture seems Shirley Sir James Outram society spirit Talleyrand Talookdars Testament theology theory things thought tion true truth Uncial Vaughan volume Whig whole words writings Wycliffe Wycliffe's