Works: With an Essay on His Life and Genius, Band 12Thomas Tegg and others, 1824 |
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Seite 17
... observation , that men's ambition is generally proportioned to their capacity . Providence seldom sends any into the world with an inclination to attempt great things , who have not abilities likewise to perform them . To have formed ...
... observation , that men's ambition is generally proportioned to their capacity . Providence seldom sends any into the world with an inclination to attempt great things , who have not abilities likewise to perform them . To have formed ...
Seite 22
... observations and inquiries , and was continually employed in making new acquisitions . Having now qualified himself for the practice of physick , he began to visit patients , but without that encouragement which others , not equally de ...
... observations and inquiries , and was continually employed in making new acquisitions . Having now qualified himself for the practice of physick , he began to visit patients , but without that encouragement which others , not equally de ...
Seite 25
... observations . The emptiness and uncertainty of all those sy- stems , whether venerable for their antiquity , or agreeable for their novelty , he has evidently shown ; and not only declared , but proved , that we are entirely ignorant ...
... observations . The emptiness and uncertainty of all those sy- stems , whether venerable for their antiquity , or agreeable for their novelty , he has evidently shown ; and not only declared , but proved , that we are entirely ignorant ...
Seite 31
... observation of nature , ought therefore to be transmitted in all its particulars to future ages , that his successors may be ashamed to fall below him , and that none may hereafter excuse his ig- norance by pleading the impossibility of ...
... observation of nature , ought therefore to be transmitted in all its particulars to future ages , that his successors may be ashamed to fall below him , and that none may hereafter excuse his ig- norance by pleading the impossibility of ...
Seite 35
... . He neither neglected the observations of others , nor blindly submitted to celebrated names . He neither thought so highly of himself as to imagine he could receive no light from books , nor so meanly as to believe he D 2 BOERHAAVE . 35.
... . He neither neglected the observations of others , nor blindly submitted to celebrated names . He neither thought so highly of himself as to imagine he could receive no light from books , nor so meanly as to believe he D 2 BOERHAAVE . 35.
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