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" TASTE FOR SCIENCE) ; BUT THE MOST OBVIOUS REMEDY IS TO PROVIDE THE EDUCATED CLASSES WITH A SERIES OF WORKS ON POPULAR AND PRACTICAL SCIENCE, FREED FROM MATHEMATICAL SYMBOLS AND TECHNICAL TERMS, WRITTEN IN SIMPLE AND PERSPICUOUS LANGUAGE, AND ILLUSTRATED... "
Treatise on Heat - Page ii
by Dionysius Lardner - 1833 - 429 pages
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Iron: An Illustrated Weekly Journal for Iron and Steel ..., Volume 15

Perry Fairfax Nursey - 1831 - 508 pages
...which the quotation prefixed to the Doctor's own treatise on optics is taken ; it is as follows: — " It is not easy to devise a cure for such a state of things (the declining lust« for science) ; but the most obvious remedy is to provide the educated classes willi a series...
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Geographia Classica, Or, The Application of Antient Geography to the Classics

Samuel Butler - 1831 - 292 pages
...volume."— LARDNER'S CABINET CYCLOPAEDIA. ' IT IS NOT EASY TO DEVICE A CURB FOR M VII » STATE op THINGS (THE DECLINING TASTE FOR SCIENCE;) BUT THE MOST OBVIOUS REMEDY IS TO PROVIDE THE EDUCABINET OF AMERICAN HISTORY. BY TF GORDON. Volumes published* I. II. HISTORY OF THE SPANISH DISCOVERIES...
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The Quarterly Review, Volume 44

William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, Sir John Murray (IV), Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle) - 1831 - 620 pages
...the dignified name of general laws what are only deductions from their own plausible speculations. It is not easy to devise a cure for such a state of things; but, in addition to some legislative enactments, the nature of which has been generally stated in a...
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The Quarterly Review, Volume 44

1831 - 632 pages
...the dignified name of general laws what are only deductions from their own plausible speculations. It is not easy to devise a cure for such a state of things ; but, in addition to some legislative enactments, the nature of which has been generally stated in...
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The Mechanics' Magazine, Museum, Register, Journal, and Gazette, Volume 15

1831 - 532 pages
...prefixed to the Doctor's own treatise on optics is taken ; it is as follows : — " It is not e«sy to devise a cure for such a state of things (the declining taete for science) ; but the most obvious remedy is to provide the educated classes with a series of...
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An Elementary Treatise on Algebra, Theoretical and Practical: With Attempts ...

John Radford Young - 1832 - 408 pages
...refere." — JVaskcille Hmnntr. ' The work deserves a place in every library."— W delphia Album. ' IT IS NOT EASY TO DEVISE A CURE FOR SUCH A STATE OF...REMEDY IS TO PROVIDE THE EDUCATED CLASSES WITH A SERIES OP WORKS ON POPULAR AND PRACTICAL SCIENCE, FREEp FROM MATHEMATICAL SYMBOLS AND TECHNICAL TERMS, WRITTEN...
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Remarks on the Statistics and Political Institutions of the United States ...

Sir William Gore Ouseley - 1832 - 266 pages
...CABINET CYCLOPAEDIA. • IT IS NOT EAST TO DEVIRE A CURB FOR SUCH A STATE OF THiiros (THE DECLININO TASTE FOR SCIENCE;) BUT THE MOST OBVIOUS REMEDY IS...PROVIDE THE EDUCATED CLASSES WITH A SERIES OF WORKS ON PORULAR AND PRACTICAL SCIENCE, FREED FROM MATHEMATICAL SYMBOLS AND TECHNICAL TERMS, WRITTEN IN SIMPLE...
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History of Spain and Portugal, Volume 2

Samuel Astley Dunham - 1832 - 338 pages
...and to receive fresh accessions of force to its corps of contributors " — I.it. Gazette. ' IT 13 NOT EASY TO DEVISE A CURE FOR SUCH A STATE OF THINGS (THE DECUMINO TASTE FOR SCIENCE;) BUT THE MOST OBVIOUS REMEDY IB TO PROVIDE THE EDUCATED CLASSES WITH A...
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Two Years and a Half in the Navy: Or, Journal of a Cruise in the ..., Volume 2

Enoch Cobb Wines - 1832 - 334 pages
...work both for its drvtxn std execution."— /.owrf. /.fi. Gaiene. LARDNER'S CABINET CYCLOPEDIA. IT i3 NOT EASY TO DEVISE A CURE FOR SUCH A STATE OF THINGS (THE DE. CMNING TASTE FOR SCIENCE;) BL'T THE MOST OBVIOUS REMEDY IS TO PROVIDE THE EDUCATED CLASSES WITH...
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The Last Man, Volume 1

Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley - 1833 - 234 pages
...space." — Evening Post. "IT IS NOT EASY TO DEVISE A CORE FOR BUCK A STATE OF THINGS (THE DE CIININO TASTE FOR SCIENCE;) BUT THE MOST OBVIOUS REMEDY IS...EDUCATED CLASSES WITH A SERIES OF WORKS ON POPULAR AND PRACTI CAL SCIENCE, FREED FROM MATHEMATICAL SYMBOLS AND TECHNICAL TERMS, WRITTEN IN &1MPLE AND PERSPICUOUS...
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