| John Francis Waller - 1857 - 230 pages
...langnage of physical science. That Comte borrowed his views from Schelling we can by no means affirm ; bnt that the whole conception of the affiliation of the...expansion of the same law of development so as to inelude the exposition of human nature and the course of social progress, is all to be found there,... | |
| James Frederick Ferrier - 1866 - 602 pages
...one, for example, who compares the philosophic method of Schelling with the ' Philosophic positive' of Auguste Comte, can have the slightest hesitation...there, no one in the smallest degree acquainted with Schilling's writings can seriously doubt." In the form of his head and the expression of his countenance... | |
| Albert Schwegler - 1867 - 438 pages
...fundamental idea is then asserted to be ' precisely the same as that of Schelling,' in whom is found also ' the whole conception of the affiliation of the sciences...of human nature and the course of social progress.' These assertions of Mr. Morell are perhaps too sweeping, but there can be no doubt that in the Germans... | |
| Friedrich Carl Albert Schwegler - 1868 - 106 pages
...fundamental idea is then asserted to be ' precisely the same as that of Schelling,' in whom is found also ' the whole conception of the affiliation of the sciences...of human nature and the course of social progress.' These assertions of Mr. Morell are perhaps too sweeping, but there can be no doubt that in the Germans... | |
| Robert Flint - 1874 - 640 pages
...one, for example, who compares the philosophic method of Schelling with the ' Philosophic Positive ' of Auguste Comte, can have the slightest hesitation...there, no one in the smallest degree acquainted with Schelling'a writings can seriously doubt." Now, in all probability Comte never read a single page of... | |
| Albert Schwegler - 1875 - 542 pages
...fundamental idea is then asserted to be ' precisely the same, as that of Schelling,' in whom is found also ' the •whole conception of the affiliation of the...of development so as to include the exposition of Tinman nature and the course of social progress.' These assertions of Mr. Morell are perhaps too sweeping,... | |
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