| 1870 - 652 pages
...classes of causes occur in nature, which, so far as experience goes, never pass one into another. The first class consists of such causes as possess the...mentioned, namely, forces, called also imponderables." * " Forces are transformable, indestructible, and (in contradistinction from matter) imponderable objects."... | |
| 1870 - 644 pages
...classes of causes occur in nature, which, so far as experience goes, never pass one into another. The first class consists of such causes as possess the...properties of weight and impenetrability. These are kind* of matter. The other class is made up of causes which are wanting in the properties just mentioned,... | |
| Geoorge W. Holley - 1894 - 312 pages
...classes of causes occur in nature, which so far as experience goes, never pass one into another. The first class consists of such causes as possess the properties of weight and impenetrability: the other class is made up of causes which are wanting in the properties just mentioned " which are... | |
| Henry Smith Williams - 1904 - 378 pages
...the properties of weight and impenetrability. These are kinds of matter. The other class is composed of causes which are wanting in the properties just...indestructible, convertible, imponderable objects. "As an example of causes and effects, take matter: explosive gas, H + O, and water, HO, are related... | |
| Henry Smith Williams - 1904 - 400 pages
...There occur in nature two causes which apparently never pass one into the other," said Mayer. "The first class consists of such causes as possess the...impenetrability. These are kinds of matter. The other class is composed of causes which are wanting in the properties just mentioned — namely, forces, called also... | |
| Henry Smith Williams, Edward Huntington Williams - 1904 - 380 pages
...There occur in nature two causes which apparently never pass one into the other," said Mayer. "The first class consists of such causes as possess the properties of weight and impenetr£bility. These are kinds of matter. The other class is composed of causes which are wanting... | |
| 1862 - 1550 pages
...classes of causes occur in nature, which, so far as experience goes, never pass one into another. The first class consists of such causes as possess the...indestructible, convertible, imponderable objects. in Anderson's University, Glas¿ow.—Considerable attention having of late been called to the author... | |
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