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" But in all the cases which have filled Westminster Hall with the most complicated considerations, the lunatics, and other insane persons who have been the subjects of them, have not only had memory, in my sense of the... "
Principles of Forensic Medicine - Page 199
by William Augustus Guy, David Ferrier - 1875 - 703 pages
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The Edinburgh Review, Volume 19

1811 - 600 pages
...with the most complicated considerations — the lunatics, atid other insane persons who have beeri the subjects of them, have not only had memory, in my sense of th • expression — they have not only had the most perfect knowledge and recollection of all the...
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Speeches of Lord Erskine, when at the Bar, on Miscellaneous Subjects, Volume 5

Thomas Erskine Baron Erskine - 1812 - 282 pages
...Westminster Hall with the most complicated considerations — the lunatics, and other insane persons who have been the subjects of them, have not only had memory,...they have not only had the most perfect knowledge and ;JAMBS- HADFIELD. lS recollection of all the relations they stood in tdwards others, and of the acts...
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The Speeches of the Hon. Thomas Erskine: (now Lord Erskine), when ..., Volume 1

Thomas Erskine Baron Erskine - 1813 - 634 pages
...Westminster Hall with the most complicated considerations—the lunatics, and other insane persons who have been the subjects of them, have not only had memory, in my sense of the exftret•:ion—they have not only had the most perfect knowledge and recollection of all the relations...
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Speeches of Lord Erskine, when at the Bar: On Miscellaneous Subjects

Thomas Erskine Baron Erskine - 1813 - 278 pages
...Westminster Hall with the most complicated considerations—the lunatics, and other insane persons who have been the subjects of them, have not only had memory, in my sense of the expression—they have not only had the most perfect knowledge and recollection of all the relations...
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The Scots Magazine and Edinburgh Literary Miscellany, Volume 76

1814 - 1032 pages
...considerations — the lu" natics, and other insane persons " who have been the subjects 'of 41 them, have not only had the most " perfect knowledge and...stood in " towards others, and of the . acts " and " «id circumstances of their lives, but " iavc, in general, been remarkable far " nbtlety and acuitnttl."...
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Elements of the Philosophy of the Human Mind, Volume 2

Dugald Stewart - 1814 - 560 pages
...complicated considerations — the lunatics, and other insane persons, who have been the subjects of them, have not only had the most perfect knowledge and recollection of all tbe relations they stood in towards others, and of the acts ana * TraitS des Prem. VeritSs. Part I....
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Elements of the Philosophy of the Human Mind, Volume 2

Dugald Stewart - 1821 - 348 pages
...insane persons who have been " the subjects of them, have not only had the most perfect knowl" edge and recollection of all the relations they stood in...of the acts and circumstances of their lives, but buvc in general, been remarkable for subtlety and acvteness ;" — " These," (he adds) " are the cases...
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A Practical Treatise on Medical Jurisprudence: With So Much of ..., Part 1

Joseph Chitty - 1836 - 560 pages
...Westminister Hall with the most complicated considerations, the lunatics and other insane persons who have been the subjects of them, have not only had memory...they have not only had the most perfect knowledge ami recollection of all the relations they stood in towards others, and of the acts and circumstances...
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A TREATISE ON THE MEDICAL JURISPRUDENCE OF INSANITY

I. RAY, M.D. - 1838
...said he, "with the most complicated considerations, the lunatics and other insane persons, who have been the subjects of them, have not only had memory in my sense of the expression—they have not only had the most perfect knowledge and recollection of all the relations...
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The Speeches of the Earl of Chatham, the Hon. R.B. Sheridan, Lord Erskine ...

William Pitt (Earl of Chatham) - 1853 - 1016 pages
...Westminster Hall with the most complicated considerations — the lunatics, and other insane persons who have been the subjects of them, have not only had memory,...they have not only had the most perfect knowledge and recollections of all the relations they stood in towards others, and of the acts and circumstances...
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