| 1828 - 746 pages
...circulation through the extremities of the system ;—every pulsation of the political machine vibrates fiom the centre to the circumference, and from the circumference to the centre. England is “all compact,” —and would to God Ireland were knit up in this astonishing condensation... | |
| 1828 - 724 pages
...circulation through the extremities of the system ; — every pulsation of the political machine vibrates from the centre to the circumference, and from the circumference to the centre. England is " all compact," — and would to God Ireland were knit up in this astonishing condensation... | |
| New Church gen. confer - 1841 - 572 pages
...their motion among each other, proceeds the first finite, whose motion must likewise be a spiral form, from the centre to the circumference, and from the circumference to the centre ; whereby opposite poles arise. If so large a quantity of substances come together that they touch... | |
| 1843 - 452 pages
...their motion among each other, proceeds the first finite, whose motion must likewise be a spiral form, from the centre to the circumference and from the circumference to the centre ; wfiereby opposite poles arise. If so large a quantity of substances come together that they touch... | |
| Andrew Ure - 1844 - 630 pages
...may advantageously precede their being set aside to ripen in a damp cellar. In France Ihe sloneware dough is not worked in such a machine ; but after...cake upon itself, and kneading it out, alternately. The process of flapping consists in cutting through a large mass with a wire, lifting up either half... | |
| Emanuel Swedenborg - 1845 - 440 pages
...arising, is similar to the internal motion and state of the point; or, that it is a spiral reciprocating from the centre to the circumference and from the 'circumference to the centre. For if every thing which exists in the finite be most perfectly finited, because it proceeds from a... | |
| Andrew Ure - 1853 - 1036 pages
...may advantageously precede their being set aside to ripen in a damp cellar. In France the stoneware dough is not worked in such a machine ; but after...to a uniform mass by oxen. It is afterwards in all coses, kneaded like baker's dough, by folding back the cake upon itself, and kneading it out, alternately.... | |
| Andrew Ure - 1853 - 1034 pages
...England, it is laid down on a clean floor, and a workman is set to tread upon it with naked fi.-et for a considerable time, walking in a spiral direction...cake upon itself, and kneading it out, alternately. The process of ¡lapping consists in cutting through a large mass with a wire, lifting up either half... | |
| 1854 - 768 pages
...liability : the political power, dispersed and localized, the currents of influence pass reciprocally from the centre to the circumference, and from the circumference to the centre, as in the circulation of the blood ; and whether the number of members in the system be more or less,... | |
| Parke Godwin - 1856 - 378 pages
...liability : the political power, dispersed and localized, the currents of influence pass reciprocally from the centre to the circumference, and from the circumference to the centre, as in the circulation of the blood ; and whether the number of members in the system be more or less,... | |
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