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" In every such change we recognize the action of Force. And in the only case in which we are admitted into any personal knowledge of the origin of force, we find it connected (possibly by intermediate links untraceable by our faculties, but yet indisputably... "
Familiar Lectures on Scientific Subjects - Page 455
by John Frederick William Herschel - 1867 - 507 pages
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The British Quarterly Review, Volume 75

1882 - 662 pages
...Origin of Force ' in ' Popular Lectures on Scientific Subjects,' p. 461. By Sir John Herschel. 1873. knowledge of the origin of force, we find it connected...intellect, and with all those attributes of mind in which personality consists.' We have already quoted (p. 881) from the same article another most suggestive...
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The Religious Magazine and Monthly Review, Volume 47

1872 - 648 pages
...Metaphysics of Sensation). Sir John Herschel also says, " In the only case in which we are admitted to any personal knowledge of the origin of force we find it connected with volition and by inevitable consequence with motive, with intellect, and with all those attributes...
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Unitarian Review and Religious Magazine, Volume 2

Charles Lowe, Henry Wilder Foote, John Hopkins Morison, Henry H. Barber, James De Normandie, Joseph Henry Allen - 1874 - 532 pages
...comparable to volition." Sir John Herschel similarly says,f " In the only case in which we are admitted to any personal knowledge of the origin of force, we find it connected with volition, and by inevitable consequence with motion, with intellect, and with all those attributes...
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The Unitarian Review and Religious Magazine, Volume 2

Charles Lowe, Henry Wilder Foote, John Hopkins Morison, Henry H. Barber, James De Normandie - 1874 - 540 pages
...comparable to volition." Sir John Herschel similarly says,f " In the only case in which we are admitted to any personal knowledge of the origin of force, we find it connected with volition, and by inevitable consequence with motion, with intellect, and with all those attributes...
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Similarities of Physical and Religious Knowledge

James Thompson Bixby - 1876 - 254 pages
...comparable to volition." Sir John Herschel similarly says,3 " In the only case in which we are admitted to any personal knowledge of the origin of force, we find it connected, pos1 Article entitled " Bishop Berkeley on the Metaphysics of Sensation," Macmillau's Magazine, 1871....
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Reconciliation of Science and Religion

Alexander Winchell - 1877 - 422 pages
...this subject I intend to return.(') (') Cocker, " Theistic Conception of the World," p. 197. (") " In the only case in which we are admitted into any...(possibly by intermediate links untraceable by our facuities, but yet indisputably connected) with volition, and, by inevitable consequence, with motive,...
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The Popular Science Monthly, Volume 16

1880 - 902 pages
...we recognize in ourselves ; and in this case we can verify our conclusion by oral communication. ... In the only case in which we are admitted into any...by intermediate links untraceable by our faculties, yet indisputably connected) with volition, and, by inevitable consequence, with motive, with intellect,...
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The Modern Review, Volume 1

1880 - 938 pages
...we recognise in ourselves ; and in this case we can verify our conclusion by oral communication." " In the only case in which we are admitted into any personal knowledge of the origin of Force, vre find it connected (possibly by intermediate links untraceable by our faculties, yet indisputably...
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The Atomic Theory of Lucretius Contrasted with Modern Doctrines of Atoms and ...

John Masson - 1884 - 288 pages
...resolvable into some change occurring in material substance, or we endeavour to trace it to this. ' In every such change we recognize the action of Force....intellect, and with all those attributes of mind in which personality consists.' We have elsewhere quoted (p. 116) from the same article another most suggestive...
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Similarities of Physical and Religious Knowledge

James Thompson Bixby - 1885 - 220 pages
...cornparable to volition." Sir John Herschel similarly says,f " In the only case in which we are admitted to any personal knowledge of the origin of force, we...connected, with volition, and by inevitable consequence w'Cn. motive, with intellect, and with all those attributes of mind in which—and not in the possession...
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