| Robert Hall - 1833 - 698 halaman
...comprehensively within his view, that he can notice and illustrate, as he proceeds, all the characters of the relation of the parts to one another and to the whole. The preacher uniformly began his sermons in a low voice, and with sentences of the utmost plainness... | |
| Alexander Jamieson - 1835 - 312 halaman
...never be taught to have a distinct notion of a jack. He sees every part ot" it as v.-ell as a man ; but the relation of the parts to one another, and. to the whole, he has not Judgment to comprehend. (See lllus. 0. .'lrt. 192.) lllus. 5. A distinct notion of an object,... | |
| Alexander Jamieson - 1837 - 312 halaman
...never he taught to have a distinct notion of a jack. He sees every part of it as well as a man ; but the relation of the parts to one another, and to the whole, he has not Judgment to comprehend. (See lllus. 6. Art. 192.) lllus. 5. A distinct notion of an object,... | |
| Leonard Woods, Charles D. Pigeon - 1838 - 708 halaman
...so comprehensively in his view that he can notice and illustrate, as he proceeds, all the characters of the relation of the parts to one another and to the whole — our preacher goes straight forward in pursuance of his plan, looking neither to the right hand... | |
| Leonard Woods, Charles D. Pigeon - 1838 - 692 halaman
...so comprehensively in his view that he can notice and illustrate, as he proceeds, all the characters of the relation of the parts to one another and to the %vhole — our preacher goes straight forward in pursuance of his plan, looking neither to the right... | |
| Robert Hall - 1846 - 596 halaman
...comprehensively within his view, that he can notice and illustrate, as he proceeds, all the characters of the relation of the parts to one another and to the whole. The preacher uniformly began his sermons in a low voice, and with sentences of the utmost plainness... | |
| Thomas Reid - 1846 - 1080 halaman
...can never be taught to have a distinct notion of a jack. He sees every part as well as a man ; but the relation of the parts to one another and to the whole, he has not judgment to comprehend. A distinct notion of an object, even of sense, is never got in an... | |
| 1851 - 592 halaman
...comprehensively within his view, that he can notice and illustrate, as he proceeds, all the characters of the relation of the parts to one another and to the whole. The preacher uniformly began his sermons in a low voice, and with sentences of the utmost plainness... | |
| James Armstrong (curate of Ardoyne.) - 1851 - 216 halaman
...are widely different from the views of every other commentator; in the division of the prophecy, in the relation of the parts to one another and to the whole, in the uniform signification of the symbols, in the scope of many symbolic visions, their time and... | |
| 1897 - 600 halaman
...reality in all its parts or details. It aims in the second place at explanation. It seeks to understand the relation of the parts to one another, and to the whole to which they belong. Its ideal may thus be schematised as a whole of clear and distinct parts related... | |
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