| Kenneth Richmond - 1918 - 278 halaman
...only to explain what each separate part does, but why it does it; that is to say, we have to explain the relation of the parts to one another and to the whole, and, in general, what is the principle or system of principles upon which the machine acts. It is a... | |
| American Microscopical Society - 1921 - 946 halaman
...the object, which is observed only in part by the magnifying glass, clear to the mental eye in all the relation of the parts to one another and to the whole. Thus the eye armed with the microscope became itself a scientific instrument, which no longer hurried... | |
| William Albert Locy - 1925 - 510 halaman
...the object, which is observed only in part by the magnifying glass, clear to the mental eye in all the relation of the parts to one another and to the whole. Thus the eye armed with the microscope became itself a scientific instrument which no longer hurried... | |
| Alfred Mansfield Brooks - 1926 - 442 halaman
...even upon authority, is not proof. On the other hand there can be no doubt that the proportions, ie, the relation of the parts to one another and to the whole — of height and width, closure and opening — must have been such as to produce a sense of profound... | |
| Thomas Reid - 1983 - 448 halaman
...acknowledged to be very different from that of a man who understands its construction, and perceives the relation of the parts to one another, and to the whole. The child sees the jack and every part of it as well as the man. The child, therefore, has all the... | |
| Immanuel Kant, Werner S. Pluhar - 1987 - 692 halaman
...pursue an aim, such as to judge the size of an area or, in a division, to enable ourselves to grasp the relation of the parts to one another and to the whole, we require regular figures, and those of the simplest kind; and here our liking does not rest directly... | |
| Michael Huemer - 2002 - 636 halaman
...acknowledged to be very different from that of a man who understands its construction, and perceives the relation of the parts to one another, and to the whole. The child sees the jack and every part of it as well as the man. The child, therefore, has all the... | |
| 1906 - 592 halaman
...cannot be said that even the physical acts are wholly mindless, for even In these acts there must be a vague mental awareness of the relation of the parts...under wise direction lead quickly and with the least ex> endlture of energy to clear and definite percepts of related things, and finally to definite conceptions... | |
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