| Thomas Green - 1810 - 262 sider
...in reality, those different movements and effects which the artist has occasion for ; a system, is an imaginary machine, invented to connect together,...different movements and effects which are already performed. How happy an illustration! Pursued Hurd's Dialogues. A note in the 4th., ridiculing the... | |
| 1822 - 440 sider
...together in reality, those different movements and effects which the artist has occasion for. A system is an imaginary machine, invented to connect together...and effects which are already in reality performed. The machines that are first invented to perform any particular movement are always the most complex;... | |
| William Archer Butler - 1856 - 486 sider
...together in reality those different movements and effects which the artist has occasion for. A system is an imaginary machine, invented to connect together...and effects which are already in reality performed. The machines that 20 [Essays on Philosophical Subjects, p. 44. Most of the foregoing statements come... | |
| William Archer Butler, William Hepworth Thompson - 1857 - 428 sider
...together in reality those different movements and effects which the artist has occasion for. A system is an imaginary machine, invented to connect together in the fancy those different movements and effecte which are already in reality performed. The machines that B [Essays on Philosophical Subjects,... | |
| Adam Smith - 1869 - 498 sider
...together, in reality, those different movements and effects which the artist has occasion for. A system is an imaginary machine invented to connect together...and effects which are already in reality performed. The machines that are first invented to perform any particular movement are always the most complex,... | |
| 1906 - 1014 sider
...Whether the people will persist will depend on their ' ' effective desire of accumulation " (53). Eae proceeds to inquire in detail into the various reasons...<335>. The one method (he says) is deductive the other indortive. and Adam Smith is deductive throughout, whether in *£fttbetics. Ethics, or Political Economy... | |
| Phyllis Deane - 1978 - 260 sider
...together, in reality, those different movements and effects which the artist has occasion for. A system is an imaginary machine, invented to connect together...fancy those different movements and effects which are in reality performed.'13 In effect, then, Adam Smith was fully committed to the rational14 theistic... | |
| Klaus Krippendorff - 1979 - 552 sider
...together, in reality, those different movements and effects which the artist has occasion for. A system is an imaginary machine invented to connect together...fancy those different movements and effects which are in reality performed. ADAM SMITH: Essays on Philosophical Subiects (1795) Let us retum once more to... | |
| Knud Haakonssen - 1989 - 254 sider
...orderly whole - as if it were a machine: 'Systems in many respects resemble machines... A system is an imaginary machine invented to connect together...and effects which are already in reality performed.' 103 This requirement of the integration of more and more phenomena into a more and more coherent system... | |
| John Cunningham Wood - 1993 - 872 sider
...fit, as neatly as possible, the events observed. For Adam Smith, therefore, a theoretical system is 'an imaginary machine invented to connect together...movements and effects which are already in reality performed.'1 Thus, the 'machine' of theory not only exists 'in the fancy' and is therefore, in its... | |
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