The Advancement of Learning and New AtlantisClarendon Press, 1974 - 297 sider |
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Side 21
... fortunes , and the dignity of their soul and vocation : so that it is impossible for them to esteem that any greatness of their own fortune can be a true or worthy end of their being and ordainment ; and therefore are desirous to give ...
... fortunes , and the dignity of their soul and vocation : so that it is impossible for them to esteem that any greatness of their own fortune can be a true or worthy end of their being and ordainment ; and therefore are desirous to give ...
Side 179
... fortune for himself . ' Faber quisque : Every man is the architect of his own fortune . A saying attributed to Appius Claudius ( fl . 300 B.C. ) . Cf. the essays ' Of Wisdom for a Man's Self ' and ' Of Fortune ' . In hoc viro : Livy ...
... fortune for himself . ' Faber quisque : Every man is the architect of his own fortune . A saying attributed to Appius Claudius ( fl . 300 B.C. ) . Cf. the essays ' Of Wisdom for a Man's Self ' and ' Of Fortune ' . In hoc viro : Livy ...
Side 192
... fortune , as they are more or less material , I hold them to stand thus . First the amendment of their own minds . For the remove of the impediments of the mind will sooner clear the passages of fortune , than the obtaining fortune will ...
... fortune , as they are more or less material , I hold them to stand thus . First the amendment of their own minds . For the remove of the impediments of the mind will sooner clear the passages of fortune , than the obtaining fortune will ...
Innhold
The First Book | 3 |
Defence of Learning against Politicians | 10 |
Defence of Learning against the discredits arising from | 17 |
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according action Advancement of Learning Aeneid affections Alexander amongst ancient Aristotle Atlantis Augmentis Augustus Caesar axioms better body Caesar causes Cicero civil cometh conceit concerning deficient Democritus Demosthenes Diogenes Laertius discourse Discourses on Livy divers divine doctrine doth earth error excellent experiments fable faculties former fortune Francis Bacon Georgics give handled hath heaven honour human humours imagination inquiry invention judgement kind king knowledge labour light likewise live logic maketh man's manner matter means medicine memory men's metaphysic method mind moral natural philosophy Novum Organum observation opinion orations Ovid Paracelsus particular persons Plato pleasure Plutarch Plutarch's precept princes Proverbs reason referred rhetoric Roman saith Salomon sciences scriptures seemeth Seneca sense Socrates sophisms soul speak speech spirit Suetonius Sylva Sylvarum Tacitus things tion touching true truth unto Virgil virtue wherein whereof wisdom wise words writing Xenophon