The Advancement of Learning and New AtlantisClarendon Press, 1974 - 297 sider |
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Side 25
... labour then was with the people ( of whom the Pharisees were wont to say , Execrabilis ista turba , quae non novit legem ) , for the winning and persuading of them there grew of necessity in chief price and request eloquence and variety ...
... labour then was with the people ( of whom the Pharisees were wont to say , Execrabilis ista turba , quae non novit legem ) , for the winning and persuading of them there grew of necessity in chief price and request eloquence and variety ...
Side 100
... labour rather how to keep it a doubt still , than how to solve it ; and accordingly bend their wits . Of this we see the familiar example in lawyers and scholars , both which , if they have once admitted a doubt , it goeth ever after ...
... labour rather how to keep it a doubt still , than how to solve it ; and accordingly bend their wits . Of this we see the familiar example in lawyers and scholars , both which , if they have once admitted a doubt , it goeth ever after ...
Side 192
... labour and difficulty or assiduity which are spent about them ; and think , if they be ever moving , that they must needs advance and proceed ; as Caesar saith in a despising manner of Cato the second , when he describeth how laborious ...
... labour and difficulty or assiduity which are spent about them ; and think , if they be ever moving , that they must needs advance and proceed ; as Caesar saith in a despising manner of Cato the second , when he describeth how laborious ...
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