Southern Quarterly Review, Volume 29Daniel Kimball Whitaker, Milton Clapp, William Gilmore Simms, James Henley Thornwell Wiley & Putnam, 1967 |
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Page 96
... truth is to rest , leads us to our final con- clusion . During this march of discovery , many errors lift up their heads and claim the homage and approbation we should give to truth alone . Many objects appear , whose real character we ...
... truth is to rest , leads us to our final con- clusion . During this march of discovery , many errors lift up their heads and claim the homage and approbation we should give to truth alone . Many objects appear , whose real character we ...
Page 175
... truth ; " that an error which sets men a thinking is better than a truth mechanically received . To this proposition we can not assent . Error is always poison , and the activity which it stimulates can never be healthful . Stagnation ...
... truth ; " that an error which sets men a thinking is better than a truth mechanically received . To this proposition we can not assent . Error is always poison , and the activity which it stimulates can never be healthful . Stagnation ...
Page 421
... truth . Real truth , that which alone was worthy of the name , and which could be dignified as knowledge , was conversant only with the permanent , the unchanging , the eternal . It had to do with the real essences of things , not with ...
... truth . Real truth , that which alone was worthy of the name , and which could be dignified as knowledge , was conversant only with the permanent , the unchanging , the eternal . It had to do with the real essences of things , not with ...
Contents
ARTICLE PAGE I THEORY OF THE BEAUTIFUL | 3 |
THE SIX DAYS OF CREATION | 21 |
IIILA BORDES INTRODUCTION TO PHYSIOLOGY | 51 |
Copyright | |
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