| American essays - 1877 - 804 pages
...animals ? ... And these things being rightly dispatched, does it not appear from the phenomena that there is a Being, incorporeal, living, intelligent,...omnipresent, who, in infinite space, as it were in his sensori1 All books mentioned under this head are to be lud at Schocnhof and Mueller's, 40 Winter St.,... | |
| Morris Kline - Mathematics - 1964 - 513 pages
...in animals? . . . And these things being rightly dispatched, does it not appear from phenomena that there is a being incorporeal, living, intelligent,...perceives them; and comprehends them wholly by their immediate presence to himself? In the second edition of his Principles, Newton answers his own questions:... | |
| 2003 - 264 pages
...that substance ? And these things being rightly despatched, does it not appear from phenomena that there is a being incorporeal, living, intelligent,...perceives them; and comprehends them wholly by their immediate presence to himself?'1 The fact of God and the reality of His creative power are the great... | |
| Morris Kline - Mathematics - 1982 - 380 pages
...in animals? . . . And these things being rightly dispatched, does it not appear from phenomena that there is a being incorporeal, living, intelligent,...perceives them; and comprehends them wholly by their immediate presence to himself? In the third edition of his Mathematical Principles of Natural Philosophy,... | |
| Alfred Rupert Hall - Biography & Autobiography - 2002 - 358 pages
...first, to which Leibniz particularly referred, Newton had asked: does it not appear from Phaenomena that there is a Being incorporeal, living, intelligent,...Sensory, sees the things themselves intimately, and throughly perceives them, and comprehends them wholly by their immediate presence to himself: . . .... | |
| Edward Grant - Science - 1981 - 484 pages
...perception by images to the direct manner in which God knows things, Newton, in query 2o,370 assumed that "there is a Being incorporeal, living, intelligent,...perceives them, and comprehends them wholly by their immediate presence to himself."371 Not only does God perceive phenomena directly and immediately, whereas... | |
| Richard S. Westfall - Biography & Autobiography - 1983 - 934 pages
...page, and pasted in a new one which asserted, not that infinite space is the sensorium of God, but that "there is a Being incorporeal, living, intelligent,...who in infinite Space, as it were in his Sensory, [tanquam Sensorio suo] sees the things themselves intimately . . ,"59 Alas, he failed to alter every... | |
| Morris Kline - Mathematics - 1985 - 270 pages
...instinct in animals?... And these things being rightly dispatched, does it not appear from phenomena that there is a being incorporeal, living, intelligent,...perceives them; and comprehends them wholly by their immediate presence to himself? In his second edition of his Principles, Newton answers his own questions:... | |
| David Park - Science - 1990 - 488 pages
...establish the relation of absolute space to God. 1 or example, does it not appear from Phacnomena that there is a Being incorporeal, living, intelligent,...thoroughly perceives them, and comprehends them wholly hy their immediate presence to himself? (Opticks, Query 18) Galileo has already mentioned the sensorium.... | |
| Joseph C. McLelland, Canadian Corporation for Studies in Religion - Religion - 1988 - 385 pages
...analogy of body-mind interaction in the sensorium of the brain. "Does it not appear from Phaenomena that there is a Being incorporeal, living, intelligent,...it were in his Sensory, sees the things themselves ultimately . . . and comprehends them wholly by their immediate presence to himself?" But neither God... | |
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