| 1784 - 548 páginas
...alked, Whit are the •Mended objects of our enquiries within thefe fpacicus limits? we anfwer, KÎAN and NATURE — whatever is performed by the one, or...according to the three great faculties of the mind, A.'«raory, Reafon, and Imagination ; which we conltantly find employed in irranging and retaining,... | |
| Asiatick Society (Calcutta, India) - 1801 - 580 páginas
...inquiries within thefe fpacious limits, we anfwer, MAN and NATURE •, whatever is performed formed by the one, or produced by the other. \ Human knowledge...to the three great faculties of the mind, \ memory, reafon, and imagination, which we conitantly find employed in arranging and retaining, .comparing and... | |
| Samuel Cooper Thacher, David Phineas Adams, William Emerson - 1806 - 788 páginas
...day, have multiplied in, at least, three quarters of the globe ; the objects of whose in.quiries are " Man and Nature, whatever is performed by the one, or produced by the other." Of those institutions in our own country, professing similar objects, it is remarkable, that the most... | |
| John Shore Baron Teignmouth - 1807 - 488 páginas
...Europe, conveys no very diftinct idea. If now it be afked, what are the intended objects of our inquiries within thefe fpacious limits, we anfwer, MAN and NATURE;...to the three great faculties of the mind, memory, reafon, and imagination, which we conftantly find employed in arranging and retaining, comparing and... | |
| Sir William Jones - 1807 - 480 páginas
...Europe, conveys no very diftinct idea. If now it be afked, what are the intended objects of our inquiries within thefe fpacious limits, we anfwer, MAN and NATURE;...produced by the Other. Human knowledge has been elegantly anal y fed according to the three great faculties of the mind, memory, reafon, and imagination, which... | |
| Sir William Jones - 1824 - 336 páginas
...it be asked what are the intended objects of our inquiries within these spacious limits, we aaswer, MAN and NATURE; whatever is performed by the one,...produced by the other. Human knowledge has been elegantly analysed according to the great faculties of the m\n&, memory, reason, and imagination, which we constantly... | |
| Sir William Jones - 1824 - 356 páginas
...be asked what are the intended objects of our inquiries within these spacious limits, we answer, MAW and NATURE; whatever is performed by the one, or produced by the other. Human knowledge has been elegantly analysed according to the great faculties of the mind, memory, reason, ami imagination, which we constantly... | |
| James Davie Butler, George Frederick Houghton - 1849 - 122 páginas
...1784. "The objects of this Association," said he, ': are Man and Nature — whatever is or has been performed by the one or produced by the other. Human knowledge has been elegantly analyzed according to the three greal faculties of the mind, Memory, Reason and Imagination, which... | |
| Asiatic Society of Bengal - 1885 - 772 páginas
...be asked, -what are the intended objects of our enquiries within these spacious limits, we answer, MAN and NATURE ; whatever is performed by the one, or produced by the other." Tliese words have since been paraphrased into — " The bounds of its investigations will be the geographical... | |
| 1887 - 450 páginas
...lead of Sir William Jones; and its broad scope is indicated by his declaration that it would include "Man and Nature; whatever is performed by the one or produced by the other." This Society being the first one organized in Asia for the purposes named, adopted as its title "The... | |
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