| 1846 - 302 pages
...proposition, when it obviously did not mean what he thought true. With Coleridge on the contra»y. the very fact that any doctrine had been believed...received by whole nations or generations of mankind, was a part of the problem to be solved, was one of the phenomena to be accounted for. And as Bentham's... | |
| John Stuart Mill - 1864 - 174 pages
...proposition, when it obviously did not mean what he thought true. With Coleridge, on the contrary, the very fact that any doctrine had been believed...the problem to be solved ; was one of the phenomena Jo be accounted for. And, as Benthanite short and easy method of referring all to the selfish interests... | |
| Aristotle - 1882 - 502 pages
...characteristic of Aristotle in all his writings, has an entirely different significance. To Aristotle as to Coleridge, "the very fact that any doctrine had been believed by thoughtful men was part of the problem to be solved, was one of the phenomena to be accounted for." And if we must... | |
| Aristotle, Edwin Wallace - 1882 - 498 pages
...characteristic of Aristotle in all his writings, has an entirely different significance. To Aristotle as to Coleridge, "the very fact that any doctrine had been believed by thoughtful men was part of the problem to be solved, was one of the phenomena to be accounted for." And if we must... | |
| Samuel Taylor Coleridge - 1893 - 190 pages
...? "... He looked at it from within and endeav| ored to see it with the eye of a believer in it. . . The very fact that any doctrine had been believed...of mankind was part of the problem to be solved." * Such then was Coleridge's conservatism ; and it is evident how far this reverent and enlightened... | |
| Sir William Searle Holdsworth - 1928 - 192 pages
...devising, and condemn all that could not satisfy those tests. Rather, as Mill says, they considered that " the very fact that any doctrine had been believed by thoughtful men, and received by whole nations and generations of mankind, was part of the problem to be solved, was one of the phenomena to be accounted... | |
| Verlyn Klinkenborg, Herbert Cahoon, Pierpont Morgan Library - 1981 - 332 pages
...that for him the past was the richest and most consequential of puzzles; in John Stuart Mill's words, “the very fact that any doctrine had been believed...generations of mankind, was part of the problem to be solved . . . . “ Christianity was the doctrine of most concern to Coleridge throughout his life, and in... | |
| Verlyn Klinkenborg, Herbert Cahoon, Pierpont Morgan Library - 1981 - 332 pages
...that for him the past was the richest and most consequential of puzzles; in John Stuart Mill's words, "the very fact that any doctrine had been believed...of mankind, was part of the problem to be solved. ..." Christianity was the doctrine of most concern to Coleridge throughout his life, and in December... | |
| Verlyn Klinkenborg, Herbert Cahoon, Pierpont Morgan Library - 1981 - 332 pages
...that for him the past was the richest arid most consequential of puzzles; In John Stuart Mlii's words, “the very fact that any doctrine had been believed...by thoughtful men, and received by whole nations or generan¿m. of mankind, vu part of the problem to be solved . . . . “ Christianity was the &,ctrine... | |
| Sir William Searle Holdsworth - 1994 - 182 pages
...devising, and condemn all that could not satisfy those tests. Rather, as Mill says, they considered that "the very fact that any doctrine had been believed by thoughtful men, and 1 Dissertations and Discussions, i, 330, 393. 65 received by whole nations and generations of mankind,... | |
| |