The spirit of the age affects all the arts; and the minds of men, being once roused from their lethargy, and put into a fermentation, turn themselves on all sides, and carry improvements into every art and science. Profound ignorance is totally banished, and men enjoy the privilege of ...
As soon as men quit their savage state, where they live chiefly by hunting and fishing, they must fall into these two classes; though the arts of agriculture employ at first the most numerous part of the society. Time and experience improve so much these arts, that the land may easily ...
Before the civil wars, learning and the fine arts were favored at court, and a good taste began to prevail in the nation. The king loved pictures, sometimes handled the pencil himself, and was a good judge of the art. The pieces of foreign masters were bought up at a vast price; and...
This thesis sets out to show that a philosophical reflection on history is, in the strongest possible way, an essential feature of Hume's project of a science of human nature: a philosophical investigation of human nature, for Hume, cannot be successful independently of an understanding of the...
David Hume: Philosopher of Moral Science . Antony Flew (22E,24S)-5α-Stigmasta-3,22-dien-6-one : An Intermediate of the Isomerization of (22E,24S)-3α,5-Cyclo-5α-stigmast-22-en-6-one into (22E,24S)-5α-Stigmasta-2,22-dien-6-one(Organic Chemistry) TAKATSUTO Suguru , KOBAYASHI ...
arts’, Bank of England notes came to embody the immutability of the abstract gold standard, acquiring a function as immutable mobiles which might be circulated without deterioration, or in other words through a time independent of their motion. In this way, Bank of England notes, and the ...
In all conflicts – whether within a given science, between different sciences, between sciences and religion, within a given religion, between different religions, between sciences and arts, within the arts, between religion and the arts, between quarreling nations, quarreling neighbours or quarreling...
Thus perished, in the thirty-eighth year of his age, the gallant marquis of Montrose; the man whose military genius both by valor and conduct had shone forth beyond any which, during these civil disorders, had appeared in the three kingdoms. The finer arts, too, he had in his youth succ...
The Danes and other northern people, who had so long infested all the coasts, and even the island parts of Europe, by their depredations, having now learned the arts of tillage and agriculture, found a certain subsistence at home, and were no longer tempted to desert their industry, in ...
doi:10.1080/10570317009373653GoldenJames L.Western SpeechGolden, James L. "The Influence of Rhetoric on the Social Science Theories of Giambattista Vico and David Hume." Western Speech. Summer (1970): 170- 180.