The Southern Quarterly Review, 22. kötetDaniel Kimball Whitaker, Milton Clapp, William Gilmore Simms, James Henley Thornwell E. H. Britton, 1852 |
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33. oldal
... effect upon private judgment ; Romanism is regarded as imposture and sin . Believing that no good thing can come out of Nazareth , they blindly shut their eyes to every thing which may commend the old church , and seem ever to forget ...
... effect upon private judgment ; Romanism is regarded as imposture and sin . Believing that no good thing can come out of Nazareth , they blindly shut their eyes to every thing which may commend the old church , and seem ever to forget ...
50. oldal
... effect , we mean no more than to assert a certain relation of sequence ; that the presence of one thing or event will always be follow- ed by that of the other . This sequence must , however , be not only uniform , but also ...
... effect , we mean no more than to assert a certain relation of sequence ; that the presence of one thing or event will always be follow- ed by that of the other . This sequence must , however , be not only uniform , but also ...
51. oldal
... effect , we shall confine our remarks to that relation . It is obvious , from what has been said above , that the object of inquiry in regard to any observed sequence is its uniformity and unconditional character , though the former may ...
... effect , we shall confine our remarks to that relation . It is obvious , from what has been said above , that the object of inquiry in regard to any observed sequence is its uniformity and unconditional character , though the former may ...
53. oldal
... effect . It is evident that we are not at all advanced to a conclusion by an instance which differs from that under consideration in so many particu- lars , as to leave it still doubtful to which we shall refer the effect . The ...
... effect . It is evident that we are not at all advanced to a conclusion by an instance which differs from that under consideration in so many particu- lars , as to leave it still doubtful to which we shall refer the effect . The ...
54. oldal
... effect as to that which he has selected . The negro differs from the Caucasian in having thick lips , a flat nose , curved shins , & c . Would our author refer his intellectual inferiority to either of these ? If not , upon what ...
... effect as to that which he has selected . The negro differs from the Caucasian in having thick lips , a flat nose , curved shins , & c . Would our author refer his intellectual inferiority to either of these ? If not , upon what ...
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