| John Mason Good - 1813 - 830 páginas
...erpression) out of themselves. For times and space! are, as it were, the places ef themselves as ot all other things. All things arc placed in time as to order of succession ; and in space at to order ot situation. It is from their essence or nature that they are places; und that the primary... | |
| John Mason Good - 1819 - 788 páginas
...be allowed the expression) out of themselves. For times and spaces arc, as' it were, the places ef themselves as of all other things. All things arc placed in time is to order of succession ; and in space as to order of situation. It is from their essence or nature... | |
| 1823 - 832 páginas
...places, and they will be moved (if the expression may be allowed) out of themselves. For times and spaces are, as it were, the places as well of themselves as of all other things. All things are placed in time as to order of succession, and in space as to order of situation. It is from their... | |
| Samuel Alexander - 1920 - 376 páginas
...substance, Bk. II. ch. zp 341 : Space-Time is not substance at all, but stuff. " For times and spaces are as it were the places as well of themselves as of all other things " (Princ. Book I. Schol. iv.). The contrast of absolute and relational is as we have seen entirely... | |
| Edwin Arthur Burtt - 1925 - 382 páginas
...places, and they will be moved (if the expression may be allowed) out of themselves. For times and spaces are, as it were, the places as well of themselves as of all other things. All things are placed in time as to order of succession ; and in space as to order of situation. It is from their... | |
| John William Navin Sullivan - 1928 - 266 páginas
...places, and they will be moved (if the expression may be allowed) out of themselves. For times and spaces are, as it were, the places as well of themselves as of all other things. All things are placed in time as to order of succession ; and in space as to order of situation. It is from their... | |
| Lewis White Beck - 1966 - 332 páginas
...places, and they will be moved (if the expression may be allowed) out of themselves. For times and spaces are, as it were, the places as well of themselves as of all other things. All things are placed in time as to order of succession; and in space as to order of situation. It is from their... | |
| Alfred North Whitehead - 2010 - 452 páginas
...places, and they will be moved (if the expression may be allowed) out of themselves. For times and spaces are, as it were, the places as well of themselves as of all other things. All things are placed in time as to order of succession; and in space as to order oft situation. It is from their... | |
| F. Bradford Wallack - 1980 - 392 páginas
...whom time was an equable flow, speaks of time as being, like space, a place. "For times and spaces are, as it were, the places as well of themselves as of all other things."127 This may well be expected of Newton, the world's leading proponent of absolute time. But... | |
| Andrew C. Papanicolaou, Pete Addison Y. Gunter - 1987 - 424 páginas
...instantaneous and simultaneous unit, representative of the absolute time of the universe. "For times and spaces are, as it were, the places as well of themselves as of all other things. All things are placed in time as to order of succession; and in space as to order of situation. It is from their... | |
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