United States or Myanmar ? Vote for the TOP Country of the Week !


THE DOCTRINE OF LIMITS, with its Applications; namely, The First Three Sections of Newton Conic Sections The Differential Calculus. By the Rev. WILLIAM WHEWELL, B.D., &c. 9s. THE MECHANICAL EUCLID. By the Rev. WILLIAM WHEWELL, B.D., Fellow and Tutor of Trin. Coll. Cambridge. 5s. 6d. AN ELEMENTARY TREATISE on the DIFFERENTIAL and INTEGRAL CALCULUS. By the Rev.

Rather to my surprise Lalage accepted the reminiscences as a tolerable substitute for the economic treatise. I suppose she did not really care what I wrote so long as I wrote something. "Very well," she said. "We'll give you six months." I had, I am bound to say, a very pleasant and undisturbed life during the six months allowed me by Lalage.

The book which occasioned this treatise, contains a collection of testimonies confirming and illustrating our teaching, that true peace cannot be established, till governments and nations arrive on our ground.

This poem, he believed, had merits far superior to those of "Paradise Lost," which he could not bear to hear praised in preference to "Paradise Regained." In the same year he published "Samson Agonistes," and two years later a treatise on "Logic," and another on "True Religion, Heresy, Schism, Toleration, and the Best Methods to Prevent the Growth of Popery."

Yes-s, admitted Istra, a little grudgingly, she was going to be at the studio that evening, though she well, there was going to be a little party some friends but yes, she'd be glad to have him come. Grimly, Mr. Wrenn set out for Washington Square. Since this scientific treatise has so exhaustively examined Mr. Arty's, for all its pretension to superiority.

In this very remarkable, but seemingly little-known treatise, Kant expounds a complete cosmogony, in the shape of a theory of the causes which have led to the development of the universe from diffused atoms of matter endowed with simple attractive and repulsive forces.

Perhaps his greatest work was the amusement of his leisure hours for thirteen years, a philosophical treatise called "The City of God," in which he raises and replies to all the great questions of his day; a sort of Christian poem upon our origin and end, and a final answer to Pagan theogonies, a final sentence on all the gods of antiquity.

Mechanics could boast of no trophy like the proposition of Archimedes on the equilibrium of the lever; no new and exact ideas like those of the same great man on statical and hydrostatical pressure; no novel and clear views like those developed in his treatise on floating bodies; no mechanical invention like the first of all steam-engines that of Hero. Natural Philosophy had come to a stop.

Here, again, we are introduced to a rude society of cave-dwellers, who eat human flesh, if not as an habitual diet, yet not only without reluctance, but with relish and enjoyment. The Phagetica of Ennius, of which fragments remain, seems to be the most ancient treatise of the kind in Roman literature.

And I am the more led to this opinion concerning that most far-seeing man, because it is known that he was favorable to liberty, for the maintenance of which he has besides given the most wholesome advice. Literally, "oil and trouble" a common proverbial expression in Latin. From A Political Treatise, ch. iv, same title. From A Political Treatise, ch. v, same title.