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Updated: June 16, 2025
Therefore every human being, when crystal-gazing, is more or less asleep. He infers a general affirmative from a single affirmative which happens not to be to the point. It is exactly as if Herr Parish argued: Mrs. B. spends hours in shopping. Mrs. B. is human. Therefore every human being is always late for dinner.
Sally's answer is not on record; but one infers what it was from the fact that they sat there very late, and before they knew it, the tide rose up and shut them in, and the moon rose up in full glory out of the water, and still they sat and talked, leaning on each other, till a cracked, feeble voice called down through the pine-trees above, like a hoarse old cricket, "Children, be you there?"
From this definition he infers that the abolitionists are greatly to blame for maintaining that American slavery is inherently and essentially sinful, and for insisting that it ought at once to be abolished. A few questions, briefly put, may not here be inappropriate. Was the form of slavery which our professor pronounces innocent the form witnessed by our Savior "in Judea?"
M. Amedee Pichot, in the Preface to the French translation of the "Conquest of Mexico," infers from the plan of the composition, that I must have carefully studied the writings of his countryman, M. de Barante. The acute critic does me but justice in supposing me familiar with the principles of that writer's historical theory, so ably developed in the Preface to his "Ducs de Bourgogne."
Connected with the healing art was the practice of embalming dead bodies, which was carried to great perfection. In elegance of life the Greeks and Romans, however, far surpassed any of the nations of antiquity, if not in luxury itself, which was confined to the palaces of kings. In social refinements the Greeks were not behind any modern nation, as one infers from reading Becker's Charicles.
"The Government," he says, "is incompetent to exercise minute and constant supervision over religious opinion." And hence he infers, that "a Government exceeds its province when it comes to adapt a scale of punishments to variations in religious opinion, according to their respective degrees of variation from the established creed.
He endorses Malthus's statement about the absurdity of considering 'wages' as something which may be fixed by his Majesty's 'Justices of the Peace, and infers with Malthus that wages should be left to find their 'natural level. But what precisely is this 'natural level? If the Justice of the Peace cannot fix the rate of wages, what does fix them? Supply and demand?
Consequently he correctly infers: "The Jew gives mankind nothing, when he despises his narrow law, when he abolishes his whole Judaism," p. 65. The relation of Jews and Christians is therefore as follows: the sole interest of Christians in the emancipation of the Jews is a general human, a theoretical interest. Judaism is a detrimental fact in the religious eyes of Christians.
Thus, an actuary infers from his tables that, of any hundred living persons under like conditions, five will reach a given age, not simply because that proportion have reached it in times past, but because that fact shows the existence there of a particular proportion between the causes which shorten and the causes which prolong life to the given extent.
Who has not heard of Port Meadow the town's meadow, as the name infers? Low it lies on the river bank to the north-west of the town.
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