| New Church gen. confer - 1847 - 510 páginas
...says he, ' which produces the end, must be the first object of analytic inquiry. The nature of the member or organ is known from the use. The use determines...which continuously precede and continuously follow it ; and what it is, in order, with those which are above and below, or prior and posterior to it. All... | |
| Emanuel Swedenborg - 1844 - 738 páginas
...announced the starting-point of his method in the first lines of his first chapter ; namely, that " the use or effect which produces the end must be the first point of analytic enquiry." First comes the question of fact or result ; next, the reasoning upon it.... | |
| 1847 - 74 páginas
...says he, " which produces the end, must be the first object of analytic enquiry. The nature of the member or organ is known from the use. The use determines...which continuously precede and continuously follow it ; and what it is, in order, with those which are above and below, or prior and posterior to it. All... | |
| 1848 - 914 páginas
...announced the starting-point of his method in the first lines of his first chapter ; namely, that " the use or effect which produces the end must be the first point of analytic enquiry." First comes the question of fact or result ; next, the reasoning upon it.... | |
| 1854 - 466 páginas
...says he, " which produces the end, must be the first object of analytic inquiry. The nature of the member or organ is known from the use. The use determines...which continuously precede and continuously follow it; and what it is, in order, with those which are above and below, or prior and posterior to it. All these,... | |
| James John Garth Wilkinson - 1876 - 626 páginas
...The Tongue, in the ANIMAL KINGDOM, Swedenborg strikes the key-note of the true analysis thus : — " The use or effect which produces the end must be the first object of analytical enquiry. The nature of a member or organ is known from the use. The use determines what the organ is... | |
| 1859 - 662 páginas
...descriptions furnished by these writers, he then proceeds to an analysis of the organs, premising, " The use or effect which produces the end, must be...determines what the organ is in itself or in its own form." This quotation will furnish a key to much that follows, and for which his translator claims so much... | |
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