Victorian Science and Victorian Values: Literary Perspectives |
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Page 279
... Bernard , but to a theory of scientific method that stresses deduction and the role of the imagination . Thus G.H. Lewes , drawing his conclusions from Comte and Bernard , argued in The Foundations of a Creed that " fictions are potent ...
... Bernard , but to a theory of scientific method that stresses deduction and the role of the imagination . Thus G.H. Lewes , drawing his conclusions from Comte and Bernard , argued in The Foundations of a Creed that " fictions are potent ...
Page 353
... Bernard Shaw Estate . One thing more should be noted here about this collection . To quote its editor , Dan H. Laurence : " Shaw had strong personal opinions about style in printing , many of them highly idiosyncratic , and as he was ...
... Bernard Shaw Estate . One thing more should be noted here about this collection . To quote its editor , Dan H. Laurence : " Shaw had strong personal opinions about style in printing , many of them highly idiosyncratic , and as he was ...
Page 355
... Bernard Shaw Estate . In these same discards Shaw writes : " Will is the motive 355 31. A. N. Whitehead , Science and the Modern World ( New York : The New American Library , 1948 ; originally published 1925 ) , pp . 15-16 . 32. Shaw ...
... Bernard Shaw Estate . In these same discards Shaw writes : " Will is the motive 355 31. A. N. Whitehead , Science and the Modern World ( New York : The New American Library , 1948 ; originally published 1925 ) , pp . 15-16 . 32. Shaw ...
Contents
Contents | 10 |
Preface By JAMES Paradis and THOMAS POSTLEWAIT | 39 |
Carlyles Extension | 69 |
Copyright | |
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Adam Sedgwick argued Arnold artist astronomy believed Bernard biological British Cambridge Carlyle Carlyle's causality chap character Charles Charles Darwin Coleridge conception Connop Thirlwall consciousness criticism culture Daniel Deronda Darwin Deucalion Dickens dramatic dreams early Victorian edition English essay fact force geology George Eliot Gwendolen Hare Herschel Hopkins human Huxley idea ideal imagination induction intellectual John John Herschel John Ruskin John Tyndall Journal Julius Hare knowledge Krakatoa landscape language laws letter Lewes literary Lockyer London Lyell metaphor metaphysical Mill mind modern moral Mordecai Natural Philosophy naturalist nineteenth century novel observation phenomena philosophy physical poem poet poetry principle professional rational Reader religion Review Revolution Romantic Ruskin scientists sense Shaw Shaw's social species spiritual T.H. Huxley Tennyson theology theory things Thomas Thomas Henry Huxley thought tion traditional truth Tyndall Tyndall's University Press Victorian science vision Whewell William William Whewell Wordsworth wrote York