Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Karl Pearson" ¶ 24
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Preface and 2nd
In The Grammar of Science, Preface to the 2nd Edition, 1900, Karl Pearson wrote, " There are many signs that a sound idealism is surely replacing, as a basis for natural philosophy, the crude materialism of the older physicists.
As described by Russell in the Preface to the 2nd edition of PM:
* Three Lectures on Wages and on the Effects of Absenteeism, Machinery and War, with a Preface on the Causes and Remedies of the Present Disturbances ( 1830, 2nd ed.
There is no known US publication of the 2nd Edition, however the text of the 1935 edition was reset, with a ' Preface ', ' Commentary ', and an additional essay, ' How Does a Poem Know When it is Finished ' ( 1963 ), as Poetries and Sciences ( W. W. Norton: New York and London, 1970 ).
: 2nd: 1927 ( Preface Date: June 1926 )

Preface and .,
B. Lindsay ; Preface by Sir George Sydenham Clarke, G. C. M. G., F. R. S., John Murray, London, second edition 1907.
* Lauran Paine, ed., Preface and The Fort and Its Dependencies, The Siskiyou Pioneer, Vol.
* Preface by Benjamin Hoadly to Clarke's Works ( 4 vols., London, 1738 – 1742 )
* Perrier, Florent, ed., Palmier, Jean-Michel ( Author ), Marc Jimenez ( Preface ).
* Sherlock Holmes, A Play ( Doubleday, Doran & Company, Inc., 1935 ); Introduction by Vincent Starrett ; Preface by William Gillette ; Reminiscent notes and drawings by Frederic Dorr Steele
He alone, besides myself, saw the necessity of this ( vide the Preface to the Pharmacopoeia Helvet., Basil, 1771, fol., p. 12 ); Nempe primum in corpore sano medela tentanda est, sine peregrina ulla miscela ; odoreque et sapore ejus exploratis, exigua illiu dosis ingerenda et ad ommes, quae inde contingunt, affectiones, quis pulsus, qui calor, quae respiratia, quaenam excretiones, attendum.
In the Sacramentary of St. Gregory the Great ( P. L., LXXVIII, 116 ) there are prayers and the Preface of the Trinity.
E. g., the Eucharistic Preface for the Easter Vigil in the Roman, Lutheran and Anglican / Episcopalian traditions, which state: ".
* Eliot Porter ( Photographer ), Daniel P Beard ( Preface ), David Brower ( Foreword ) ( Eds., 1997 ).
Cantos VI., VII., VIII., with a Preface, were published on 15 July ; Cantos IX., X., XI on 29 August ; Cantos XII., XIII., XIV., on 17 December 1823 ; Cantos XV., XVI.

Preface and Science
*< cite > Science and Sanity: An Introduction to Non-Aristotelian Systems and General Semantics </ cite >, Alfred Korzybski, Preface by Robert P. Pula, Institute of General Semantics, 1994, hardcover, 5th edition, ISBN 0-937298-01-8, ( full text online )
As remembered by Rudolf Carnap and Charles Morris in the Preface to the 1969 edition of the International Encyclopedia of Unified Science:
: For Anthony Boucher, who ... in eighty-seven splendidly edited issues of Fantasy & Science Fiction, perfected the Grand Art of the Preface.
In 1993 he wrote the " Preface to the Fifth Edition " of Alfred Korzybski's Science and Sanity.
* Preface partly reprinted in " Science and Hypothesis ", Ch.
* Preface partly reprinted in " Science and Hypothesis ", Ch.

Preface and stated
Hegel, for example, stated in his Preface to the Phenomenology of Spirit that a subject is constituted by " the process of reflectively mediating itself with itself.
This new editorial policy was stated in the Preface to the first anthology to appear under her leadership: " In this new book we have followed a slightly different arrangement to that of our former Anthology.
While the Catholic scholars " conferred " with the Hebrew and Greek originals, as well as with " other editions in diverse languages ," their avowed purpose was to translate from the Latin Vulgate, for reasons of accuracy as stated in their Preface, but which also tended to produce, in places, stilted syntax and Latinisms.
As stated in the book's Preface, it is " a translation of part I of Max Weber's Wirtschaft und Gesellschaft, which was in turn originally published as volume III of the collaborative work Grundriss der Sozialoekonomik.
His prime interest was not scientific, but political, as stated in the Preface where he discusses changes he considers essential before mankind can govern itself successfully.

Preface and "...
Although James E. Murphy noted that "... most uses of the term seem to refer to something more specific than vague new directions in journalism ", Curtis D. MacDougal devoted the Preface of the Sixth Edition of his Interpretative Reporting to New Journalism and cataloged many of the contemporary definitions: " Activist, advocacy, participatory, tell-it-as-you-see-it, sensitivity, investigative, saturation, humanistic, reformist and a few more.
The title of his first collection apparently was a mild disappointment to Roughead, stating in his " Personal Preface " to his third collection, Glengarry's Way and Other Studies, that "... I have always considered that my venture suffered in its baptism ... of those three fateful words two at least were unhappily chosen.

Preface and science
Enquête sur les ovnis-Voyage aux frontières de la science, Preface by Jacques Benveniste, Éditions Albin Michel, Collection " Aux marches de la science ", 1990, ISBN 2-226-0120-6
As he put it in the Preface to Dynamic Sociology, " The real object of science is to benefit man.

Preface and is
Following is a Preface that gives thanks to the Father and ends leading into the " Sanctus et Benedictus " ( Holy, holy, holy Lord ... Blessed is he who comes ....).
In 1738, while hearing Luther's Preface to the Epistle to the Romans read at St. Botolph Church on Aldersgate Street in London, John Wesley famously felt his heart " strangely warmed ", a conversion experience which is often seen as the beginning of Methodism.
Marx's clearest formulation of his " Materialist Conception of History " was in the 1859 Preface to his book " A contribution to the Critique of Political Economy ," whose relevant passage is reproduced here:
At priestly ordination the bishop imposes hands upon the deacon who is by that matter and the form of the consecratory Preface ( Liturgy ) | preface ordained to the priesthood.
In some later anthologies of Coleridge's poetry, the Preface is dropped along with the subtitle denoting its fragmentary and dream nature.
Sometimes, the Preface is included in modern editions but lacks both the first and final paragraphs.
It is possible that Coleridge was displeased by the lack of unity in the poem and added a note about the structure to the Preface to explain his thoughts.
When the Preface is dropped, the poem seems to compare the act of poetry with the might of Kubla Khan instead of the loss of inspiration causing the work to have a more complex depiction of the poetic power.
Taken together, the Preface could connect with the first half of the poem to suggest that the poem is from the view of a dreaming narrator, or it could connect with the second half of the poem to show how a reader is to interpret the lines by connecting himself with the persona in a negative manner.
The poet of the Preface is a dreamer who must write and the poet of the poem is a vocal individual, but both are poets who lose inspiration.
Only the poet of the poem feels that he can recover the vision, and the Preface, like a Coleridge poem that is quoted in it, The Picture, states that visions are unrecoverable.
Its Preface is world famous and has been used in many studies of the creative process as a signal instance in which a poem has come to us directly from the unconscious.
In 1981, Kathleen Wheeler contrasts the Crewe Manuscript note with the Preface: " Contrasting this relatively factual, literal, and dry account of the circumstances surrounding the birth of the poem with the actual published preface, one illustrates what the latter is not: it is not a literal, dry, factual account of this sort, but a highly literary piece of composition, providing the verse with a certain mystique.
Hegel begins his definition of the subject at a standpoint derived from Aristotelian physics: " the unmoved which is also self-moving " ( Preface, pgph.
::"... the bifurcation of the simple ; it is the doubling which sets up opposition, and then again the negation of this indifferent diversity and of its anti-thesis " ( Preface, pgph.
" Astrology itself is mentioned only twice in Nostradamus's Preface and 41 times in the Centuries themselves, but more frequently in his dedicatory Letter to King Henri II.
This view is confirmed by the " Prague Fragments " and by certain Old Glagolitic liturgical fragments brought from Jerusalem to Kiev and there discovered by Saresnewsky — probably the oldest document for the Slavonic tongue ; these adhere closely to the Latin type, as is shown by the words " Mass ," " Preface ," and the name of one Felicitas.
In his " Preface to Lyrical Ballads ", which is called the " manifesto " of English Romantic criticism, Wordsworth calls his poems " experimental.

1.035 seconds.