| David Hartley - 1801 - 544 頁
...of the import of thofe fymbols, which they do ufe in giving intimations to one another, and to us. We feem to be in the place of God to them, to be his...fame tenure to be their guardians and benefactors. CHAP. i CHAP. IV. Of the six CLASSES of INTELLECTUAL PLEASURES and PAINS. I HAVE now difpatched the... | |
| David Hartley - 1834 - 650 頁
...import of those symbols, which they do use in giving intimations to one another, and to us. We seem to be in the place of God to them, to be his vicegerents,...from them in his name. And we are obliged, by the same tenure, to be their guardians and benefactors. CHAR IV. THE SIX CLASSES OF INTELLECTUAL PLEASURES... | |
| David Hartley - 1834 - 646 頁
...import of those symbols, which they do use in giving jri*jj»ations to one another, and to us. We seem to be in the place of God to them, to be his vi$" gerents, and empowered to receive homage from them in name. And we are obliged, by the same tenure,... | |
| 1842 - 1124 頁
...symbols, which they do use in giving intimations to one another, and to us. We seem to be in the place ot God to them, to be his vicegerents, and empowered...from them in his name. And we are obliged, by the same tenure, to be their guardians and benefactors. That the soul is reduced to a state of inactivity... | |
| 1849 - 214 頁
...import of those symbols, which they do use in giving intimations to one another, and to us. • We seem to be in the place of God to them, to be his •vicegerents,...from them in his name. And we are obliged, by the same tenure, to be their guardians and benefactors. That the soul is reduced to a state of inactivity... | |
| Thomas Cromwell - 1859 - 332 頁
...seem to be in the place of God to them" (the Brute animals), " to be his vicegerents, and impowered to receive homage from them in his name. And we are obliged by the same tenure to be their guardians and benefactors." * * Hartley's Theory, by Priestley, p. 249. V.... | |
| Edward Williams Byron Nicholson - 1879 - 236 頁
..." instead of a God or Melior Natura." Hartley (Observations on Man, 1791, ip 415) has said "We seem to be in the place of God to them, to be his vicegerents,...empowered to receive homage from them in his name." Hartley adds "And we are obliged by the same tenure to be their guardians and benefactors." Darwin... | |
| Samuel Smiles - 1900 - 456 頁
...Hartley, in his Observations on Man, says of the dog, that we seem to be in the place of God to him ; to be His vicegerents, and empowered to receive homage from them in His name ; and he adds, that we are obliged, by the same tenure, to be their guardians and benefactors. Darwin says,... | |
| Stephen H. Webb - 1998 - 235 頁
...obligations imposed by desire. As David Hartley, an eighteenthcentury psychologist, wrote, "We seem to be in the place of God to them, to be his Viceregents, and empowered to receive homage from them in His name. And we are obliged by the same... | |
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