... undervalue such beauty, far from it, but it has nothing to do with science; I mean that profounder beauty which comes from the harmonious order of the parts and which a pure intelligence can grasp. This it is which gives body, a structure so to speak,... Lectures on the Philosophy of Mathematics - Σελίδα 186των James Byrnie Shaw - 1918 - 206 σελίδεςΠλήρης προβολή - Σχετικά με αυτό το βιβλίο
| 1914 - 758 σελίδες
...it is which gives a body, a structure, so to speak, to the iridescent appearances which flatter our senses, and without this support the beauty of these fugitive dreams would be only imperfect, because it would be vague and always fleeting. . . . And we need not fear that this... | |
| Henri Poincaré, George Bruce Halsted - 1907 - 160 σελίδες
...This it is which gives body, a structure so to speak, to the iridescent appearances which flatter our senses, and without this support the beauty of these fugitive dreams would be only imperfect, because it would be vague and always fleeting. On the contrary, intellectual beauty... | |
| Paul Carus - 1909 - 682 σελίδες
...This it is which gives body, a structure so to speak, to the iridescent appearances which flatter our senses, and without this support, the beauty of these fugitive dreams would be only imperfect, because it would be vague and always fleeting. On the contrary, intellectual beauty... | |
| Astronomical Society of the Pacific - 1911 - 308 σελίδες
...This it is which gives body, a structure, so to speak, to the iridescent appearances which flatter our senses, and without this support the beauty of these fugitive dreams would be only imperfect, because it would be vague and always fleeting. On the contrary, intellectual beauty... | |
| Astronomical Society of the Pacific - 1911 - 688 σελίδες
...which gives body, a structure, so to speak, to the iridescent appearances which flatter our <cn<es. and without this support the beauty of these fugitive dreams would be only imperfect, because it would be vague and always fleeting. On the contrary, intellectual beauty... | |
| 1912 - 660 σελίδες
...science; I mean that subtler beauty of the harmonious order of the parts which pure intellect appreciates. This it is which gives a body, a skeleton as it were,...scientist condemn himself to long and tedious labors. In connection with this view of the scientist in his own domain, I desire to quote also from the preface... | |
| Henri Poincaré - 1913 - 584 σελίδες
...This it is which gives body, a structure so to speak, to the iridescent appearances which flatter our senses, and without this support the beauty of these fugitive dreams would be only imperfect, because it would be vague and always fleeting. On the contrary, intellectual beauty... | |
| Edwin Emery Slosson - 1914 - 338 σελίδες
...This it is which gives body, a structure so to speak, to the iridescent appearances which flatter our senses, and without this support the beauty of these fugitive dreams would be only imperfect, because it would be vague and always fleeting. On the contrary, intellectual beauty... | |
| 1913 - 708 σελίδες
...beauty of the harmonious order of the parts which pure intellect appreciates. This it is which gives * body, a skeleton as it were, to the fleeting appearances...because it would be unstable and evanescent. On the eomtrary intellectual beauty is self-sufficient and for its sake, rather than for the good of humanity,... | |
| Gerald James Holton, Stephen G. Brush - 2001 - 604 σελίδες
...This it is which gives body, a structure so to speak, to the iridescent appearances which flatter our senses, and without this support the beauty of these fugitive dreams would be only imperfect, because it would be vague and always fleeting. On the contrary, intellectual beauty... | |
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