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... tion ; but such scenes were the natural sphere of Blake ; and if by their character they transcend all strict representation , it may at least be said that no one has equalled him in the veracity with which his intense imagination saw ...
... tion of science two things are requisite - facts and ideas ; observa- tion of things without , and an inward effort of thought , or in ' Biographical History of Philosophy , ' by G. H. Lewes , i . p . 12 . Ernst H. F. Meyer , Geschichte ...
... tion , " " Of Sleep and Waking , " " Of Dreams , " " Of Prophetic Dreams , " " Of the Motion common to all Animals . " In conclusion come the larger work " On the Generation of Animals , " in five books , and the shorter treatises " On ...
... tion depends on the greater or less degree of the natural temperature of the animals . Hence the breathing organs are made proportionate to the animal's necessities , the bloodless or cold animals requiring them smaller , those provided ...
... tion as to how far Aristotle's observations are the result of his own investigation naturally suggests itself again here ; had Aristotle ever dissected a human body , he never would have asserted a proposition so manifestly false as ...