176 resultados para Islam and science.
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Ceased Publication Dec. 1902, V.19
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"Special works of reference" (accompanying particularly Professor Boltzmann's address)": v. 1, p. [625]-626.
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"Authors consulted in the preparation of this work": p. [673]-691.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Other slight variations in title.
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Philosophy: its relation to life and education.--The idealism of Spinoza.--Recent discussion in materialism.--Professor Watson on reality and time.--The cosmic and the moral.--Psychology past and present.--The postulates of physiological psychology.--The origin of volition in childhood.--Imitation: a chapter in the natural history of consciousness.--The origin of emotional expression.--The perception of external reality.--Feeling, belief, and judgment.--Memory for square size.--The effect of size-contrast upon judgments of position in the retinal field.--An optical illusion.--New questions in mental chronometry.--Types of reaction.--The "type-theory" of reaction.--The psychology of religion.--Shorter philosophical papers.--Shorter literary papers.
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Consists of a partial translation of the author's "History of the conflict between religion and science" combined with Ahmet Midhat's comments noted on t.p. as "İslam ve ulûm" (Islam and science).
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Özege, M. S. Eski harflerle,
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Each part has separate t.-p.: part 6 has title: The Pentateuch and book of Joshua in face of the science and moral sense of our age.
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On title page: Author's copy.
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"Office of the Chief of Staff, Second (Military Information) Division."
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Includes bibliographical references.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Edited at first by Robert Walsh, Jr. and then by Eliakim and Squier Littell, the monthly Museum of Foreign Literature, Science, and Art was the leading American eclectic for twenty years. Much of its contents were selected from British magazines; included were reviews, poetry, literary and scientific news, biographical sketches of British authors, lists of new British publications, and articles on literature. The engraved portraits in each number were a popular feature. After 1830, plates were published regularly, and the magazine began to devote a large proportion of its space to serial fiction by Dickens, Reade, Bulwer, Thackeray and other popular English novelists.
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Mode of access: Internet.