 | Charles Babbage - 1837 - 240 pages
...approximations were sufficiently pursued, gave the whole motions which observations had discovered. CHAP. IX. ON THE PERMANENT IMPRESSION OF OUR WORDS AND ACTIONS...Strong and audible as they may be in the immediate neighbourhood of the speaker, and at the immediate moment of utterance, their quickly attenuated force... | |
 | British and foreign young men's society - 1837
...which every particle of the material universe may finally be summoned and serve as a witness for God. The principle of the equality of action and reaction,...Strong and audible as they may be in the immediate neighbourhood of the speaker, and at the immediate moment of utterance, their quickly attenuated force... | |
 | 1837
...fanciful chapter on " the Permanent Impression of our Words and Actions on the Globe we inhabit.5' " The pulsations of the air, once set in motion by the...Strong and audible as they may be in the immediate neighbourhood of the speaker, and at the immediate moment of utterance, their quickly attenuated force... | |
 | Sarah Renou - 1838
...production of human genius, intellect, perseverance, and industry, the calculating machine. terated. The pulsations of the air once set in motion by the...Strong and audible as they may be in the immediate neighbourhood of the speaker, and at the immediate moment of utterance, their quickly attenuated force... | |
 | William Gordon - 1847 - 160 pages
...506. The distribution of rains is another of the most important offices entrusted to the winds. 507. The pulsations of the air, once set in motion by the...to exist with the sounds to which they gave rise. The motions they have impressed on the particles of one portion of our atmosphere, are communicated... | |
 | 1849
...fifty-eight, laws of eigh> teen hundred and forty-seven are hereby repealed. Tbc Record« of Eternity. The pulsations of the air, once set in motion by the...speaker, and at the immediate moment of utterance, their quickly attenuated force soon becomes inaudible to human ears. The moiions iliey have impressed on... | |
 | William Rathbone Greg - 1851 - 307 pages
...that the whole of futurity would be different had that word never been spoken, or that deed enacted. " The pulsations of the air, once set in motion by the...Strong and audible as they may be in the immediate neighbourhood of the speaker, and at the immediate moment of utterance, their quickly-attenuated force... | |
 | 1852
...in the Religion of Gcology, by President Hitchcock. ADL RESULTS OF THE LAW OF ACTION AND RE-ACTION. THE pulsations of the air once set in motion by the...neighborhood of the speaker, and at the immediate moment of their utterance, their quickly attenuated force soon becomes inaudible to human ears. The motions they... | |
 | ROBERT C. WINTROP - 1852
...bitter. It was most strikingly said by Charles Babbage, in his " Ninth Bridgewater Treatise," that " the pulsations of the air, once set in motion by the...voice, cease not to exist with the sounds to which they give rise." "Every atom (says he) impressed with good and with ill, retains at once the motions which... | |
 | William Rathbone Greg - 1855 - 357 pages
...the whole of futurity would be different had that word never been spoken, or that deed enacted. liThe pulsations of the air, once set in motion by the human...Strong and audible as they may be in the immediate neighbourhood of the speaker, and at the immediate moment of utterance, their quicklyattenuated force... | |
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