But to say that each individual shall reap the benefits brought to him by his own powers, inherited and acquired, is to enunciate egoism as an ultimate principle of conduct.
The purpose of this chapter is to justify it in full, and I enunciate it at the outset because the arguments used will be better understood, if the conclusion to which they converge is in the reader's view.
To define, he says, is toenunciate the essence of that which is defined.
These and other conditions being generally understood, it is unnecessary to enunciate them in common speech.
This expresses, only in words of fuller pith, the views which I ventured to enunciate in Belfast.
I could not accept his views of the origin and destiny of the universe, nor was I prepared to enunciate any definite views of my own.
Mr. von Osten evidently imagined the process was somewhat like this: Whenever Hans was about to count 5, he would enunciate inwardly the numbers from 1 to 5, and would accompany each word with a tap of the foot.
It is not necessary to enunciate the questions aloud ("On est convenu que celui qui commanderait ne prononcerait pas a haute voix le nombre de coups, mais se contenterait de les penser, apres les avoir communiques a l'oreille de son voisin.
It will abound in righteous demands and noble sentiments, but not in the evidence that they who enunciate these demands and sentiments are prepared to put themselves in harmony with what they conceive and demand.
The rest either enunciate the religion as explained above, or describe the means adopted by the king for propagating it, or acting in accordance with it.
Such was the Buddha's gospel, as his most ancient scriptures enunciate it.
To say that politicians always do one thing at a time is no reason why philosophers should not enunciate the broad principles that underlie that one thing and a dozen others.
But, Mrs. President, if we should fail in doing this, we shall not fail to enunciate the principles of democracy and republicanism which underlie the structure of a free government.
This sentiment he perhaps thought it unnecessary to enunciate here; because, in fact, he intended it solely for the Irish, not by any means for the Americans, although it reads like a universal maxim for the human race.
You enunciate principles, sir, which differ vastly from what morality and religion teach.
Consciously, he was never able to discover it, consciously, he was never able to enunciate it.
At any rate, it is hardly credible that this collection of words was ever put forward at any time in the world's history to enunciate a new law for a community of any type that ever existed.
In a few, as for example the "Parmenides," other speakers enunciate the Platonic teaching, but even in these Socrates always plays an important role.
Nevertheless, inasmuch as he was the first to enunciate the proposition "All is one," he takes his place in philosophy.
The second locus (after that bearing on the Prius et Notius) of argument for **impugning a definition is, where it does not enunciate the genus in which the definiend is really included.
Or suppose the definiend to be a generic relatum, and the definition to enunciate its generic correlate.
It may also enunciate the differentia either as a part of the genus or as a part of the species; or it may enunciate the genus either as a part of the differentia or as a part of the species.
Perhaps the thesis may enunciate as a genus what is really nothing more than a differentia.
Perhaps too the thesis may enunciate the Definition as if it were a Proprium; which is another ground for objecting that the proprium is not well set out.
To enunciate this in the language of the Platonic Menon, we learn nothing by or through the evidence of the Syllogism, except a part of what we have already professed ourselves to know by asserting the major premiss.
If the definiend be a Relatum, the definition ought to enunciate its true correlate, or the true correlate of the genus to which it belongs.
Thus, the thesis mayenunciate Ens or Scibile as being the genus of Opinabile.
By multiplied observation of sensible particulars, we can hunt out and elicit the Universal, enunciate it clearly and separately, and make it serve for demonstration.
In the outlines of the policy you so ably enunciate I heartily concur.
Such a woman, separated young from her husband, could not enunciate such opinions and lead a life so independent and uncontrolled as Madame de Grantmesnil had done, without scandal, without calumny.
Before Berry had time to draw himself up to enunciate his longest, he was requested to step upstairs, and as his young mistress at once led the way, Berry could not refuse to put his legs in motion and carry the stately edifice aloft.
It would be difficult to enunciate more boldly the theory of theocracy, with the Inquisition as its delegate and the crown merely the executor of its decrees.
Instead she would perform an upwards scale in gradual crescendo, and on the highest most magnificent note would enunciate at the top of her voice, "Yawning York!
Then starting soft again she would descend in crescendo to a superb low note and enunciate "Love's Lilies Lonely.
When we define a right line as the shortest path from one point to another, we enunciate a property of that line which is of no use for demonstrations.
When we define a curved line as one which is neither straight nor composed of straight lines, we enunciate two negations which can lead to no result, and which have no connection with the peculiar nature of the curved line.
He admitted that there is not a sole law that we canenunciate with the certainty that it has always been true in the past.
It is true they enunciate laws of which the form would have been different if other variables, other units of measure, had been chosen, and especially if the problems had been propounded chronologically in a different order.
The same superstition and medical ignorance would enunciate the same diagnosis at the present day.
Gegenbaur might, therefore, with perfect right, enunciatethis axiom in the Introduction to his "Comparative Anatomy.