For instance, his De rerum natura took its plan and much of its substance from Isidore's work of the same name.
They express beliefs about things and the relations among things in rerum natura: when any one understands them and gives his assent to them, he never stops to think of the speaker's state of mind, but of what the words represent.
Paullus has reckoned as a mode of original acquisition, if we have caused anything to exist, si quid ipsi, ut in rerum natura esset, fecimus.
The De Rerum Natura and the Paradise Lost, while they exercised a profound influence over later poets, came silently into the world, and seem to have passed over the heads of their immediate contemporaries.
As extant it consists of five books, the last being incomplete; the full plan seems to have included a sixth, and would have extended the work to about five thousand lines, or two-thirds of the length of the De Rerum Natura.
Thirty years ago it was the first and second books of the De Rerum Natura which excited the greatest enthusiasm in the scientific world.
Varro also is mentioned by ancient writers, in connexion with Empedocles and Lucretius, as the author of a metrical work 'De Rerum Natura[4].
Contemporaries of Laberius were the satirist Abuccius, and Egnatius, who wrote a didactic poem de rerum natura.
The de rerum natura is an exposition of Epicureanism, especially on its physical side; i.
Varro also is mentioned by ancient writers, in connexion with Empedocles and Lucretius, as the author of a metrical work 'De Rerum Natura[339].
In any case, a scientific reasoner might be expected to ask: 'Is this alleged acquisition of knowledge, not through the ordinary channels of sense, a thing in rerum natura?
I answer, things are as real, and exist in rerum natura, as much as ever.
On my Principles there is a reality: there are things: there is a rerum natura.
Again and again to mention & illustrate the doctrine of the reality of things, rerum natura, &c.
M360) Space without any bodies existing in rerum natura would not be extended, as not having parts--in that parts are assigned to it wth respect to body; from whence also the notion of distance is taken.
The repetition of his creed in the first Aeneid ought to warn us that his enthusiasm for the study of Rerum natura did not die.
Catullus' death and of the publication of Lucretius' De Rerum Natura.
Maecenas stands in the same relation to the Georgics as Memmius does to the 'De Rerum Natura.
The work of the latter is called Compendium de Rerum Natura, and is printed, after the preface, with this running title.
I had at one time a doubt, suggested by the language of the title-page, whether the Compendium de Rerum Natura were not an abridgment of Campanella, by Adami himself.
Is the bull, bear, and horse, inrerum natura still?
But she is not in rerum natura, or I have never been lucky enough to discover where rerum natura is.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "rerum natura" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.