... "Family, property, and country are finite things, which ought to be organized with a view to the infinite...
P. J. Proudhon 「What is Property?」
...It was alsoobvious that there must be a finite depth to the earth below our feet...
Robert Stawell Ball 「The Story of the Heavens」
...Observe also, that as ironperishes by corrosion in our atmosphere, that great mass of iron cannothave lain where it is for indefinite ages; it must have been placedthere at some finite time...
Robert Stawell Ball 「The Story of the Heavens」
...We do possess thesense of sight; but is it to be supposed that we possess every sensethat can be possessed by finite beings? There is not the least groundfor such an assumption...
Oliver Lodge 「Pioneers of Science」
...Thus the infinite and heavenly dominates the finite and earthly...
Henry Warren 「Recreations in Astronomy」
... Religion unites man with God or puts them in communication; but do you say that God is infinite? If God is infinite, no finite being can have communication or any relation with Him...
Jean Meslier Anna Knoop 「Superstition In All Ages (1732)」
... does not even give me a finite one? ...
Jean Meslier Anna Knoop 「Superstition In All Ages (1732)」
... do we need an Infinite or Divine happiness? ...
Jean Meslier Anna Knoop 「Superstition In All Ages (1732)」
...Hobbes in his Leviathan, says, "whatsoever we imagine is finite...
Paul Henri Thiery (Baron D'Holbach) Samuel Wilkinson 「The System of Nature, Volume 2」
...So that the idea of nothing, if I may so speak, is absolutely the negative of all ideas; the idea, therefore, either of a finite or infinite nothing is a contradiction in terms...
Paul Henri Thiery (Baron D'Holbach) Samuel Wilkinson 「The System of Nature, Volume 2」
...Neither will he be able, under any circumstances, to make a finite mind comprehend infinity; much less when he shall represent this infinity as bounded by finity itself...
Paul Henri Thiery (Baron D'Holbach) Samuel Wilkinson 「The System of Nature, Volume 2」
...What it is actually and truly like, therefore, is quite and for everbeyond us—so long as we are finite beings...
Oliver Lodge 「Pioneers of Science」
...It has boundaries,to be sure, for we are finite, but we cannot measure them...
Henry Warren 「Recreations in Astronomy」
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