"Descartes:00001" sayfasının sürümleri arasındaki fark
Gezinti kısmına atla
Arama kısmına atla
k (Yeni sayfa: This sense of superiority to contemporary mathematicians coexisted with a belief that his ideas could be made plain to ordinary men of good sense. This seemingly rather odd combination ...) |
k |
||
| 1. satır: | 1. satır: | ||
| − | + | {| border="1" | |
| + | |- | ||
| + | |This sense of superiority to contemporary mathematicians coexisted | ||
with a belief that his ideas could be made plain to ordinary | with a belief that his ideas could be made plain to ordinary | ||
men of good sense. This seemingly rather odd combination of attitudes | men of good sense. This seemingly rather odd combination of attitudes | ||
is more than an accident of Descartes’s temperament.<ref>;William Bernard (1978),''' Descartes - The Project of Pure Enquiry ''', p. 10</ref> | is more than an accident of Descartes’s temperament.<ref>;William Bernard (1978),''' Descartes - The Project of Pure Enquiry ''', p. 10</ref> | ||
| + | |- | ||
| + | |} | ||
07.04, 14 Eylül 2009 tarihindeki hâli
| This sense of superiority to contemporary mathematicians coexisted
with a belief that his ideas could be made plain to ordinary men of good sense. This seemingly rather odd combination of attitudes is more than an accident of Descartes’s temperament.[1] |
- ↑ ;William Bernard (1978), Descartes - The Project of Pure Enquiry , p. 10