Searching First Scientific Lecture-Course Matches
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Query was: sum
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- Title: First Lecture (First Scientific Lecture-Course)
Matching lines:
- Phenomena like this the scientist sums up and so arrives at what he
- assume that there are centres, charged as it were with possibilities
- Title: Second Lecture (First Scientific Lecture-Course)
Matching lines:
- — or a small circular opening, we may assume to begin with
- Title: Fourth Lecture (First Scientific Lecture-Course)
Matching lines:
- the other mirror. Such is the distribution you are to assume; I draw
- lighter it must grow there, — or else one would have to assume
- do. Therefore they said: Let us assume, not that the light is in
- they assumed that waves of this kind are also kindled in the ether.
- light explains them on the assumption that light is a wave-movement
- — we might well assume that with the help of the prism this
- Title: Fifth Lecture (First Scientific Lecture-Course)
Matching lines:
- but more as a kind of function, an outcome of the division sum. Thus
- Assume now that in
- Title: Sixth Lecture (First Scientific Lecture-Course)
Matching lines:
- we are asked to assume, if we be looking through such a plate of
- invite us to assume that space is filled with “ether”,
- and to assume this bombardment too. The masses then are, so to speak,
- presumed to be doing this or that — saves one the need of doing
- fundamental assumption, from which the people of today seem to be
- therefore, to sum up, is the essential point: For all that meets us
- what it has abstracted is the real thing, and on this assumption sets
- cannot of course be perceived but can at most be assumed
- recent developments set in, our physicists assumed that behind
- assumption that there must be some kinship between the phenomena of
- what has happened. The scientists had been assuming that they knew
- assumption is hypothetical.
- Title: Eighth Lecture (First Scientific Lecture-Course)
Matching lines:
- physiologists will naturally not presume that they could ever fall
- Title: Ninth Lecture (First Scientific Lecture-Course)
Matching lines:
- again, I am presumably still recalling what you already know
- assumed that when warmth is applied in the steam-engine, this
- Suppose you have a magnet or electromagnet. (I must again presume
- electricity is based on matter. Now on the contrary we must assume,
- Title: Tenth Lecture (First Scientific Lecture-Course)
Matching lines:
- space. I need only assume that the two lines meet, in reality,
- envisage another and perhaps more real space. The sum of the angles
- geometries are possible, for which the sum of the three angles of a
- guiding line with which I wished provisionally to sum up the little
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