Searching First Scientific Lecture-Course Matches
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Query was: sure
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- Title: Foreword: First Scientific Lecture-Course
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- surely be very grateful to the scientists — teachers of
- who have hitherto administered this spiritual treasure —
- senses and then express in terms of measure, number and
- higher forms of reality”, the time will surely come when
- Title: Prefatory Note: First Scientific Lecture-Course
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- leisure and the means to write a scientifically up-to-date
- Title: First Lecture (First Scientific Lecture-Course)
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- from a to b. Suppose the measure of this force,
- real pull, a real force is exercised. Here I must somehow measure the
- mental activity. Forces you have to measure in the outer world. The
- Parallelogram of Forces, this you cannot make sure of in any
- Parallelogram of Movements. It must be measured and ascertained
- measures, how strongly such a point or centre has the potentiality of
- working. Speaking in general terms, we call the measure of a force
- Title: Second Lecture (First Scientific Lecture-Course)
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- is surely significant that all the truths we thus derive by thought
- yesterday, present-day Physics (though now a little less sure in this
- growing velocity, and there will be a certain measure of this
- pressure. Mass, after all, reveals itself through pressure. As I said
- exert pressure. You make acquaintance with pressure by pressing upon
- something going on in us when we exert pressure with our finger,
- — when we, therefore, ourselves experience a pressure —
- it is, try making the pressure ever more intense. Try it, — or
- rather, don't! Try to exert pressure on some part of your body and
- place, so to speak, on a small scale when you exert a pressure that
- a pressure stronger than you can endure — is taking place
- contact with an effect of pressure — with an effect, therefore,
- from the downward pressure of weight.
- blood. The heavy pressure would immediately cloud our consciousness.
- with the downward pressure. Precisely this deprives the rest of our
- as it were, by the downward pressure, we see men being put to sleep.
- For the Will works in the sense of this downward pressure. Only a
- tiny portion of it, amounting to the 20 grammes' pressure of which we
- shewing, comes to terms both with the downward pressure and with the
- down into such phenomena as pressure and buoyancy. Here is true
- Maximum number of matches per file exceeded.
- Title: Third Lecture (First Scientific Lecture-Course)
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- mean measured. I now only refer to the main principle. To what can
- outward into space the stimulus which it receives. Surely we ought to
- surely the nerve which senses the light. Yet it is insensitive to
- Title: Fourth Lecture (First Scientific Lecture-Course)
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- surely be less illumined by reflected light than when the two mirrors
- rather devastating thought might occur to him, for surely while these
- Title: Fifth Lecture (First Scientific Lecture-Course)
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- exposure the stone went on shining for a time, emitting a certain
- light, which it expressed by being luminous still after exposure
- velocity”. By means of space and time we only measure the
- instance you are separated by the bodily surface. Be sure you
- Title: Sixth Lecture (First Scientific Lecture-Course)
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- displacement. Surely this is wrong. For even if I fix my gaze on this
- Title: Seventh Lecture (First Scientific Lecture-Course)
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- prove to be totally diverse organs. This surely is significant and
- finger — exerting pressure, using some force as you do so,
- measured when warmth is produced by dint of mechanical work or
- Title: Eighth Lecture (First Scientific Lecture-Course)
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- to apply to the phenomena of sound and light? This surely would be
- soul — which, within you and for yourselves, is surely not to
- Title: Ninth Lecture (First Scientific Lecture-Course)
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- they imagined — though to begin with surely there is no cause
- surely make a hole in going through other matter. So then they
- Title: Tenth Lecture (First Scientific Lecture-Course)
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- fair example — have been pervaded, it will assuredly be of
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