Date: 1755
"The brain contains ten thousand cells, / In each some active fancy dwells."
preview | full record— Prior [from Johnson's Dictionary of the English Language]
Date: 1755
Mine eyes he clos'd, but open left the cell, / Of fancy, my internal sight.
preview | full record— Milton [from Johnson's Dictionary of the English Language]
Date: 1755
"But since the brain doth lodge the pow'rs of sense, / How makes it in the heart those passions spring?"
preview | full record— Davies [from Johnson's Dictionary of the English Language]
Date: 1797
"Tabula rasa. Lat.--'A shaved or smoothed tablet.'--His mind is a tabula rasa--it is a mere blank."
preview | full record— MacDonnel, David Evans (fl. 1797)
Date: 1901
"The double aspect theory ... professes to overcome the onesidedness of these two theories [materialism and idealism] by regarding both series as only different aspects of the same reality, like the convex and the concave views of a curve (G.H. Lewes); or, according to another favourite metaphor,...
preview | full record— Baldwin, James Mark (1861-1934)
Date: 1901
"Repeating Locke's metaphor, Kant blames Hume for declaring certain questions to lie beyond the 'horizon' of human knowledge, without determining where that horizon falls."
preview | full record— Baldwin, James Mark (1861-1934)
Date: 1916
"Little minds, like weak liquors, are soonest soured."
preview | full record— Wilstach, Frank J.