The British Quarterly Review, 28. ciltHenry Allon Hodder and Stoughton, 1858 |
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100 sonuçtan 1-5 arası sonuçlar
Sayfa 8
... never comes from climate or soil , not from either separately , nor from both con- jointly . Agriculture caters for the animal nature of man , for that , and no more . If the agriculturalist produces more than will meet such wants in ...
... never comes from climate or soil , not from either separately , nor from both con- jointly . Agriculture caters for the animal nature of man , for that , and no more . If the agriculturalist produces more than will meet such wants in ...
Sayfa 9
... class and its middle power , between the top and the bottom . Commerce was this middle power . It made agriculture what it would never otherwise have been , and both together held To a place in the social scale , which warriors ,
... class and its middle power , between the top and the bottom . Commerce was this middle power . It made agriculture what it would never otherwise have been , and both together held To a place in the social scale , which warriors ,
Sayfa 11
... never be forgotten that it is from Asia - from the Asiatic mind - that Christianity has come to us . Who shall say what the quarter of the globe which produced that may not yield ? Every man knows , moreover , that despotic government ...
... never be forgotten that it is from Asia - from the Asiatic mind - that Christianity has come to us . Who shall say what the quarter of the globe which produced that may not yield ? Every man knows , moreover , that despotic government ...
Sayfa 17
... never be made to comprehend . And who can presume to say that the superficial view , which seems to favour the doctrine of necessity , may not be counter- balanced by the profounder elements which as certainly belong to this problem ...
... never be made to comprehend . And who can presume to say that the superficial view , which seems to favour the doctrine of necessity , may not be counter- balanced by the profounder elements which as certainly belong to this problem ...
Sayfa 18
... never led to a vestige of discovery in anything . In opposition to this concep- tion , he writes : - ' Everything we at present know , has been ascertained by studying phenomena , from which all casual disturbances having been removed ...
... never led to a vestige of discovery in anything . In opposition to this concep- tion , he writes : - ' Everything we at present know , has been ascertained by studying phenomena , from which all casual disturbances having been removed ...
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