The British Quarterly Review, 28. ciltHenry Allon Hodder and Stoughton, 1858 |
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100 sonuçtan 6-10 arası sonuçlar
Sayfa 21
... becoming more virtuous , they likewise become more ignorant . This double movement , moral and intellectual , is essential to the very idea of civilization , and includes the entire theory of mental progress . To be willing to perform ...
... becoming more virtuous , they likewise become more ignorant . This double movement , moral and intellectual , is essential to the very idea of civilization , and includes the entire theory of mental progress . To be willing to perform ...
Sayfa 24
... become in this respect what a few men only have been , and there is room for the few of the future to be wiser than ... become more common , and the conduct accounted vicious will become more rare . But men will not in reality be more ...
... become in this respect what a few men only have been , and there is room for the few of the future to be wiser than ... become more common , and the conduct accounted vicious will become more rare . But men will not in reality be more ...
Sayfa 27
... become strong at the cost of the military class . With this change come manufactures , trade , commerce , law , literature , science , philosophy , diplomacy . All these bring , more or less , of a pacific influence . Now the assumption ...
... become strong at the cost of the military class . With this change come manufactures , trade , commerce , law , literature , science , philosophy , diplomacy . All these bring , more or less , of a pacific influence . Now the assumption ...
Sayfa 29
... become in itself an educator . Knowledge , in the purely secular sense in which Mr. Buckle uses that term , may suffice to make one religious system better than another , but it will be in vain to look to any system of religion as a ...
... become in itself an educator . Knowledge , in the purely secular sense in which Mr. Buckle uses that term , may suffice to make one religious system better than another , but it will be in vain to look to any system of religion as a ...
Sayfa 37
... become excessive , and so become injurious . But it must go very far before it would come under that description in Mr. Buckle's estimation . His great fear is for the credulity of mankind ; he has scarcely a fear for the opposite ...
... become excessive , and so become injurious . But it must go very far before it would come under that description in Mr. Buckle's estimation . His great fear is for the credulity of mankind ; he has scarcely a fear for the opposite ...
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