From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 62
Page 105
The developement of science has been little more than a constant widening of the sphere of logic and a narrowing of the sphere of sentiment in the formation of human judgements . Accordingly we find that the first sciences to emerge ...
The developement of science has been little more than a constant widening of the sphere of logic and a narrowing of the sphere of sentiment in the formation of human judgements . Accordingly we find that the first sciences to emerge ...
Page 114
That might do if human character was perfect . But taking human nature as it is , there is abundant evidence to show that the altruism required would not be forthcoming . The whole contention furnishes an illustra- tion of the position ...
That might do if human character was perfect . But taking human nature as it is , there is abundant evidence to show that the altruism required would not be forthcoming . The whole contention furnishes an illustra- tion of the position ...
Page 117
If human nature was perfect then probably Socialism would work well ; but so also would any other state of society . Doubtless much might be done by education , but the innocent belief in the perfectibility of human nature which ...
If human nature was perfect then probably Socialism would work well ; but so also would any other state of society . Doubtless much might be done by education , but the innocent belief in the perfectibility of human nature which ...
What people are saying - Write a review
Reviews aren't verified, but Google checks for and removes fake content when it's identified
User Review - Flag as inappropriate
This volume published 1908, not 1808 as listed.
Contents
THE GOVERNMENT OF SUBJECT RACES | 1 |
Dent | 28 |
Adam and Charles Black | 105 |
10 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
acres appears authority average become Bossuet Britain British called century character Christian Church common court Dante desire doubt effect England English existence expression fact Fénelon fish foreign France give Gothic Government hand holdings hope House human important increase influence interest Italy King Lady land later less letters live London Lord Lord John Russell Madame Mary matter means mind ministers natural nearly neutral never once origin party passed period play political possible practical present principles Queen question reason regard religious result rule Saint-Simon seems sense Socialism society spirit style things thought tion trout true United Kingdom Versailles whole writes