A Modern Reader: Essays on Present-day Life and CultureWalter Lippmann, Allan Nevins D. C. Heath, 1946 - 667 Seiten |
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Seite 405
... progress among philosophers . Both of them give definitions of the word - a very necessary thing to do , and I have not yet attempted to do it . Hegel defines progress as spiritual freedom ; Comte as true or positive social philosophy ...
... progress among philosophers . Both of them give definitions of the word - a very necessary thing to do , and I have not yet attempted to do it . Hegel defines progress as spiritual freedom ; Comte as true or positive social philosophy ...
Seite 406
... progress can never have any temporal sense , " and explains that a perfect philosopher would see the whole world of appearance as a " progress , " by which he seems to mean only a rearrangement in terms of ascending and descending value ...
... progress can never have any temporal sense , " and explains that a perfect philosopher would see the whole world of appearance as a " progress , " by which he seems to mean only a rearrangement in terms of ascending and descending value ...
Seite 407
... progress , and we may suspect that the vagueness of the idea is one of its attractions . There has been no physical progress in our species for many thousands of years . The Cro - Magnon race , which lived perhaps twenty thousand years ...
... progress , and we may suspect that the vagueness of the idea is one of its attractions . There has been no physical progress in our species for many thousands of years . The Cro - Magnon race , which lived perhaps twenty thousand years ...
Inhalt
The Results Democratic Government Has Given LORD BRYCE | 18 |
The Position and Prospects of Communism HAROLD J LASKI | 37 |
London Ottawa Wellington Canberra | 50 |
Urheberrecht | |
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A Modern Reader: Essays on Present Day Life and Culture Walter Lippmann,Allan Nevins Keine Leseprobe verfügbar - 2013 |
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Ameri American army become believe British called Central Electricity Board century character civilization coöperation democracy democratic doctrine economic effect equal Europe European existence experience fact fear feel force freedom frontier future George Eliot German Graham Wallas Herbert Morrison human ideal ideas important individual industrial interest labor League of Nations less living London Transport Board mankind material means ment methods military mind modern moral nature Negro never nomic novel organization Paul Cambon peace philosophy physical planning poet poetry political population possible present principle problem production progress question R. H. Tawney race reason religion religious Russia scientific sense social socialist society spirit Sweden theory things thought tion trade tradition United universal universal suffrage whole