Social Statics, Or, The Conditions Essential to Human Happiness Specified: And the First of Them DevelopedWilliams and Norgate, 1868 - 523 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 60
Página 14
... perfect physical development was the chief essential to human felicity ; Plotinus , on the contrary , was so purely ideal in his aspirations as to be ashamed of his body . Indeed the many contradictory answers given by Grecian thinkers ...
... perfect physical development was the chief essential to human felicity ; Plotinus , on the contrary , was so purely ideal in his aspirations as to be ashamed of his body . Indeed the many contradictory answers given by Grecian thinkers ...
Página 46
... perfect intellectual vision . The Calmuck in delicacy of smell , and the red Indian in acuteness of hearing , do not excel the white man more than the white man excels them in moral susceptibility . Every age , every nation , every cli ...
... perfect intellectual vision . The Calmuck in delicacy of smell , and the red Indian in acuteness of hearing , do not excel the white man more than the white man excels them in moral susceptibility . Every age , every nation , every cli ...
Página 51
... perfect ; or rather , to put the expressions in proper se- quence - man becomes perfect , just in so far as he is able to obey them . A total disagreement may therefore be looked for be- tween the doctrines promulgated in the following ...
... perfect ; or rather , to put the expressions in proper se- quence - man becomes perfect , just in so far as he is able to obey them . A total disagreement may therefore be looked for be- tween the doctrines promulgated in the following ...
Página 58
... perfect knowledge of man , of society , of institutions , of events , of all the complex , ever - varying phenomena of human existence ; and to a grasp of mind that can infer from these how things will go in future . In short , he is ...
... perfect knowledge of man , of society , of institutions , of events , of all the complex , ever - varying phenomena of human existence ; and to a grasp of mind that can infer from these how things will go in future . In short , he is ...
Página 65
... how seemingly in- expedient , dangerous , injurious even , may be the course which morality points out as " abstractedly right , " the highest wisdom is in perfect and fearless submission . 4 PART I. CHAPTER I. DEFINITION OF MORALITY . § 1.
... how seemingly in- expedient , dangerous , injurious even , may be the course which morality points out as " abstractedly right , " the highest wisdom is in perfect and fearless submission . 4 PART I. CHAPTER I. DEFINITION OF MORALITY . § 1.
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Términos y frases comunes
acts of parliament Adam Smith adaptation admit amongst argument assert assertors assume authority become belief CHAPTER character circumstances civilization claims common conclusions conduct consequences conservatism consider constitution deductions desire diminishing Divine doctrine duty ence equal freedom equity essential ethical evil exer exercise of faculties existence fact feelings force fulfil function further give gratification greater greatest happiness Hence human implies impulse individual inference instinct institutions justice labour law of equal legislative less liberty of action limits maintain man-the man's matter means men's men's rights ment moral law moral sense nature necessity needful obtained opinion organization pain perfect perfect law personal rights political possession present principle produce proved race reason recognize respect rule sentiment sinecurist slavery social Social Statics society sphere suffering suppose surely theory thing tion true truth whilst wrong