Essays: Moral, Political and AestheticD. Appleton, 1888 - 428 páginas |
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Página 4
... nature of our political insti- tutions implies , and their success demands , on the part of the people , an ... natural rights , it is 4 PREFACE .
... nature of our political insti- tutions implies , and their success demands , on the part of the people , an ... natural rights , it is 4 PREFACE .
Página 5
Herbert Spencer. PREFACE . 5 ment of natural rights , it is obvious that our citizens have a vital and peculiar ... nature and human action , of social organization and social growth , which rest at the foundation of all intelligent ...
Herbert Spencer. PREFACE . 5 ment of natural rights , it is obvious that our citizens have a vital and peculiar ... nature and human action , of social organization and social growth , which rest at the foundation of all intelligent ...
Página 9
... natural apti- tude . A clear head , a quick imagination , and a sensitive ear , will go far towards making all rhetorical precepts needless . He who daily hears and reads well - framed sentences , will naturally more or less tend to use ...
... natural apti- tude . A clear head , a quick imagination , and a sensitive ear , will go far towards making all rhetorical precepts needless . He who daily hears and reads well - framed sentences , will naturally more or less tend to use ...
Página 18
... is great . " When the first arrangement is used , the utterance of the word " great " arouses those vague associations of an im ARRANGEMENT OF PREDICATE AND SUBJECT . 19 pressive nature with 18 THE PHILOSOPHY OF STYLE .
... is great . " When the first arrangement is used , the utterance of the word " great " arouses those vague associations of an im ARRANGEMENT OF PREDICATE AND SUBJECT . 19 pressive nature with 18 THE PHILOSOPHY OF STYLE .
Página 19
Herbert Spencer. ARRANGEMENT OF PREDICATE AND SUBJECT . 19 pressive nature with which it has been habitually connect . ed ; the imagination is prepared to clothe with high attri butes whatever follows ; and when the words , " Diana of ...
Herbert Spencer. ARRANGEMENT OF PREDICATE AND SUBJECT . 19 pressive nature with which it has been habitually connect . ed ; the imagination is prepared to clothe with high attri butes whatever follows ; and when the words , " Diana of ...
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absolute morality action Acts of Parliament argument arrangement asserted Bank Bank of England bankers become belief bills body capital carried cause cent citizens classes companies conclusion consciousness consequence consider constitution contract conviction Corn-Laws demand direct directors effect Empiricism engineers entail equitable established evils existence experience extension fact fulfil function further gained give greater habitually Hence HERBERT SPENCER House of Commons idea implies increased interests issue labour law of effect legislation less manufacturers means members of Parliament ment mental mercantile mind mode nation nature needful Obermair obtained organization Parliament political present principle prisoners produced profits proposition proved question railway reason regulation representative government respect restraint riences scarcely sentence shareholders shares Sir William Hamilton social society supposed things thought tion trade true truth undertakings warrant words