Essays, Moral, Political and AestheticD. Appleton and Company, 1884 - 418 páginas |
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Página 4
... reason , the scope , and authority of all civil rule . Repudiating as we did , at the outset of our national career , the ancient and pre- vailing forms of government ; casting loose to a consid- erable extent from the traditions and ...
... reason , the scope , and authority of all civil rule . Repudiating as we did , at the outset of our national career , the ancient and pre- vailing forms of government ; casting loose to a consid- erable extent from the traditions and ...
Página 12
... reasons assignable for this may all be reduced to the general reason - economy . The most important of them is early association . A child's vocabulary is almost wholly Saxon . He says , I have , not I possess — I wish , not I desire ...
... reasons assignable for this may all be reduced to the general reason - economy . The most important of them is early association . A child's vocabulary is almost wholly Saxon . He says , I have , not I possess — I wish , not I desire ...
Página 13
... will also be true , though in a less degree , when the recogni- tion of them is easy . Hence , the shortness of Saxon words becomes a reason for their greater force . One qualification however , must not be overlooked . A word which.
... will also be true , though in a less degree , when the recogni- tion of them is easy . Hence , the shortness of Saxon words becomes a reason for their greater force . One qualification however , must not be overlooked . A word which.
Página 14
... reasons which we have given for pre- ferring short words evidently do not hold here . So that to make our generalization quite correct we must say , that while in certain sentences expressing strong feeling , the word which more ...
... reasons which we have given for pre- ferring short words evidently do not hold here . So that to make our generalization quite correct we must say , that while in certain sentences expressing strong feeling , the word which more ...
Página 16
... reasons for believing that in every sentence there is some one order of words more effective than any other ; and that this order is the one which presents the elements of the proposition in the suc cession in which they may be most ...
... reasons for believing that in every sentence there is some one order of words more effective than any other ; and that this order is the one which presents the elements of the proposition in the suc cession in which they may be most ...
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Términos y frases comunes
absolute morality abstract action Acts of Parliament 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 David Duncan demand direct directors effect Empiricism engineers English 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 lines 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 words