The Social & Political Ideas of Some Representative Thinkers of the Victorian Age: A Series of Lectures Delivered at King's College, University of London, During the Session 1931-32Fossey John Cobb Hearnshaw Barnes & Noble, 1930 - 270 Seiten |
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Seite 71
... conception of natural rights . Not only , moreover , did he resuscitate these antiquated notions , he gave them - perhaps without knowing much about their ante- cedents - a new meaning , a new vitality , a new rationality . For he ...
... conception of natural rights . Not only , moreover , did he resuscitate these antiquated notions , he gave them - perhaps without knowing much about their ante- cedents - a new meaning , a new vitality , a new rationality . For he ...
Seite 152
... conception of human nature too shallow . They felt that a new start had to be made and a proper conception of human nature and action acquired before an adequate political theory could be constructed . That is why none of them were ...
... conception of human nature too shallow . They felt that a new start had to be made and a proper conception of human nature and action acquired before an adequate political theory could be constructed . That is why none of them were ...
Seite 158
... conception of a common good maintained by law . It is the fault of the State if this conception fails to make him a loyal subject , if not an intelligent patriot . It is a sign that the State is not a true State , that it is not ...
... conception of a common good maintained by law . It is the fault of the State if this conception fails to make him a loyal subject , if not an intelligent patriot . It is a sign that the State is not a true State , that it is not ...
Inhalt
THE VICTORIAN AGE 18371901 9 | 9 |
THOMAS CARLYLE | 31 |
HERBERT SPENCER AND THE INDIVIDUALISTS | 53 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Arnold association psychology Bagehot biological Carlyle Carlyle's Chartism civilisation Communist Communist Manifesto conception condition contemporary criticism Culture and Anarchy democracy dialectical doctrine economic Engels England English epoch equal Essays ethics existence fact forces France French French Revolution Froude Hegel Herbert Spencer Hobbes ideal importance individual individualistic industrial influence institutions intellectual interest jurists Karl Marx labour less Liberal liberty literature logical Marx's material Matthew Arnold ment method middle classes Mill mind modern moral natural rights never nineteenth century organisation origin Oxford Oxford Movement political ideas principles problems production Professor progress race realised recognised reform reign religion Revolution revolutionary says schools sense social psychology Social Statics society sociology Synthetic Philosophy T. H. Green Taine Taine's theory thinkers thought tion Tocqueville true Utilitarians Victorian age Victorian era volumes whole writings