Patriotism and Science: Some Studies in Historic PsychologyRoberts Brothers, 1893 - 164 Seiten |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-5 von 11
Seite 20
... habits of these enormously - diffused and red - handed people of the United States of North America , and , on the other , the conduct of the peoples of the United Kingdom ( and it is unfortunate for him that this name includes the ...
... habits of these enormously - diffused and red - handed people of the United States of North America , and , on the other , the conduct of the peoples of the United Kingdom ( and it is unfortunate for him that this name includes the ...
Seite 61
... habit of impulse , and by an impetuous sincerity in the realisation of her Gallic convictions , which the typical Englishman has never understood . Whenever he has found himself begin- ning to admire this greater spontaneity of thought ...
... habit of impulse , and by an impetuous sincerity in the realisation of her Gallic convictions , which the typical Englishman has never understood . Whenever he has found himself begin- ning to admire this greater spontaneity of thought ...
Seite 63
... habit of mind by large and generous endowments . But any obvious breaking away from the conventional has so far taken a line of immoral eccentricity as to be too often damned as inconvenient in the good old - fashioned sense of the word ...
... habit of mind by large and generous endowments . But any obvious breaking away from the conventional has so far taken a line of immoral eccentricity as to be too often damned as inconvenient in the good old - fashioned sense of the word ...
Seite 70
... habit of criticism and culture to see the whole bearing of his contentions . His impatience , his lack of perspective , his style of hue and cry , ex- actly suited them . The little knowledge of the host of readers in North America ...
... habit of criticism and culture to see the whole bearing of his contentions . His impatience , his lack of perspective , his style of hue and cry , ex- actly suited them . The little knowledge of the host of readers in North America ...
Seite 77
... habit . There- fore he is not prepared for the often Jesuitical quality of French subtlety , or the as frequent New English characteristic of chicane . If there is one thing he dis- likes more than another , it is the uncanny canniness ...
... habit . There- fore he is not prepared for the often Jesuitical quality of French subtlety , or the as frequent New English characteristic of chicane . If there is one thing he dis- likes more than another , it is the uncanny canniness ...
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Patriotism and Science: Some Studies in Historic Psychology (Classic Reprint) William Morton Fullerton Keine Leseprobe verfügbar - 2018 |
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
admirable American Revolution Ammonites appreciation authority century characteristic Chemosh Christianity Church civilisation colonies common criticism danger Democracy democratic dignity distinction Doric energy England English Englishman equality Ernest Renan exist facts faith force France French Frenchmen fresh generalisation habit Hamerton helot hope human nature hypocrisy idea ideal illustration imagine individual instance interesting island Jephthah laic land Laveleye Laveleye's less liberty lish live longer matter Matthew Arnold Megara ment merits mind modern nation never North America odious passion patriotism perhaps Philistines planet political rights Pope Leo XIII positively present problem question race Ravachol regard régime religion religious Renan Republic Revolution ROBERTS BROTHERS Roger Townshend Rome selfishness sense social conditions sort speak spirit Square 12mo suggestive sure temper things thought tical tion to-day truth United virtue Voltaire vulgar whole word writer
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 105 - All Protestantism, even the most cold and passive, is a sort of dissent. But the religion most prevalent in our northern colonies is a refinement on the principle of resistance ; it is the dissidence of dissent, and the Protestantism of the Protestant religion.
Seite 164 - Lessing's Laocoon : an Essay upon the Limits of Painting and Poetry, with remarks illustrative of various points in the History of Ancient Art. By GOTTHOLD EPHRAIM LESSING.
Seite 51 - ... l'homme peut donc et doit tout tenter, il ne lui faut que du temps pour tout savoir. Il...
Seite 39 - I received the idea of a polity in which there is the same law for all, a polity administered with regard to equal rights and equal freedom of speech, and the idea of a kingly government which respects most of all the freedom of the governed...
Seite 101 - Yet, stranger, weep not ! for though premature his death, his life was glorious, enrolling him with the names of those immortal Statesmen and Commanders whose wisdom and intrepidity, in the course of this comprehensive and successful war, have extended the commerce, enlarged the dominion, and upheld the majesty of these kingdoms, beyond the idea of any former age.
Seite 76 - All politeness is owing to liberty. We polish one another, and rub off our corners and rough sides by a sort of amicable collision.
Seite 164 - ... and of philosophy ; being limited, strictly speaking, to the exhibition of ideal actions. These views, in which Lessing differed widely from Klopstock, who made moral beauty, and also from Wieland, who considered nature and truth, as the great aim of poetry, but in which he agreed with Aristotle, and was closely followed in their aesthetical theories by Goethe, Schiller- and Humboldt, were enforced with great argumentative power, extraordinary purity and correctness of taste, and with rich and...
Seite 51 - ... avare ou trop mystérieuse, et se féliciter de ce qu'à mesure qu'il lève une partie de son voile , elle lui laisse entrevoir une immensité d'autres objets tous dignes de ses recherches. Car ce que nous...
Seite 147 - Quand la mer Rouge apparut. C'est un coup que l'on reçoit Avant qu'on s'en doute; A peine on s'en aperçoit, Car on n'y voit goutte. Un certain ressort caché, Tout à coup étant lâché, Fait tomber, ber, ber, Fait sauter, ter, ter, Fait tomber, Fait sauter, Fait voler la tête; C'est bien plus honnête.