Road to modern educationFrederick Mayer College & University Press, 1966 |
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Seite 70
... creature can comprehend God in his majesty , and therefore did he come before us in the simplest manner , and was made man , ay , sin , death , and weakness . In all things , in the least creatures and in their members , God's almighty ...
... creature can comprehend God in his majesty , and therefore did he come before us in the simplest manner , and was made man , ay , sin , death , and weakness . In all things , in the least creatures and in their members , God's almighty ...
Seite 273
... creature who could be perfected . He did not agree that man was a creature of sin - a view which he attacked vigorously . Progress could be best achieved , Jefferson asserted , in a free society which emphasized the future and which ...
... creature who could be perfected . He did not agree that man was a creature of sin - a view which he attacked vigorously . Progress could be best achieved , Jefferson asserted , in a free society which emphasized the future and which ...
Seite 367
... creature in nature , and the child more than the germ of a plant ? The tree germ bears within itself the nature of the whole tree , the human being bears in him- self the nature of all humanity ; and is not , therefore , humanity born ...
... creature in nature , and the child more than the germ of a plant ? The tree germ bears within itself the nature of the whole tree , the human being bears in him- self the nature of all humanity ; and is not , therefore , humanity born ...
Inhalt
Bases of the Renaissance | 13 |
PART TWOREBELLION | 41 |
The Gulistan of Sadi | 43 |
Urheberrecht | |
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according accustomed activity Alcibiades aristoi Aristotle attain axioms become begin believed better body called cause character child Christian Comenius Copernicus creature Democritus Descartes desire discourse divine Don Quixote earth Erasmus evil exercise experience faculties faith father feeling Galileo Gargantua give habit hand heart Herbart hope human ideas Idols impulse individual instruction interest Irnerius judgment kind knowledge less live Lord's Prayer manifold many-sidedness matter means ment mind monk moral mother natural philosophy nature necessary never object observation opinion pain Paracelsus parents person Petrarch philosophy Plato play pleasure Plutarch prayer present principles pupil reason Renaissance render scholasticism Scotists sense Sileni society soon speak spirit syllogism taught teach teacher thee things thou thought tion true truth understanding unity unto virtue whole wise words young youth