| Walter Bagehot - 1881 - 286 Seiten
...morals united as well as their breeds, if one race by its great numbers and prepotent organisation so presided over the other as to take it up and assimilate...nations, and a greater chance of lasting in the world. Another mode in which one state acquires a superiority over competing states is by provisional institutions,... | |
| Walter Bagehot - 1891 - 608 Seiten
...cosmopolitan race like the Jews : each race was a sort of " parish race," narrow in thought and bounded in range, and it wanted mixing accordingly. But the...nations and a greater chance of lasting in the world. Another mode in which one state acquires a superiority over competing states is by provisional institutions,... | |
| Charles de Secondat baron de Montesquieu - 1899 - 476 Seiten
...cosmopolitan race like the Jews; each race was a sort of " parish race," narrow in thought and bounded in range, and it wanted mixing accordingly. But the...line, it might give the mixed and ameliorated state a study advantage in the battle of nations, and a greater chance of lasting in the world. Another mode... | |
| Timothy Dwight, Julian Hawthorne - 1899 - 480 Seiten
...cosmopolitan race like the Jews ; each race was a sort of " parish race," narrow in thought and bounded in range, and it wanted mixing accordingly. But the...line, it might give the mixed and ameliorated state a study advantage in the battle of nations, and a greater chance of lasting in the world. Another mode... | |
| Walter Bagehot - 1915 - 272 Seiten
...morals united as well as their breeds, if one race by its great numbers and prepotent organisation so presided over the other as to take it up and assimilate...it, and leave no separate remains of it, then the ,v--'admixture was invaluable. It added to the probability of variability, and therefore of improvement... | |
| 1918 - 736 Seiten
...des circonstances locales ; en d'autres termes, qu'il depend des influences exercees par I'ensemble des conditions d'existence, par le milieu." By which...nations, and a greater chance of lasting in the world. Uiem. The most important of these — slavery — arises out of the same early conquest as the mixture... | |
| Robert Elliott Speer - 1924 - 456 Seiten
...morals united as well as their breeds, if one race by its great numbers and prepotent organisation so presided over the other as to take it up and assimilate...remains of it, then the admixture was invaluable." 54 And Professor Conklin, while disapproving indiscriminate amalgamation, indulges the thought of an... | |
| Walter Bagehot - 2007 - 149 Seiten
...morals united as well as their breeds, if one race by its great numbers and prepotent organisation so presided over the other as to take it up and assimilate...it, THEN the admixture was invaluable. It added to 50 the probability of variability, and therefore of improvement; and if that improvement even in part... | |
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