The Cambridge History of English Literature, Volume 14Sir Adolphus William Ward, Alfred Rayney Waller G.P. Putnam's sons, 1917 - English literature |
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Page 4
... whole produce of the country , after paying the labourers , will be the property of the owners of land and the receivers of tithes and taxes . " There is , therefore , an opposition of interests within the body economic ; and this ...
... whole produce of the country , after paying the labourers , will be the property of the owners of land and the receivers of tithes and taxes . " There is , therefore , an opposition of interests within the body economic ; and this ...
Page 5
... whole- hearted adherent of the greatest happiness principle , and added nothing to its statement ; but he was better equipped for its defence on philosophical grounds and he could supplement Bentham's deficiencies as a psychologist ...
... whole- hearted adherent of the greatest happiness principle , and added nothing to its statement ; but he was better equipped for its defence on philosophical grounds and he could supplement Bentham's deficiencies as a psychologist ...
Page 9
... whole of western thought from ancient Greece to modern Ger- many . Hamilton , however , had the defects of his qualities . He never obtained easy mastery of his own learning ; he would summon a " cloud of witnesses " when a single good ...
... whole of western thought from ancient Greece to modern Ger- many . Hamilton , however , had the defects of his qualities . He never obtained easy mastery of his own learning ; he would summon a " cloud of witnesses " when a single good ...
Page 12
... whole , which in its nature must be without any conditions ; and it may also be taken as implying that our know- ledge of the finite parts is not a knowledge of them as they truly exist , but only as they are modified by our way of know ...
... whole , which in its nature must be without any conditions ; and it may also be taken as implying that our know- ledge of the finite parts is not a knowledge of them as they truly exist , but only as they are modified by our way of know ...
Page 15
... whole , the most interesting and characteristic figure in English philosophy in the nineteenth century . He was successively the hope and the leader , some- times , also , the despair , of the school of thought which was regarded as ...
... whole , the most interesting and characteristic figure in English philosophy in the nineteenth century . He was successively the hope and the leader , some- times , also , the despair , of the school of thought which was regarded as ...
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