Civilization & Progress: By John Beattie Crozier |
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Page xxviii
... Interests a Safeguard -Special Dangers in America — Their Remedy - Dangers from Weakness of Executive - Difficulties of Democracy . 310-324 CHAPTER V. DEMOCRACY - THE DEMAGOGUE . Belief in the xxviii . SUMMARY OF CHAPTERS .
... Interests a Safeguard -Special Dangers in America — Their Remedy - Dangers from Weakness of Executive - Difficulties of Democracy . 310-324 CHAPTER V. DEMOCRACY - THE DEMAGOGUE . Belief in the xxviii . SUMMARY OF CHAPTERS .
Page 15
... interest the rapid flowerage and culmination of Grecian glory , her noontide brilliance and dazzling eleva- tion ; and as she turns slowly to her setting , we linger over her departing splendour until , torn by dissension within and ...
... interest the rapid flowerage and culmination of Grecian glory , her noontide brilliance and dazzling eleva- tion ; and as she turns slowly to her setting , we linger over her departing splendour until , torn by dissension within and ...
Page 23
... interests , and beliefs which must be directed and combined before any society can enter on a higher stage ; but merely points to a fatality rolling through the ages , and making human beings its willing or unwilling ministers ...
... interests , and beliefs which must be directed and combined before any society can enter on a higher stage ; but merely points to a fatality rolling through the ages , and making human beings its willing or unwilling ministers ...
Page 26
... interests of the people - material , intellectual , moral ; and that Slavery , which at one time helped civilization by releasing the more advanced races from the lower toils , thereby enabling them to pursue higher ends , has become ...
... interests of the people - material , intellectual , moral ; and that Slavery , which at one time helped civilization by releasing the more advanced races from the lower toils , thereby enabling them to pursue higher ends , has become ...
Page 33
... interest ; while the guidance he gave him eventuated in that brutal ignorance in which he has lain until our own time . Carlyle would not , of course , have the identical relation repeated D • in the present day ; he would put a HISTORY ...
... interest ; while the guidance he gave him eventuated in that brutal ignorance in which he has lain until our own time . Carlyle would not , of course , have the identical relation repeated D • in the present day ; he would put a HISTORY ...
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Common terms and phrases
action Æneid alike ANDREW LANG aristocracies aspirations assent believe Cabinet Edition Carlyle CHAPTER character Christian Church civilization classes Comte connexion Crown 8vo culture Deity democracies despotism doctrine E. A. FREEMAN effects elevation and expansion equality Essays evil Evolution example existence fact factors feeling give hand harmony heart Herbert Spencer higher History human mind idea ideal illative sense illusion Illustrations imagination individual influence insight intellectual interests justice knowledge laws of Nature liberty material and social men's mental Metaphysics Monotheism moral natural laws necessity Newman Newman's Cardinal object of Religion opinion organism organon phenomena Philosophy physical political Polytheism practical present principle problem progress reason regarded relations Religion religious scheme Science scientific seen sentiment serf social conditions society soul Spencer spirit supernatural Supernaturalist supreme theory things thinkers thought tion true truth utopias vols whole Woodcuts worship