Living Philosophies |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 41
Page 103
... future . Nations fear each other and think that in order to safeguard their future it is necessary to be armed against every neighbor . We see that some of them even think that armament increases their ability to keep a potential enemy ...
... future . Nations fear each other and think that in order to safeguard their future it is necessary to be armed against every neighbor . We see that some of them even think that armament increases their ability to keep a potential enemy ...
Page 113
... future of millions of years before it — at least , we hope so . The historians of the remote future will , I imagine , see democracy merely as one of the early experiments tried in that age of repeated upheavals - our own - in which ...
... future of millions of years before it — at least , we hope so . The historians of the remote future will , I imagine , see democracy merely as one of the early experiments tried in that age of repeated upheavals - our own - in which ...
Page 313
... future . The Jews had hopes for the future , but what they hoped for was a supernatural deliverance , which would enable them to bruise their oppressors with a rod of iron . The consequence was that neither from Palestine nor from ...
... future . The Jews had hopes for the future , but what they hoped for was a supernatural deliverance , which would enable them to bruise their oppressors with a rod of iron . The consequence was that neither from Palestine nor from ...
Contents
012114125 PAGE I ALBERT EINSTEIN | 3 |
BERTRAND RUSSELL | 9 |
JOHN DEWEY | 21 |
Copyright | |
19 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
achieved æsthetic animal atoms beauty become believe better biological body brain called century Christian church civilization conception conduct Confucius coöperation creatures creed death democracy doctrine dualism earth economic emotion ethical evil existence experience fact faith fear feel future H. L. MENCKEN happiness hope human nature ideals ideas immortal individual instinct intellectual intelligence invisible world IRVING BABBITT IRWIN EDMAN J. B. S. HALDANE JAMES TRUSLOW ADAMS John Dewey JOSEPH WOOD KRUTCH JULIA PETERKIN knowledge least less living man's mankind matter means ment merely mind modern nation never one's organization ourselves past philosophy physical political possible practical present question race reason religion religious ROBERT ANDREWS MILLIKAN Rousseau Rousseauist scientific seems sense social society soul spirit things thought tion to-day true truth universe values whole WILLIAM RALPH INGE words