Living Philosophies |
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Page 90
... give themselves to that life and all that in- creases knowledge and power . I do not believe in the surrender of one jot or one tittle of one's intelligence and will to the greatest happiness of the greatest number , or to the will of ...
... give themselves to that life and all that in- creases knowledge and power . I do not believe in the surrender of one jot or one tittle of one's intelligence and will to the greatest happiness of the greatest number , or to the will of ...
Page 111
... give him a happy life . We want some- thing more than good environment - we want good raw material in the form of children born from the best possible stock . Our unsentimental ancestors achieved this in a very simple way : they just ...
... give him a happy life . We want some- thing more than good environment - we want good raw material in the form of children born from the best possible stock . Our unsentimental ancestors achieved this in a very simple way : they just ...
Page 123
... give us at last the true meaning of Rousseau . Yet this writer does not even cite the passage that , as Rousseau himself correctly tells us , gives the key to his major writings . It is to this passage that every interpreter of Rousseau ...
... give us at last the true meaning of Rousseau . Yet this writer does not even cite the passage that , as Rousseau himself correctly tells us , gives the key to his major writings . It is to this passage that every interpreter of Rousseau ...
Contents
012114125 PAGE I ALBERT EINSTEIN | 3 |
BERTRAND RUSSELL | 9 |
JOHN DEWEY | 21 |
Copyright | |
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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