Essays for Our Day: A Background of ModelsLouis Byron Shackelford, Florien Preston Gass W. W. Norton, Incorporated, 1931 - 454 من الصفحات |
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الصفحة 254
... human society to its non - human environment , and of the nature of the non- human world as it is in itself apart from our desires and interests . If this standard is admitted , we can return to the consideration of science , inquiring ...
... human society to its non - human environment , and of the nature of the non- human world as it is in itself apart from our desires and interests . If this standard is admitted , we can return to the consideration of science , inquiring ...
الصفحة 269
... human mind would be precisely the world of the laboratory and nothing more . Conceiving a daily life far more thoroughly mechanized than that of to - day , of a society that sped through the air at incredible speed , that took its ...
... human mind would be precisely the world of the laboratory and nothing more . Conceiving a daily life far more thoroughly mechanized than that of to - day , of a society that sped through the air at incredible speed , that took its ...
الصفحة 332
... human being ; Rousseau is interested in Rousseau because he is Jean- Jacques . Montaigne observes himself impartially as a normal specimen of the genus homo . Rousseau , as we have seen , posi- tively gloats over his own otherwiseness ...
... human being ; Rousseau is interested in Rousseau because he is Jean- Jacques . Montaigne observes himself impartially as a normal specimen of the genus homo . Rousseau , as we have seen , posi- tively gloats over his own otherwiseness ...
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Ahab American Arrow of Gold Bachelor of Arts beautiful become better called character civilization college football common course criticism culture Dean Martin Dyak English equality essay Everett Dean existence eyes fact feel football French friends Gérard de Nerval give habit hand heart human ideal ideas imagination intellectual interest Julius Cæsar knowledge less liberal education living look matter Matthew Arnold means merely mind Moby Dick modern moral nature never night perhaps persons philosophy play pleasure practical question reason reprinted by permission scientific mood seems sense Sir Patrick Spens social sort soul speak spirit student talk teach things thought tion true truth undergraduate walk whole words write young youth