| Edward W. Badger, William Hillhouse - Natural history - 1890 - 616 pages
...nature that women should be kept under the control of men and not allowed any will of their own. (4) Women, indeed, are human beings, but they are of a lower state than men, and never can attain to full equality with them. (5) The aim of female education, therefore, is perfect... | |
| Constance Naden - Induction (Logic) - 1890 - 254 pages
...nature that women should be kept under the control of men and not allowed any will of their own. (4) Women, indeed, are human beings, but they are of a...men, and can never attain to full equality with them. (5) The aim of female education, therefore, is perfect submission, not cultivation and development... | |
| Ellis Ethelmer - History - 1893 - 258 pages
...women should. be. kept under the control of men, and not be allowed any will of their own. "4.—Women, indeed, are human beings, (!) but they are of a lower...men, and can never attain to full equality with them. " 5.—The aim of female education, therefore, is perfect submission, not cultivation and development... | |
| Margaret Ernestine Burton - China - 1911 - 272 pages
...hundred years before Lady Tsao, he said: " Women • Williams, in The Chinese Recorder, Jan.-Feb., 1880. are as different from men as earth is from heaven....education therefore is perfect submission, not cultivation ancl development of the mind." To us who are accustomed to the ideals regarding the education of women... | |
| Robert Elliott Speer - Christianity and other religions - 1911 - 450 pages
...in bodily form, but in the very essence of nature ; that though women are regarded as human beings, they are of a lower state than men and can never attain to full equality with men; that women are to be kept under the power of men and not allowed any will of their own; that women... | |
| Mrs. Sarah (Moore) Sites - Methodist Church - 1912 - 338 pages
...to women seems to have been generally accepted and held by the Chinese people. He said : — " Women are human beings, but they are of a lower state than men and can never attain to equality with them. ' ' A book written by a distinguished scholar of the last century is called " The... | |
| Sherwood Eddy - Asia - 1915 - 276 pages
...The well-known saying of Confucius shows the former attitude of the Chinese to female education: " Women, indeed, are human beings, but they are of a...female education, therefore, is perfect submission, not culture and development." Thus the Chinese were strongly opposed to the education of their daughters... | |
| Kirby Page - Christianity - 1920 - 104 pages
...in bodily form, but in the very essence of nature; that though women are regarded as human beings, they are of a lower state than men and can never attain to full equality with men; that women are to be kept under the power of men and not allowed any will of their own; that women... | |
| Emily Georgiana Kemp - China - 1921 - 278 pages
...govern there as here." " Women are as different from men as earth is from heaven. . . . Women are indeed human beings, but they are of a lower state than men, and can never attain to a full equality with them. The aim of female education therefore is perfect submission, not cultivation... | |
| Emily Georgiana Kemp - China - 1921 - 280 pages
...other world the condition of affairs is exactly the same, for the same laws govern there as here.” “Women are as different from men as earth is from heaven. . Women are indeed human beings, but they are of a lower state than men, and can never attain to a full equality... | |
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