The British Quarterly Review, Volume 28Henry Allon Hodder and Stoughton, 1858 - Christianity |
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Page 6
... known to mankind ( religious persecution and war ) have not been diminished by moral improvement , but have been , and still are , yielding to intellectual discoveries . From all this it evidently follows that if we wish to ascertain ...
... known to mankind ( religious persecution and war ) have not been diminished by moral improvement , but have been , and still are , yielding to intellectual discoveries . From all this it evidently follows that if we wish to ascertain ...
Page 7
... known civilizations ; and a fact which pre- ceded these civilizations can hardly be said to have been produced by them . The patriarchal authority naturally took this shape . It grew up in the centre of those lesser sovereignties which ...
... known civilizations ; and a fact which pre- ceded these civilizations can hardly be said to have been produced by them . The patriarchal authority naturally took this shape . It grew up in the centre of those lesser sovereignties which ...
Page 12
... known something of freedom , as in her old Phoenician cities , and more of it in other forms than Europeans suspect . Brave men are always more or less free . The Sudra of Hin- dostan is no fair representative of the true Asiatic . You ...
... known something of freedom , as in her old Phoenician cities , and more of it in other forms than Europeans suspect . Brave men are always more or less free . The Sudra of Hin- dostan is no fair representative of the true Asiatic . You ...
Page 17
... known how to dispense in attempting to set up a moral government ! We now come to the next great principle in Mr. Buckle's argument - viz . , that all the progress possible to humanity must come from its progressive knowledge concerning ...
... known how to dispense in attempting to set up a moral government ! We now come to the next great principle in Mr. Buckle's argument - viz . , that all the progress possible to humanity must come from its progressive knowledge concerning ...
Page 19
... known that in the condition and adjustment of faculties in each mind , and in the experiences affecting it , there must be peculiarity , and that these endless peculiarities have to be remembered in all reasoning con- cerning the action ...
... known that in the condition and adjustment of faculties in each mind , and in the experiences affecting it , there must be peculiarity , and that these endless peculiarities have to be remembered in all reasoning con- cerning the action ...
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