The New Englander, 23 tomasA.H. Maltby, 1864 |
Knygos viduje
Rezultatai 6–10 iš 100
4 psl.
... tion , " of his gleeful participation in the sports and gambols of the children , of his anticipating " his approaching dissolution with due solemnity but perfect com- posure , " of his being " minutely and accurately informed , to a ...
... tion , " of his gleeful participation in the sports and gambols of the children , of his anticipating " his approaching dissolution with due solemnity but perfect com- posure , " of his being " minutely and accurately informed , to a ...
10 psl.
... tion of man to God , which relations are not matters of choice . On the contrary , the force of all the pacts which we enter into with any particular person or number of persons among mankind , depends upon those prior obligations . In ...
... tion of man to God , which relations are not matters of choice . On the contrary , the force of all the pacts which we enter into with any particular person or number of persons among mankind , depends upon those prior obligations . In ...
18 psl.
... tion was " rather too theoretical , yet necessary at that time , as denying the divine origin of monarchy , from which its abso- lute and indefeasible authority had been plausibly derived . " * He also remarks : " they proceeded not by ...
... tion was " rather too theoretical , yet necessary at that time , as denying the divine origin of monarchy , from which its abso- lute and indefeasible authority had been plausibly derived . " * He also remarks : " they proceeded not by ...
19 psl.
... tion this notion of common consent puts Prince and people under to observe the laws . " * This sounds like the Lockian Social Compact . The revolution , the same manager said , occurred in " a case that the law of England could never ...
... tion this notion of common consent puts Prince and people under to observe the laws . " * This sounds like the Lockian Social Compact . The revolution , the same manager said , occurred in " a case that the law of England could never ...
20 psl.
... tion ; leading , however , when taken for anything else than a fiction , to false and mischievous consequences . When we in- terpret it , with Burke , as a mode of saying that every rational will is presupposed to coincide with the ...
... tion ; leading , however , when taken for anything else than a fiction , to false and mischievous consequences . When we in- terpret it , with Burke , as a mode of saying that every rational will is presupposed to coincide with the ...
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