Selected Criticism, 1916-1957 |
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Page 193
... moral order , no trace of the finger of God . What Sidgwick can find sometimes , Newman finds never . The difference between them emerges with greater clarity : just as , in regard to the inner world , Newman's sense of the reality of ...
... moral order , no trace of the finger of God . What Sidgwick can find sometimes , Newman finds never . The difference between them emerges with greater clarity : just as , in regard to the inner world , Newman's sense of the reality of ...
Page 229
... moral progress of Humanity ? The first consequence was that Rousseau straightway became an exile from Civilization ... moral civilization . The next step was inevitable . If , as was obvious to him , external Progress was completely ...
... moral progress of Humanity ? The first consequence was that Rousseau straightway became an exile from Civilization ... moral civilization . The next step was inevitable . If , as was obvious to him , external Progress was completely ...
Page 241
... moral or political . Thus it is that , in the most important sense , Rousseau has been irrelevant to the social and political history of the epoch that followed him . The main determinants of that history have been precisely those which ...
... moral or political . Thus it is that , in the most important sense , Rousseau has been irrelevant to the social and political history of the epoch that followed him . The main determinants of that history have been precisely those which ...
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