The Quarterly Review, 248–249. köide |
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Page 19
No doubt , states did not come into existence in the first instance as ideas , but were built upon accomplished facts of supremacy . The ruler or tyrant probably preceded any philosophy of the state , and yet the state in a proper sense ...
No doubt , states did not come into existence in the first instance as ideas , but were built upon accomplished facts of supremacy . The ruler or tyrant probably preceded any philosophy of the state , and yet the state in a proper sense ...
Page 21
Those are some of the questions modern men are called upon to answer , if they are to take right action in their social activities . If , as some believe , there be no necessity for the existence of a state at all ...
Those are some of the questions modern men are called upon to answer , if they are to take right action in their social activities . If , as some believe , there be no necessity for the existence of a state at all ...
Page 23
No doubt the state did not come into existence for this expressed purpose . Indeed , it may sometimes have come into existence because of an inner necessity for the organisation of justice and defence , for communal defence that is ...
No doubt the state did not come into existence for this expressed purpose . Indeed , it may sometimes have come into existence because of an inner necessity for the organisation of justice and defence , for communal defence that is ...
Page 39
The proscenium arch should be something more than a structural detail , for it is the frame of a separate life , the open doorway to another existence , to a world of enchantment . How carelessly , how wantonly , are this distinction ...
The proscenium arch should be something more than a structural detail , for it is the frame of a separate life , the open doorway to another existence , to a world of enchantment . How carelessly , how wantonly , are this distinction ...
Page 50
The author explains further that : As a bare condition of her national existence , England is forced to maintain always upon the seas sufficient power to keep open and safe for trade the sea - routes of the world , she must always also ...
The author explains further that : As a bare condition of her national existence , England is forced to maintain always upon the seas sufficient power to keep open and safe for trade the sea - routes of the world , she must always also ...
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