The ultimate man will be one whose private requirements coincide with public ones. He will be that manner of man who, in spontaneously fulfilling his own nature, incidentally performs the functions of a social unit; and yet is only enabled so to fulfil... American Problems: Essays and Addresses - Sivu 115tekijä(t) James Hutchins Baker - 1907 - 222 sivuaKoko teos - Tietoja tästä kirjasta
| Herbert Spencer - 1851 - 492 sivua
...to some faculty in itself — which could not, in fact, expand at all, if otherwise circumstanced. The ultimate man will be one whose private requirements...fulfil his own nature, by all others doing the like. § 14. How truly, indeed, human progress is towards greater mutual dependence, as well as towards greater... | |
| Herbert Spencer - 1868 - 544 sivua
...to some faculty in itself — which could not, in fact, expand at all, if otherwise circumstanced. The ultimate man will be one whose private requirements...fulfil his own nature, by all others doing the like. § 14. How truly, indeed, human progress is toward greater mutual dependence, as well as toward greater... | |
| Herbert Spencer - 1873 - 556 sivua
...to some faculty in itself — which could not, in fact, expand at all, if otherwise circumstanced. The ultimate man will be one whose private requirements coincide with public ones. lie will be that manner of man, who, in spontaneously fulfilling his own nature, incidentally performs... | |
| Herbert Spencer - 1897 - 666 sivua
...just named, have not caused me to recede from the belief expressed nearly fifty years ago that — " The ultimate man will be one whose private requirements...fulfil his own nature by all others doing the like." THE END. REFERENCES. To find the authority for any statement in the text, the reader is to proceed... | |
| Herbert Spencer - 1877 - 548 sivua
...to some faculty in itself — which could not, in fact, expand at all, if otherwise circumstanced. The ultimate man will be one whose private requirements...social unit ; and yet is only enabled so to fulfil his o-nn nature, by all others doing the like. § 14. How truly, indeed, human progress is toward greater... | |
| Herbert Spencer - 1892 - 442 sivua
...answering to some faculty in itself—which could not, in fact, expand at all, if otherwise circumstanced. The ultimate man will be one whose private requirements...fulfil his own nature by all others doing the like. How truly, indeed, human progress is towards greater mutual dependence, as well as towards greater... | |
| Herbert Spencer - 1892 - 452 sivua
...to some faculty in itself — which could not, in fact, expand at all, if otherwise circumstanced. The ultimate man will be one whose private requirements...functions of a social unit ; and yet is only enabled so/to fulfil his own nature by all others doing the like. How truly, indeed, human progress is towards... | |
| Herbert Spencer - 1897 - 670 sivua
...ago that — " The ultimate man will be one whose private requirements coincide with public ones. lie will be that manner of man who, in spontaneously fulfilling...fulfil his own nature by all others doing the like." THE END. REFERENCES. To find the authority for nny statement in the text, the render is to proceed... | |
| 1897 - 564 sivua
...it belongs, with a quotation from one of his own earlier writings, published nearly fifty years ago: "The ultimate man will be one whose private requirements...functions of a social unit ; and yet is only enabled so to fulfill his own nature by all others doing the like." Columbia University, New York. FRANKLIN H. GlDDINGS.... | |
| William Jay Youmans - 1897 - 900 sivua
...his work, "... have not caused me to recede from the belief expressed nearly fifty years ago that ' the ultimate man will be one whose private requirements...incidentally performs the functions of a social unit.' " The volume now before us includes the discussion of Ecclesiastical, Professional, and Industrial... | |
| |