Brownson's Quarterly Review, Volume 1Orestes Augustus Brownson Benjamin H. Greene, 1965 |
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Resultados 1-3 de 45
Página 36
... individuals participate , and which enables them to live at once a national and an individual life . It does not subsist without individuals , nor does it subsist in individuals as formed by them . They must obey at once the law of ...
... individuals participate , and which enables them to live at once a national and an individual life . It does not subsist without individuals , nor does it subsist in individuals as formed by them . They must obey at once the law of ...
Página 146
... individual and the government , and can maintain the state only by force ; that is , by constant violence to what you acknowledge to be individual rights . If you found it exclusively on the social idea , on the assumed authority of ...
... individual and the government , and can maintain the state only by force ; that is , by constant violence to what you acknowledge to be individual rights . If you found it exclusively on the social idea , on the assumed authority of ...
Página 301
... individual and the sensible , is real , -held it to be purely phenomenal , and accordingly defined the individual man to be " sensation sentiment cognition , " thus making the substantive existence that is sensibly affected , that feels ...
... individual and the sensible , is real , -held it to be purely phenomenal , and accordingly defined the individual man to be " sensation sentiment cognition , " thus making the substantive existence that is sensibly affected , that feels ...
Índice
NUMBER I | 1 |
VINCENZO OR SUNKEN ROCKS | 45 |
POPULAR CORRUPTION AND VENALITY | 70 |
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abolition Abolitionists Abraham Lincoln Administration adopted American anti-slavery army Articles of Confederation assert authority believe Catholic Christian Church citizens civil command Congress Constitution Convention copula democracy Democratic Democratic party deny divine doctrine doubt duty election emancipation equal existence fact faith favor Federal Fitz John Porter freedom Frémont friends Gioberti give Hence hold honor human idea independent intelligible intuition Italian Jesuits judgment La Civiltà Cattolica liberty Lincoln loyal martial law McClellan ment military mind moral nation nature negro never object organization ourselves party patriotic peace philosophy political population and territory President principles Proclamation prove question re-election reason Rebellion Rebels religion Republic Republican Republican party respect seceded secession sense sentiment simply slavery slaves society soul Southern sovereign sovereignty spirit superintelligible suppose theory thing tion truth understand Union United unity vote War Democrat