Readings for Liberal Education, Volúmenes1-2Louis Glenn Locke, William Merriam Gibson, George Arms Rinehart, 1948 |
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Página 555
... fact that , in our survey of civilizations , we have found in no case a higher number of successive generations than three means that this species is very young in terms of its own time - scale . Moreover , its absolute age up to date ...
... fact that , in our survey of civilizations , we have found in no case a higher number of successive generations than three means that this species is very young in terms of its own time - scale . Moreover , its absolute age up to date ...
Página 562
... fact , however grotesque and fantastic they may appear to us , are for him an integral extension of the world of matter of fact and by no means devoid of consequence for the realities of life . For the primitive man , like the immature ...
... fact , however grotesque and fantastic they may appear to us , are for him an integral extension of the world of matter of fact and by no means devoid of consequence for the realities of life . For the primitive man , like the immature ...
Página 577
... fact knowledge is limited to the narrow circle of immediate experience , a world beyond the matter of fact - an outer world of nature , a historical world of Time - Passed — is imaginatively created in terms of magic and the epic story ...
... fact knowledge is limited to the narrow circle of immediate experience , a world beyond the matter of fact - an outer world of nature , a historical world of Time - Passed — is imaginatively created in terms of magic and the epic story ...
Contenido
LEARNING | 1 |
How Agassiz Taught Shaler Nathaniel Southgate Shaler | 12 |
Gate Receipts and Glory Robert M Hutchins | 28 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Readings for Liberal Education, Volúmenes1-2 Louis Glenn Locke,William Merriam Gibson,George Arms Vista de fragmentos - 1967 |
Readings for Liberal Education, Volúmenes1-2 Louis Glenn Locke,William Merriam Gibson,George Arms Vista de fragmentos - 1952 |
Términos y frases comunes
A. E. Housman American Anytus Aristotle atomic beauty become believe Bennington better called Center century chlorophyll civilization CLEOTA course Crossing culture DAMON death Deerslayer Dover Beach E. E. Cummings ELLEN emotional English experience fact Faustus feel frontier girl give hand human ideas individual interest James Thurber kind knowledge Left less living look man's Master Doctor matter mean Meletus ment MEPH Mephistophilis MICHAEL mind modern moral nature never PATRICIA person philosophy phlogiston theory play poetry problem Professor question reason religion scientific sense social society soul story sulfuric acid T. S. Eliot talk teachers tell thee things thou thought tion TOMMY true truth turn understand universe WALLY whole William Wordsworth words writing