The Boston Quarterly Review, Volumen5Benjamin H. Greene, 1842 |
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Página 1
... believe must form the basis of the future Church , that we have made . It has been now some five or six years before the public , without having attracted much attention , although it has not failed to secure some warm friends . And yet ...
... believe must form the basis of the future Church , that we have made . It has been now some five or six years before the public , without having attracted much attention , although it has not failed to secure some warm friends . And yet ...
Página 32
... believe that making suffrage absolutely uni- versal would vary at all their results . The second would be to increase the power of the government , and to enlarge the sphere of its activity . But the evil com- plained of does not arise ...
... believe that making suffrage absolutely uni- versal would vary at all their results . The second would be to increase the power of the government , and to enlarge the sphere of its activity . But the evil com- plained of does not arise ...
Página 33
... believe will be most satisfactory to their constituents . How then can it be pretended , that the will of the people is not freely and fully expressed ? or that if there could be a freer and fuller expression , it would vary the re ...
... believe will be most satisfactory to their constituents . How then can it be pretended , that the will of the people is not freely and fully expressed ? or that if there could be a freer and fuller expression , it would vary the re ...
Página 36
... believe has the greatest likelihood of succeeding . Of the remainder , not one in ten has any clear conception of the questions at issue , or any toler- able judgment of what will be the practical operation of one policy or another ...
... believe has the greatest likelihood of succeeding . Of the remainder , not one in ten has any clear conception of the questions at issue , or any toler- able judgment of what will be the practical operation of one policy or another ...
Página 42
... believe that a majority of the people would sustain it . Written constitutions are indispensable in this coun- try ; but mere written constitutions impose only a slight restriction on the power of the ruling majority . If there be not a ...
... believe that a majority of the people would sustain it . Written constitutions are indispensable in this coun- try ; but mere written constitutions impose only a slight restriction on the power of the ruling majority . If there be not a ...
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able absolute religion aspire assert beautiful become believe Benjamin Constant Bible body called carbonic acid cause character Charles Elwood Christ Christianity Church classes communion conception constitution contends Cousin Descartes divine doctrine earth Edward Lytton effect element evil existence fact faculties faith feel finite French Revolution George Sand heart heaven human Ideal ideas important individual infinite inspiration intelligence interests Jesus Jesus of Nazareth knowledge labor Leibnitz Leroux liberty live man's nature manifest mankind means ment merely mind moral never NOT-ME object organization ourselves pantheism Parker party perceive perception perfect phenomena philosophy Plato principle progress question race reason recognise religious sentiment Saint Paul Saint-Simon Saint-Simonian sense of dependence social society soul speak spirit supernatural theology things thou thought tion true truth Unitarian universal veto virtue whole word Zanoni