Property, Its Duties and Rights, Historically, Philosophically and Religiously Regarded: Essays by Various WritersMacmillan and Company, 1915 - 229 lappuses |
No grāmatas satura
1.–5. rezultāts no 54.
xvii. lappuse
... interests - the interest of any of their number - and spare nothing , in short , to promote it . " Thus the Christian church became a corporation for mutual support , refusing the idler who would not work , but for the rest accepting ...
... interests - the interest of any of their number - and spare nothing , in short , to promote it . " Thus the Christian church became a corporation for mutual support , refusing the idler who would not work , but for the rest accepting ...
xxi. lappuse
... interests to one which you may check ? The most formidable form of this plea is that which represents to us that in ... interest but only on the motive of unrestricted selfishness . There are many experiences in modern industrial life ...
... interests to one which you may check ? The most formidable form of this plea is that which represents to us that in ... interest but only on the motive of unrestricted selfishness . There are many experiences in modern industrial life ...
2. lappuse
... . Need of discrimination between property for “ use and for " power , " and of the extension of certain forms of State ownership in the interest of personal rights . 99 I THE HISTORICAL EVOLUTION OF PROPERTY , IN FACT AND.
... . Need of discrimination between property for “ use and for " power , " and of the extension of certain forms of State ownership in the interest of personal rights . 99 I THE HISTORICAL EVOLUTION OF PROPERTY , IN FACT AND.
7. lappuse
... interest out of account would then be to divorce the conception of property from the main conditions of practical control . It will be seen then that property is a principle which admits of variation in several distinct directions . It ...
... interest out of account would then be to divorce the conception of property from the main conditions of practical control . It will be seen then that property is a principle which admits of variation in several distinct directions . It ...
8. lappuse
... interest which a class of objects excites - either through their use for food or , in the exceptional case of the jackdaw , through their inherent attractiveness as nice , bright , peckable things , easily portable in one's bill - is ...
... interest which a class of objects excites - either through their use for food or , in the exceptional case of the jackdaw , through their inherent attractiveness as nice , bright , peckable things , easily portable in one's bill - is ...
Citi izdevumi - Skatīt visu
Bieži izmantoti vārdi un frāzes
absolute Ambrosiaster Aristotle authority basis Baxter belongs Canon law century character charity Christian Church claim common conception conscience conventional dependent Divine doctrine duty economic English enjoyment essay ethical existence Fathers freedom give God's Government Gratian hand Hegel held hold Hugh Latimer human idea of property ideal individual individualistic industry insist interest justice Karl Marx labour Lactantius land law of nature liberty limited live man's means of production mediaeval modern moral natural law natural right necessity organization owner ownership Parliament patristic personality philosophical Plato political poor possession possible practical primitive principle of private private property Puritan purposes question recognized Reformation regarded regulation relation religion religious rich right of property Roman law secure sense social society spirit stewardship teaching tendency theory of property things Thomas Aquinas thought tion tribe true trust usury Utilitarian wealth whole