Their standard examples of poetry, eloquence, history, criticism, grammar, etymology, have been a universal bond of sympathy, however diverse might be the opinions which prevailed respecting any of these examples. All the civilized world has been one... On the Principles of English University Education - 35 ページWilliam Whewell 著 - 1837 - 186 ページ全文表示 - この書籍について
| Royal Geographical Society (Great Britain) - 1865 - 912 ページ
...the literature of * Parker, Strand, 1837. MAT 28, 1866.] OBITUARY.— WHEWELL— ADMIRAL SMYTH. 193 the ancient world, was conveyed to all by the organization of their institutions of education."* And this is said by the mathematician who by some was considered to be too exclusive a favourer of... | |
| 1853 - 526 ページ
...the preceding, by living upon a common intellectual estate. They have shared in a common development of thought because they have understood each other....their institutions of education. The authors of Greece aud Rome, familiar to the child, admired and dwelt on by the aged, were the common language, by the... | |
| Royal Geographical Society (Great Britain) - 1865 - 706 ページ
...lettered Europe have been one body, because the same nutriment, the literature of * Parker, Strand, 1837. the ancient world, was conveyed to all by the organization of their institutions of education." * And this is said by the mathematician who by some was considered to be too exclusive a favourer of... | |
| David Kay - 1873 - 244 ページ
...civilized world has been one intellectual nation — and it is this that has made it so great and so prosperous a nation — all the countries of lettered...organization of their institutions of education." — (WHEWET.L : University Education.) "The human race, looked at from its origin, appears, in the... | |
| Martha McMackin Garland, Martha M. Garland - 1980 - 216 ページ
...however diverse might be the opinions which prevailed respecting any of these examples. All the civilized world has been one intellectual nation; and it is...familiar to the child, admired and dwelt on by the the aged, were the common language, by the possession of which each man felt himself a denizen of the... | |
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