H. G. Wells and the World StateYale University Press, 1961 - 301 pages |
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Page 107
... followed its master , Comte , in subordinating individual welfare and referring human religious feeling to the service of the col- 102. Ironically , Wells always considered Hegel a humbug and Hegelianism a pastime for wool - gathering ...
... followed its master , Comte , in subordinating individual welfare and referring human religious feeling to the service of the col- 102. Ironically , Wells always considered Hegel a humbug and Hegelianism a pastime for wool - gathering ...
Page 143
... followed up by educa- tional programs on a scale vast enough and continuously intelligent enough to keep pace with their sheer physical expansion . Empires could not survive long because they could not assimilate their subject peoples ...
... followed up by educa- tional programs on a scale vast enough and continuously intelligent enough to keep pace with their sheer physical expansion . Empires could not survive long because they could not assimilate their subject peoples ...
Page 198
W. Warren Wagar. out along the usual lines followed by radical associations in England . Wells lost interest almost immediately ; and in pri- vate he denounced it in effect as a miscellany of dilettan- tes , 56 which may have been a fair ...
W. Warren Wagar. out along the usual lines followed by radical associations in England . Wells lost interest almost immediately ; and in pri- vate he denounced it in effect as a miscellany of dilettan- tes , 56 which may have been a fair ...
Contents
Acknowledgments vii | 1 |
The Prophetic Office | 12 |
Fundamental Assumptions | 60 |
Copyright | |
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Anticipations Belloc biology British century chapter common creative critics democracy early economic edition Edwardian elite especially Experiment in Autobiography Fabian Society faith Gods Happiness of Mankind historian Homo sapiens human idea individual insisted integrated intellectual Invisible King Julian Huxley knowledge Last Things later literary living London Macmillan Men Like Gods ment mental Modern Utopia moral movement nature never novels Open Conspiracy Open Conspirators organization Outline of History political popular progress propaganda prophet of world prophetic career published race racial mind readers religion Samurai scale schools scientific romances scientists sense Shape of Things social philosophy socialist spirit T. H. Huxley thinker thinking thought tion Tono-Bungay twentieth twentieth-century universe Victorian Wealth and Happiness Wellsian Western whole William Clissold World Brain world crisis world encyclopedia World of William world order world revolution World Set Free world society writing wrote York