The equality of married persons before the law, is not only the sole mode in which that particular relation can be made consistent with justice to both sides, and conducive to the happiness of both, but it is the only means of rendering the daily life... The Popular Science Monthly - Page 5541873Full view - About this book
| John Stuart Mill - 1869 - 204 pages
...sides, and conducive to the happiness of both, but it is the only means of rendering the daily life of mankind, in any high sense, a school of moral cultivation....the less advanced states of society, people hardly recognise any relation with their equals. To be an equal is to be an enemy. Society, from its highest... | |
| William Ballantyne Hodgson - 1869 - 158 pages
...she ought to stand," it signifies little with what grimaces of gallantry "we offer her a chair." * " The moral education of mankind has hitherto emanated...almost solely to the relations which force creates. . . . The morality of the first ages rested on the obligation to submit to power ; that of the ages... | |
| James Fitzjames Stephen - 1873 - 360 pages
...:— The equality of married persons before the law ... is the only means of rendering the daily life of mankind in any high sense a school of moral cultivation. Though the EQUALITY 2O7 truth may not be felt or generally acknowledged for generations to come, the only school... | |
| Jane Hume Clapperton - 1885 - 510 pages
...time." * * Essay on "Liberty," chap. iii. CHAPTER XIV. LEGISLATIVE VERSUS VOLUNTARY METHODS OF REFORM. "Though the truth may not be felt or generally acknowledged...genuine moral sentiment is society between equals." — JS MILL. AT the close of the seventeenth or the beginning of the eighteenth century, a fencing-master... | |
| John Stuart Mill - 1895 - 404 pages
...sides, and conducive to the happiness of both, but it is the only means of rendering the daily life of mankind, in any high sense, a school of moral cultivation. Though thjL truth may not be felt or generally acknowledged for generations to come, the only school \Lqf... | |
| John Stuart Mill - 1897 - 416 pages
...sides, and conducive to the happiness of both, but it is the only means of rendering the daily life of mankind, in any high sense, a school of moral cultivation....the less advanced states of society, people hardly recognise any relation with their equals. To be an equal is to be an enemy. Society, from its highest... | |
| John Stuart Mill, Harriet Hardy Taylor Mill - 1970 - 256 pages
...sides, and conducive to the happiness of both, but it is the only means of rendering the daily life of mankind, in any high sense, a school of moral cultivation....the less advanced states of society, people hardly recognise any relation with their equals. To be an equal is to be an enemy. Society; from its highest... | |
| Susan G. Bell, Karen M. Offen - 1983 - 588 pages
...sides, and conducive to the happiness of both, but it is the only means of rendering the daily life of mankind, in any high sense, a school of moral cultivation....the less advanced states of society, people hardly recognise any relation with their equals. To be an equal is to be an enemy. Society, from its highest... | |
| Alan W. Bellringer, C. B. Jones - 1988 - 264 pages
...sides, and conducive to the happiness of both, but it is the only means of rendering the daily life of mankind, in any high sense, a school of moral cultivation....the less advanced states of society, people hardly recognise any relation with their equals. To be an equal is to be an enemy. Society, from its highest... | |
| John Stuart Mill - 1989 - 336 pages
...sides, and conducive to the happiness of both, but it is the only means of rendering the daily life of mankind, in any high sense, a school of moral cultivation....the less advanced states of society, people hardly recognise any relation with their equals. To be an equal is to be an enemy. Society, from its highest... | |
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