In a state of society like this, the accumulation of wealth is the first great step that can be taken, because without wealth there can be no leisure, and without leisure there can be no knowledge. If what a people consume is always exactly equal to what... History of Civilization in England - Сторінка 38автори: Henry Thomas Buckle - 1858Повний перегляд - Докладніше про цю книгу
| Henry Thomas Buckle - 1884 - 734 стор.
...physical geography :' " Climate constitutes the aggregate of til the external physical circumstances appertaining to each locality in its relation to organic nature." Ferry's Climate of the United States and its Endemic Influences, New York, 1842, p. 127 progress of knowledge eventually... | |
| Henry Thomas Buckle - 1890 - 724 стор.
...that can be taken, because without wealth there can be no leisure, and without leisure there can be nc knowledge. If what a people consume is always exactly...be maintained.3 But if the produce is greater than the consumption, an overplus arises, which, according to well-known principles, increases itself, and... | |
| 1858 - 1062 стор.
...of society like this, the accumulation of wealth is the first great step that can be taken, because without wealth there can be no leisure, and without...always exactly equal to what they possess, there will he no residue, and therefore, no capital being accumulated, there will be no means by which the unemployed... | |
| John Clark Ridpath - 1898 - 544 стор.
...leisure there can be no knowledge. If what a people consume is always exactly equal to what they produce, there will be no residue, and, therefore, no capital...be no means by which the unemployed classes may be maintained. But if the produce is greater than the consumption, an overplus arises which, according... | |
| Henry Thomas Buckle - 1904 - 976 стор.
...of society like this, the accumulation of wealth is the first great step that can be taken, because without wealth there can be no leisure, and without...be maintained.3 But if the produce is greater than the consumption, an overplus arises, which, according to well known principles, increases itself,*... | |
| Thomas Nixon Carver - 1905 - 826 стор.
...of society like this the accumulation of wealth is the first great step that can be taken, because without wealth there can be no leisure, and without...accumulated, there will be no means by which the unemployed 1 As to the proper limits of physical geography, see Prichard on Ethnology, in Report of the British... | |
| 1927 - 748 стор.
...concentration, to the end that what would be oppressive in one case would be liberative in the other. "If what a people consume is always exactly equal...be no means by which the unemployed classes may be maintained." 9 All of this is true, as I have witnessed it, but it considers none except wage earners,... | |
| 1927 - 250 стор.
...concentration, to the end that what would be oppressive in one case would be liberative in the other. "If what a people consume is always exactly equal...be no means by which the unemployed classes may be maintained." ' All of this is true, as I have witnessed it, but it considers none except wage earners,... | |
| 1919 - 1232 стор.
...a society of any kind the accumulation of wealth is the first great step that can be taken, because without wealth there can be no leisure, and without...consume is always exactly equal to what they possess, then there can be no residue; and no capital being accumulated, there will be no means by which the... | |
| Booker T Washington, Louis R Harlan - 1977 - 790 стор.
...of society like this, the accumulation of wealth is the first great step that can be taken, because without wealth there can be no leisure, and without leisure there can be no knowledge." The Tuskegee Student commented: "No amount of misrepresentation, nor of sophistry, nor of rodomontade,... | |
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