| John Stuart Mill - 1909 - 1076 стор.
...prefer that occupation, adopt it ; but that there should be no option, no other carrikre possible fpr the great majority of women, except in the humbler departments of life, is a flagrant social injustice.1 The ideas and institutions by '[The original (1848) text ran: "that there should be no... | |
| Ashmore Kyle Paterson Wingate - 1910 - 238 стор.
...yet died a pauper, or next door to it. it, but, that there should be no option, no other carri'ere possible, for the great majority of women, except in the humbler departments of life, is one of those social injustices that call loudest for remedy. "The poor girl of Nazareth had less option... | |
| John Stuart Mill - 1899 - 532 стор.
...Let women who prefer that occupation, adopt it; but that there should be no option, no other career possible for the great majority of women, except in...dissimilarity of social functions, must ere long be recognized as the greatest hindrance to moral, social, and even intellectual improvement. On the present... | |
| John Stuart Mill, Harriet Hardy Taylor Mill - 1970 - 256 стор.
...the working classes in his Political Economy, Mill stated this connection in the following manner: The ideas and institutions by which the accident of...dissimilarity of social functions, must ere long be recognized as the greatest hindrance to moral, social and even intellectual improvement. On the present... | |
| Herbert Spiegelberg - 1986 - 362 стор.
...option (for women), no other career possible for the great majority of women (than as wife and mother) except in the humbler departments of life is a flagrant social injustice. 67. On Liberty, Ch. II (Everyman edition, 80). But what does he mean here by 'social injustice'? It... | |
| Alice S. Rossi - 1988 - 748 стор.
...to Harriet on the future condition of the working classes in his Political Economy, Mill observed : The ideas and institutions by which the accident of...dissimilarity of social functions, must ere long be recognized as the greatest hindrance to moral, social and even intellectual improvement. On the present... | |
| Maurice Cowling - 1990 - 220 стор.
...'flagrant social injustice',2 their status evidence of a 'mouldering fabric of monopoly and tyranny'.3 'The ideas and institutions by which the accident...forced dissimilarity of social functions must ere 1 Principles, p. 763. • Op. tit., p. 759. * Rtprisentative Government, p. 224. 48 long be recognised... | |
| Susan Moller Okin - 1979 - 428 стор.
...emphasis is most succinctly summarized in a passage in the Principles of Political Economy, where he says: "The ideas and institutions by which the accident...dissimilarity of social functions, must ere long be recognized as the greatest hindrance to moral, social, and e'ven intellectual improvement."*2 There... | |
| Max L. Stackhouse, Dennis P. McCann, Preston N. Williams, Shirley J. Roels - 1995 - 1002 стор.
...Let women who prefer that occupation, adopt it; but that there should be no option, no other curricrc possible for the great majority of women, except in...dissimilarity of social functions, must ere long be recognized as the greatest hindrance to moral, social, and even intellectual improvement. On the present... | |
| John Stuart Mill - 1998 - 516 стор.
...option, no other carrière* possible for the great majority of women, except in the humbler departmerits of life, is a flagrant social injustice. The ideas...dissimilarity of social functions, must ere long be recognized as the greatest hindrance to moral, social, and even intellectual improvement. On the present... | |
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