... the slightest infringement of which is punished by severe fines, which are the chief source of their income. But the object of these rules is to give the weak and unfortunate the same chance in life as others more favoured by nature. These rules naturally... The Industrial Arts of India - Página 140por George Christopher Molesworth Birdwood - 1880 - 176 páginasVista completa - Acerca de este libro
| William Samuel Lilly - 1902 - 354 páginas
...of these rules is to give the weak and unfortunate the same chance in life as others more favoured by nature. These rules naturally follow from the theocratic...humanity and of real religious convictions among men." I will end my citations from Sir George Birdwood's most interesting volume with a warning which has... | |
| Ananda Kentish Coomaraswamy - 1909 - 166 páginas
...of these rules is to give the weak and unfortunate the same chance in life as others more favoured by nature. These rules naturally follow from the theocratic...unrestricted development of the competitive impulse in modern life, particularly in the pursuit of personal gain, is absolutely antagonistic to the growth... | |
| Ananda Kentish Coomaraswamy - 1909 - 160 páginas
...chance in life as others more favoured by nature. These rules naturally follow GUILDS IN AHMADABAD. from the theocratic conceptions which have governed...unrestricted development of the competitive impulse in modern life, particularly in the pursuit of personal gain, is absolutely antagonistic to the growth... | |
| Roger D. Long - 2004 - 426 páginas
...United States of America'. Machinery should be the servant not the master of men, Birdwood voiced: it is incontrovertible that the unrestricted development...humanity, and of real religious convictions among men. o-) Weeks, on the contrary, found: the wood-carvers particularly have lost none of their traditional... | |
| |