How Conservatives ThinkPhilip Wallenstein Buck Penguin, 1975 - 185 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 35
Página 49
... never wholly new , in what we retain we are never wholly obsolete . By adhering in this manner and on those principles to our forefathers , we are guided , not by the super- stition of antiquarians , but by the spirit of philosophic ...
... never wholly new , in what we retain we are never wholly obsolete . By adhering in this manner and on those principles to our forefathers , we are guided , not by the super- stition of antiquarians , but by the spirit of philosophic ...
Página 127
... never withdraw from it , you can never reverse it without having undergone a national disaster impossible to calculate , impossible accurately to foresee , but which would exceed in magnitude , and in unhappy consequences , any calamity ...
... never withdraw from it , you can never reverse it without having undergone a national disaster impossible to calculate , impossible accurately to foresee , but which would exceed in magnitude , and in unhappy consequences , any calamity ...
Página 166
... never hurry and they never pause ' . Believing a they do in the virtues of accumulated experience , Conservative reject revolutionary change which seeks to overthrow our herit age from the past in favour of some modern nostrum Against ...
... never hurry and they never pause ' . Believing a they do in the virtues of accumulated experience , Conservative reject revolutionary change which seeks to overthrow our herit age from the past in favour of some modern nostrum Against ...
Contenido
Introduction | 9 |
LORD HUGH CECIL 130 | 26 |
MARQUIS OF HALIFAX | 29 |
Otras 13 secciones no mostradas
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Términos y frases comunes
activity affairs aristocracy believe body born British Burke century Churchill civil society classes Commonwealth condition Conservatism Conservative party constitution Crown democracy democratic direct Downing Street duty economic Educated election England English equality essay existence fact freedom give Halifax hath Hilaire Belloc honour House of Commons human ideas important individual industry institutions interest justice Labour leaders legislation liberty living London Lord Hugh Lord Hugh Cecil Lord Randolph Lord Randolph Churchill mankind means ment ministry modern monarchy moral multitude nation nature never opinion organic organisation Parliament parliamentary passion Penguin persons political popular government principles progress published question reason Reform Bill Reformed Parliament representative Revolution rule Secretary social Socialist spontaneous order suffrage suppose taxation theory things tion Tory Democracy Tory party tradition Trimmer true vote Whigs whole wisdom wise
Referencias a este libro
Principles of Social Welfare: An Introduction to Thinking about the Welfare ... Paul Spicker Sin vista previa disponible - 1988 |
The British Business Elite: Its Attitudes to Class, Status, and Power John E. Fidler Sin vista previa disponible - 1981 |