The Study of Politics: The Western Tradition and American OriginsMcGraw-Hill, 1963 - 120 páginas |
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Página 3
... student is , for all intents and purposes , in a period of suspended animation . Father's dinner - table dicta on the latest mischiefs perpetrated by the men who govern us must now face competition from other sources . The Sunday visits ...
... student is , for all intents and purposes , in a period of suspended animation . Father's dinner - table dicta on the latest mischiefs perpetrated by the men who govern us must now face competition from other sources . The Sunday visits ...
Página 8
... student himself to become conscious of his own opinions and preferences . Then he can constantly ask himself if he is seeing what he wants to see , or whether he is seeing what is really there . Most people do not have such an insight ...
... student himself to become conscious of his own opinions and preferences . Then he can constantly ask himself if he is seeing what he wants to see , or whether he is seeing what is really there . Most people do not have such an insight ...
Página 15
... student must seek an awareness of his personal values and must sense when they are prejudicing his analysis . He must also be willing to compare his findings and conclusions with those of others , for only out of such a community of ...
... student must seek an awareness of his personal values and must sense when they are prejudicing his analysis . He must also be willing to compare his findings and conclusions with those of others , for only out of such a community of ...
Contenido
THE STUDY OF POLITICS | 1 |
THE WESTERN TRADITION | 17 |
ENDS AND MEANS | 31 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Otras ediciones - Ver todas
The Study of Politics: The Western Tradition and American Origins Andrew Hacker Vista de fragmentos - 1963 |
The Study of Politics: The Western Tradition and American Origins Andrew Hacker Vista de fragmentos - 1973 |
Términos y frases comunes
Alexander Hamilton American analysis ANDREW HACKER citizens conflict Congress create democracy develop economic Edmund Burke elected electors emerge equal executive exercise express fact faction Federalist authors freedom governmental groups Hamilton and Madison House of Representatives human nature ideas ideology important individuals industrialization institutions interests issues Jean-Jacques Rousseau Jefferson Jeremy Bentham John Locke justice Karl Marx laws leaders legislative legislatures less liberty majority rule means ment mind minority Moreover national government national power natural rights oligarchic opinions organic original sin party passions person philosophical policies political philosophy political theory possess President principles problems promote proposed constitution protect reason republic REVIEW QUESTIONS role Senate separation of powers social society students of politics STUDY OF POLITICS superior Supreme Court talents theorist theory of human Thomas Hobbes vote voters welfare Whitcomb and Brody women wrote