| Richard Whately - Economics - 1831 - 282 pages
...improvement must date its commencement. That this is not (as several writers on Political -Economy have appeared to suppose) what is properly called...satisfactorily established. And I shall afterwards direct your attention to some of the principal steps by which nations have advanced, and may be expected... | |
| Richard Whately - Civilization - 1855 - 396 pages
...writers on Political-Economy have appeared to suppose) what is properly called the savage state—that we have no reason to believe that any community ever...utter barbarism, into any thing that can be called civilization—is a point which I think can be very satisfactorily established. And I shall afterwards... | |
| British Association for the Advancement of Science - Science - 1868 - 904 pages
...seem to me to render it untenable. Dr. Whately enunciates his opinions in the following words : — " That we have no reason to believe that any community...external helps, from a state of utter barbarism, into anything that can be called civilization ..... Man has not emerged from the savage state ; the progress... | |
| Anthropological Society of London - Anthropology - 1868 - 688 pages
...seem to me to render it untenable. Dr. Whately enunciates his opinions in the following words : — " That we have no reason to believe that any community...external helps, from a state of utter barbarism, into anything that can be called civilisation. Man has not emerged from the savage state ; the progress... | |
| Theology - 1868 - 904 pages
...prince of logicians. The result, as might be expected, is a deplorable failure. The Archbishop held "That we have no reason to believe that any community...ever did or ever can emerge, unassisted by external help, from a state of utter barbarism into anything that can be called civilisation." This sentiment,... | |
| British Association for the Advancement of Science - Science - 1868 - 896 pages
...his opinions in the following words : — " That we have no reason to believe that any community over did, or ever can emerge, unassisted by external helps, from a state of utter barbarism, into anything that can be called civilization Man has not emerged from the savage state; the progress of... | |
| Edmund Burke - History - 1868 - 684 pages
...singled out more especially the opinions of the late Dr. Whately, which were thus enunciated, — ' We have no reason to believe that any community ever did, or even can, emerge, unassisted by external helps, from a state of utter barbarism, into any thing that... | |
| Edmund Burke - Books - 1868 - 662 pages
...singled out more especially the opinions of the late Dr. Whately, which were thus enunciated, — ' We have no reason to believe that any community ever did, or even can, emerge, unassisted by external helps, from a state of utter barbarism, into any thing that... | |
| Andreas Gottlob Rudelbach - 1869 - 828 pages
...Erziehung unsres Geschlechts allzu beschränkt denkt. 1) Mit Rechl sagt Erzbischof Whalely von Dublin: „We have no reason to believe that any Community ever did or ever can emerge, unas$isted by ezternal helps, from a statt' of utter barbarism, into angthing that can be called civilisalion."... | |
| 1870 - 914 pages
...h»vc independently raised themselves." late Archbishop Whatcly that " we have no reason to suppose that any community ever did or ever can emerge, unassisted...from a state of utter barbarism into any thing that con be called civilization ; " and that of the Duke of Argyll, who holds that the primitive condition... | |
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