The Calcutta Review, Volume 4 |
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Page 12
Not the least remarkable thing in the action of Belgium in August 1914 was the swiftness - nay , the immediacy - of the resolve to resist at all costs . Kant has a far - reaching distinction between the “ hypothetical imperative ” of ...
Not the least remarkable thing in the action of Belgium in August 1914 was the swiftness - nay , the immediacy - of the resolve to resist at all costs . Kant has a far - reaching distinction between the “ hypothetical imperative ” of ...
Page 16
... that the people as a whole have the most implicit faith in British justice , that in the consciousness of it they are tolerant of mistakes - these are things which such writers find it convenient to ignore , because their object is ...
... that the people as a whole have the most implicit faith in British justice , that in the consciousness of it they are tolerant of mistakes - these are things which such writers find it convenient to ignore , because their object is ...
Page 20
Things have gone too far and the strictly orthodox party are in the position of Julian . The advantages of contact with the Western world are too apparent , the inconveni . ence of adhering strictly to antiquated regulations is too ...
Things have gone too far and the strictly orthodox party are in the position of Julian . The advantages of contact with the Western world are too apparent , the inconveni . ence of adhering strictly to antiquated regulations is too ...
Page 21
... the care of the public health and the provision against famine , lastly the creation of a purer and more unselfish public spirit , - all these things are among the blessings which England has conferred upon India .
... the care of the public health and the provision against famine , lastly the creation of a purer and more unselfish public spirit , - all these things are among the blessings which England has conferred upon India .
Page 24
As an argument for substituting German for English authority such questions are puerile , for if the two things are equal , there is no need for a change . But let that pass . Germany might perhaps have given to India her material ...
As an argument for substituting German for English authority such questions are puerile , for if the two things are equal , there is no need for a change . But let that pass . Germany might perhaps have given to India her material ...
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