The American Biblical Repository1842 |
From inside the book
Results 6-10 of 92
Page 26
... common means of support as at Sparta , the amount of education acquired , depended , of course , to some extent on the rank and ability of the family . But every citizen was expected to exhibit a certain degree of culture , and every ...
... common means of support as at Sparta , the amount of education acquired , depended , of course , to some extent on the rank and ability of the family . But every citizen was expected to exhibit a certain degree of culture , and every ...
Page 33
... common belief of the Greeks . On the other hand , between deformity and vice there is , it seemed to them , a natural connection . The bad qualities of Ther- sites , Homer clothes with a misshapen and ugly body . The fascinations of ...
... common belief of the Greeks . On the other hand , between deformity and vice there is , it seemed to them , a natural connection . The bad qualities of Ther- sites , Homer clothes with a misshapen and ugly body . The fascinations of ...
Page 35
... common mass . The four most distinguished philosophical schools , the Academic , the Peripatetic , the Stoic , and the Epicurean , each main- tained a Professor's chair at Athens , and under the Roman Emperors these schools became state ...
... common mass . The four most distinguished philosophical schools , the Academic , the Peripatetic , the Stoic , and the Epicurean , each main- tained a Professor's chair at Athens , and under the Roman Emperors these schools became state ...
Page 39
... common people in the good times of the republic , had none at all . They had no instruction in reading and writing , and no systematic physical training similar to the Greek gymnas- tics . Education among the Romans was a domestic ...
... common people in the good times of the republic , had none at all . They had no instruction in reading and writing , and no systematic physical training similar to the Greek gymnas- tics . Education among the Romans was a domestic ...
Page 40
... common schools for the people , such as the Athenians maintained from a very early period , was there unknown . Plutarch finds fault with Numa because he instituted no system of education , and thinks he showed himself in this much ...
... common schools for the people , such as the Athenians maintained from a very early period , was there unknown . Plutarch finds fault with Numa because he instituted no system of education , and thinks he showed himself in this much ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
ancient Apostle Athens Azazel beautiful believe Bible blood called character Christ Christian church covenant dead deaf and dumb deaf mute death Demosthenes divine doctrine employed express fact faith father feeling feet give goat gospel Greece Greek Haram heart heaven Hebrew Hegel Herodotus holy human idea incest influence instruction intellectual interpretation Jesus labor language learned letters Levitical logic Lord Lycurgus manual alphabet marriage means ment mind ministers mode moral nature Neoplatonism never object Old Testament opinion pantheism passage peculiar philosophy Plato polygamy pray prayer preacher preaching present principle reason regard religion religious remarks rendered respect Roman sacrifice Scriptures sense Septuagint sermons signs society soul spirit supposed testament testator theology thing thou thought tion Transcendentalists true truth volume whole word worship writing written