Proceedings, American Philosophical Society (vol. 107, no. 5, 1963)American Philosophical Society |
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第 1 到 5 筆結果,共 27 筆
第 369 頁
... hand ; the problems of energy requirements , nutri- tion , and metabolism became predominant during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries . This movement has progressed so far that the very fabric of the body can now be described in ...
... hand ; the problems of energy requirements , nutri- tion , and metabolism became predominant during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries . This movement has progressed so far that the very fabric of the body can now be described in ...
第 371 頁
... hand axe by the smoother Acheulian tool during Paleolithic times ; the horse remained the fastest means of transportation until the middle of the nineteenth century ; the speed of railroads has hardly increased in the past hundred years ...
... hand axe by the smoother Acheulian tool during Paleolithic times ; the horse remained the fastest means of transportation until the middle of the nineteenth century ; the speed of railroads has hardly increased in the past hundred years ...
第 372 頁
... hand that man is endowed with a wide range of adaptive po- tentialities . This fact suggests the need for re- search focused on the utilization of these poten- tialities . c ) Man can indeed become adapted to almost anything , even to ...
... hand that man is endowed with a wide range of adaptive po- tentialities . This fact suggests the need for re- search focused on the utilization of these poten- tialities . c ) Man can indeed become adapted to almost anything , even to ...
第 373 頁
... hand , it illustrates how a given natural phenomenon can come into being only when several unrelated variables are properly manipulated . properly manipulated . On the other hand , it brings to light that certain attributes of the alga ...
... hand , it illustrates how a given natural phenomenon can come into being only when several unrelated variables are properly manipulated . properly manipulated . On the other hand , it brings to light that certain attributes of the alga ...
第 378 頁
... hand , no written law has as yet been found , apparently because the pharoah , as a living god on earth , needed no law other than his own spoken utterance : " He , as a god , was the state . . . . The customary law of the land was ...
... hand , no written law has as yet been found , apparently because the pharoah , as a living god on earth , needed no law other than his own spoken utterance : " He , as a god , was the state . . . . The customary law of the land was ...
常見字詞
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熱門章節
第 376 頁 - Hammurabi, the exalted prince, the worshiper of the gods, to cause justice to prevail in the land, to destroy the wicked and the evil, • to prevent the strong from oppressing the weak, to go forth like the Sun over the Black Head Race, to enlighten the land and to further the welfare of the people.
第 376 頁 - John A. Wilson, The Burden of Egypt (Chicago, University of Chicago Press, 1951), pp.
第 381 頁 - Finally, and this is an important point, the early li were the product of a society in which hierarchical difference was emphasized. That is to say, the li prescribed sharply differing patterns of behavior according to a person's age and rank both within his family and in society at large (one pattern when acting toward a superior, another toward an inferior, still a third toward an equal). This idea of hierarchical difference, with resulting differences in behavior and privilege, has remained alive...
第 384 頁 - Thus when ministers have made great claims while their actual accomplishment is small, they are punished. This is not punishment because of the smallness of the accomplishment, but because the accomplishment is not equal to the name of it. And when ministers have made small claims while the actual accomplishment is great, they are also punished. This is not because no pleasure is taken in the larger accomplishment, but because it is not in accord with the name given to...
第 380 頁 - Most of them were less theoretical thinkers than tough-minded men of affairs who, as administrators, diplomats, and political economists, sought employment from whatever state would use their services. Their aim was direct and simple: to create a political and military apparatus powerful enough to suppress feudal privilege at home, expand the state's territories abroad, and eventually weld all the rival kingdoms into a single empire. Toward this goal they were ready to use every political, military,...
第 413 頁 - General Program of the Committee on Documentary Reproduction, American Historical Association," College and Research Libraries, July, 1953: 303-307.
第 379 頁 - Tightness has its origin in what is fitting for the many. What is fitting for the many is what accords with the minds of men. Herein is the essence of good government. . . . Law is not something sent down by Heaven, nor is it something engendered by Earth. It springs from the midst of men themselves, and by being brought back [to men] it corrects itself.27 The sages, being enlightened and wise by nature, inevitably penetrated the mind of Heaven and Earth.
第 376 頁 - China, as we shall see in the next section, no one at any time has ever hinted that any kind of written law — even the best written law — could have had a divine origin.
第 376 頁 - Law is not a product of human thought, nor is it any enactment of peoples, but something eternal which rules the whole universe by its wisdom in command and prohibition. Thus they have been accustomed to say that Law is the primal and ultimate mind of God, whose reason directs all things either by compulsion or restraint.
第 381 頁 - Confucian ideal gentleman (the chün-tcu or "Superior Man") from ordinary men was his mastery of the li. On the other hand, the Confucians believed that underlying the minutiae of the specific rules of li are to be found certain broad moral principles which are what give the li their validity.