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  • Physics and Politics

    Walter Bagehot『Physics and Politics』の読書記録です

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原書講読 WALTER BAGEHOT『PHYSICS AND POLITICS』6(2)

Thus we see the use of a sort of 'preliminary' age in societies, when trade is bad because it prevents the separation of nations, because it infuses distracting ideas among occupied communities, because it 'brings alien minds to alien shore

    • 原書講読 WALTER BAGEHOT『PHYSICS AND POLITICS』6(1)

      NO. VI. VERIFIABLE PROGRESS POLITICALLY CONSIDERED. 客観的に証明可能な進歩の政治的省察 The original publication of these essays was interrupted by serious illness and by long consequent ill—health, I and now that I am putting them together I wish to add

      • 原書講読 WALTER BAGEHOT『PHYSICS AND POLITICS』5-2(2)

        This is one of the unrecognised benefits of free government, one of the modes in which it counteracts the excessive inherited impulses of humanity. There is another also for which it does the same, but which I can only touch delicately, and

        • 原書講読 WALTER BAGEHOT『PHYSICS AND POLITICS』5-2(1)

          II. In this manner politics or discussion broke up the old bonds of custom which were now strangling mankind, though they had once aided and helped it. But this is only one of the many gifts which those polities have conferred, are conferri

        原書講読 WALTER BAGEHOT『PHYSICS AND POLITICS』6(2)

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        記事

          原書講読 WALTER BAGEHOT『PHYSICS AND POLITICS』5-1(2)

          If there had been no discussion of principle in Greece, probably she would still have produced works of art. Homer contains no such discussion. The speeches in the 'Iliad,' which Mr. Gladstone, the most competent of living judges, maintains

          原書講読 WALTER BAGEHOT『PHYSICS AND POLITICS』5-1(2)

          原書講読 WALTER BAGEHOT『PHYSICS AND POLITICS』5-1(1)

          NO. V. THE AGE OF DISCUSSION. 議論の時代 The greatest living contrast is between the old Eastern and customary civilisations and the new Western and changeable civilisations. A year or two ago an inquiry was made of our most intelligent offic

          原書講読 WALTER BAGEHOT『PHYSICS AND POLITICS』5-1(1)

          原書講読 WALTER BAGEHOT『PHYSICS AND POLITICS』4(4)

          It is in the interior of these customary groups that national characters are formed. As I wrote a whole essay on the manner of this before, I cannot speak of it now. By proscribing nonconformist members for generations, and cherishing and r

          原書講読 WALTER BAGEHOT『PHYSICS AND POLITICS』4(4)

          原書講読 WALTER BAGEHOT『PHYSICS AND POLITICS』4(3)

          Two preliminary processes indeed there are which seem inscrutable. There was some strange preliminary process by which the main races of men were formed; they began to exist very early, and except by intermixture no new ones have been forme

          原書講読 WALTER BAGEHOT『PHYSICS AND POLITICS』4(3)

          原書講読 WALTER BAGEHOT『PHYSICS AND POLITICS』4(2)

          It will be said that this argument proves too much. For it proves that not only the somewhat-before-history men, but the absolutely first men, could not have had close family instincts, and yet if they were like most though not all of the a

          原書講読 WALTER BAGEHOT『PHYSICS AND POLITICS』4(2)

          原書講読 WALTER BAGEHOT『PHYSICS AND POLITICS』4(1)

          Ⅳ 第四部 NO. IV. NATION-MAKING. 国民の形成 All theories as to the primitive man must be very uncertain. Granting the doctrine of evolution to be true, man must be held to have a common ancestor with the rest of the . But then we do not know wh

          原書講読 WALTER BAGEHOT『PHYSICS AND POLITICS』4(1)

          原書講読 WALTER BAGEHOT『PHYSICS AND POLITICS』3(3)

          This extreme propensity to imitation is one great reason of the amazing sameness which every observer notices in savage nations. When you have seen one Euegian, you have seen all Fuegians—one Tasmanian, all Tasmanians. The higher savages, a

          原書講読 WALTER BAGEHOT『PHYSICS AND POLITICS』3(3)

          原書講読 WALTER BAGEHOT『PHYSICS AND POLITICS』3(2)

          After such great matters as religion and politics, it may seem trifling to illustrate the subject from little boys. But it is not trifling. The bane of philosophy is pomposity: people will not see that small things are the miniatures of gre

          原書講読 WALTER BAGEHOT『PHYSICS AND POLITICS』3(2)

          原書講読 WALTER BAGEHOT『PHYSICS AND POLITICS』3(1)

          Ⅲ 第三章 NO. III NATION-MAKING. 国民の形成 In the last essay I endeavoured to show that in the early age of man—the 'fighting age' I called it—there was a considerable, though not certain, tendency towards progress. The best nations conquered

          原書講読 WALTER BAGEHOT『PHYSICS AND POLITICS』3(1)

          原書講読 WALTER BAGEHOT『PHYSICS AND POLITICS』2-3

          III. This advantage is One of the greatest in early civilisation—one of the facts which give a decisive turn to the battle of nations; but there are many others. A little perfection in POLITICAL INSTITUTIONS may do it. Travellers have noti

          原書講読 WALTER BAGEHOT『PHYSICS AND POLITICS』2-3

          原書講読 WALTER BAGEHOT『PHYSICS AND POLITICS』2-2

          II. By far the greatest advantage is that on which I observed before—that to which I drew all the attention I was able by making the first of these essays an essay on the Preliminary Age. The first thing to acquire is if I may so express i

          原書講読 WALTER BAGEHOT『PHYSICS AND POLITICS』2-2

          原書講読 WALTER BAGEHOT『PHYSICS AND POLITICS』2-1

          Ⅱ 第二章 THE USE OF CONFLICT. 闘争の利点 'The difference between progression and stationary inaction,' says one of our greatest living writers, 'is one of the great secrets which science has yet to penetrate.' I am sure I do not pretend that I

          原書講読 WALTER BAGEHOT『PHYSICS AND POLITICS』2-1