Messages of Freedom, from the Magna Carta to the Lahore PledgeAsia Publishing House, 1963 - 115 sider |
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Side 60
... feels most inclination . Nor is it enough that he should hear the arguments of adversaries from his own teachers ... feel the whole force of the difficulty which the true view of the subject has to encounter and dispose of ; else he ...
... feels most inclination . Nor is it enough that he should hear the arguments of adversaries from his own teachers ... feel the whole force of the difficulty which the true view of the subject has to encounter and dispose of ; else he ...
Side 76
... feel that my will has access to avenues through which it can impress itself upon the holders of power . If I have the sense that the orders issued are beyond my scrutiny or criticism , I shall be , in a vital sense , unfree . Liberty ...
... feel that my will has access to avenues through which it can impress itself upon the holders of power . If I have the sense that the orders issued are beyond my scrutiny or criticism , I shall be , in a vital sense , unfree . Liberty ...
Side 84
... feel significant , and this , in the absence of liberty and equality , we cannot hope to achieve ..... But it is also important to remember that whatever adds to the power of government is always attended by contingent danger . The ...
... feel significant , and this , in the absence of liberty and equality , we cannot hope to achieve ..... But it is also important to remember that whatever adds to the power of government is always attended by contingent danger . The ...
Innhold
MAGNA CARTA | 1 |
ON LIBERTYJohn Milton | 15 |
THAT IN A FREE STATE EVERY MAN MAY THINK WHAT He Likes and SAY WHAT HE THINKSSpinoza | 21 |
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Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
abolish abuse according achieved action aforesaid Aligarh Aligarh Muslim University amerced American Declaration argument authority bailiffs BARUCH DE SPINOZA become believe British cause citizens civil rights compelled condition Congress conscience considered contrary death debt doctrine duty economic liberty England English error exercise fact favour fear feel fief five-and-twenty barons force Free Commonwealth freedom French Revolution Gandhiji granted heir hold honour human India individual industrial inequalities infallibility John Milton John Stuart Mill judge judgment justice justiciar King knight Lahore land live lord Magna Carta Mahatma Gandhi mankind means ment Milton mind nation natural rights Nehru Report never obey offence passive resistance peace person pledge political liberty possess present private liberty reason received opinion religion rule rulers scutage sheriff socage social society supreme thing Thomas Paine tion true truth tyranny University unless wardship whole