North-American Review and Miscellaneous Journal, Band 8Jared Sparks, Edward Everett, James Russell Lowell, Henry Cabot Lodge O. Everett, 1965 Vols. 277-230, no. 2 include Stuff and nonsense, v. 5-6, no. 8, Jan. 1929-Aug. 1930. |
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Seite 385
... merit is often founded upon one of those illusive sympathies , by which , when we bring home to ourselves the case of another , we are often affected in a manner in which the person principally concerned is incapable of being affected ...
... merit is often founded upon one of those illusive sympathies , by which , when we bring home to ourselves the case of another , we are often affected in a manner in which the person principally concerned is incapable of being affected ...
Seite 386
... merit , which , -although they may confer no such particular benefit on any individual as to be the proper occasion of gratitude , -the common consent of mankind has still ascribed to them . Or , in other words , that the perception of ...
... merit , which , -although they may confer no such particular benefit on any individual as to be the proper occasion of gratitude , -the common consent of mankind has still ascribed to them . Or , in other words , that the perception of ...
Seite 389
... merit of benevolence , other circumstances being the same , is in proportion to the wideness of its views , and the multiplicity of the objects it embraces . This is the plain decision of the judgment ; but so far as feeling is ...
... merit of benevolence , other circumstances being the same , is in proportion to the wideness of its views , and the multiplicity of the objects it embraces . This is the plain decision of the judgment ; but so far as feeling is ...
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