| Thomas Welbank Fowle - 1881 - 184 halaman
...by which the relief is conveyed. This law or fact we may express in the following terms : — That every society upon arriving at a certain stage of...for the due performance of the purposes for which societies exist, — to provide that no person, no matter what has been his life, or what may be the... | |
| Thomas Welbank Fowle - 1881 - 184 halaman
...by which the relief is conveyed. This law or fact we may express in the following terms : — That every society upon arriving at a certain stage of...sake, — that is to say, for the satisfaction of Us own humanity, and for the due performance of the purposes for which societies exist, — to provide... | |
| 1891 - 750 halaman
...rights in the soil or of the self-defense of society, is the theory of the social conscience : — " Every society, upon arriving at a certain stage of...for the due performance of the purposes for which societies exist — to provide that no person, no matter what has been his life, or what may be the... | |
| Charles Francis Bastable - 1892 - 704 halaman
...least that minimum of subsistence probably attainable in a state of nature, or — to vary the 1 ' Every society upon arriving at a certain stage of...civilization finds it positively necessary for its own sake ... to provide that no person . . . shall perish for want of the bare necessaries of existence." Fowle,... | |
| Arthur MacDonald - 1893 - 462 halaman
...process, relief must come at the cost of the community. This law may be expressed in these terms: "That every society, upon arriving at a certain stage of...exists — to provide that no person, no matter what bas'been his life or what may be the consequences, shall perish for want of the bare necessities of... | |
| Arthur MacDonald - 1893 - 460 halaman
...come at the cost of the commnnity. This law may be expressed in these terms: "That every society, npon arriving at a certain stage of civilization, finds...— that is to say, for the satisfaction of its own hnmanity and for the dne performance of the pnrposes for which society exists — to provide that no... | |
| United States. Office of Education - 1893 - 1550 halaman
...arriving »ta certain stage <»f civiliration, flnds it ¡muitively п«чч>>.чагу for it* o« n sake — that is to say, for the satisfaction of its own humanity and беthé due performance of the pur|*>scs for which society exist* — tu pro vide that no person,... | |
| Francis Greenwood Peabody - 1900 - 396 halaman
...a duty of any well-ordered State. " Every society," as a historian of the English Poor Law remarks, "upon arriving at a certain stage of civilization, finds it positively necessary for its own sake ... to provide that no person . . . shall perish for want of the bare necessaries 1 Acts iii. 5, 6.... | |
| Robert Elliott Speer - 1902 - 296 halaman
...is the great fountain of philanthropy and charity. ' ' Every society, ' ' says an English writer, " upon arriving at a certain stage of civilization, finds it positively necessary for its own sake . . . to provide that no person . . . shall perish for want of the bare necessities of existence."... | |
| Francis Greenwood Peabody - 1913 - 328 halaman
...Fowle, "The Poor Law," 1881, p. 10: "This law or fact we may express in the following terms : That every society upon arriving at a certain stage of civilization finds it positively necessary that society is merely the organization of selfishness, that the elevation of the few involves the... | |
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