| Benjamin Aaron, Zvi H. Bar-Niv, Thilo Ramm - Law - 1989 - 696 pages
...rules, mores and principles which govern the communities in which they live. As John Stuart Mill stated, 'if public spirit, generous sentiments, or true justice...the school in which these excellences are nurtured'. (Principles of Political Economy (1893), Vol. 2, at p. 352.) 110 Freedom of association is most essential... | |
| John Cunningham Wood - Business & Economics - 1991 - 676 pages
...within a social structure which 'schools' him. Cooperative associations in industry were educational; 'if public spirit, generous sentiments, or true justice...interests is the school in which these excellences are nurtured'.24 Social experiment is not something optional, it is something necessary because educational.... | |
| Frank Roosevelt, David Belkin - Business & Economics - 1994 - 422 pages
...Mill's enunciation of those ends still seems the most elemental, the most bare of extraneous elements: "the aim of improvement should be not solely to place...do without one another, but to enable them to work for one another in relations not involving dependence." As this collection of "Voices from Dissent"... | |
| John Stuart Mill - Mill - 1998 - 444 pages
...previously supposed. Besides the economic element, however, what Mill termed the "moral aspect" was crucial if public spirit, generous sentiments, or true justice...interests, is the school in which these excellences are to be nurtured. The aim of improvement should not be solely to place human beings in a condition in... | |
| John Stuart Mill - 1998 - 376 pages
...foresight and self-government." But the latter were far superior: "if public spirit, generous sentiment, or true justice and equality are desired, association,...interests, is the school in which these excellences are nurtured."13 Likewise, in Mill's discussions of representative government, his support for institutions... | |
| Nadia Urbinati - Philosophy - 2002 - 306 pages
...power in such a way that the "desire for power over others" is transformed into equal partnership. "But if public spirit, generous sentiments, or true justice...interests, is the school in which these excellences are nurtured."51 Mill's individual is free insofar as she can act sincerely toward herself and responsibly... | |
| Colin Heydt - Philosophy - 2006 - 175 pages
...the Autobiography and in the 'Inaugural Address'. If we are to overcome toxic forms of individualism, if 'public spirit, generous sentiments, or true justice and equality are desired', then 'association, not isolation, of interests, is the school in which these excellences are nurtured.... | |
| Scott J. Hammond, Kevin R. Hardwick, Howard Leslie Lubert - History - 2007 - 988 pages
...would be scarcely any community of interest or necessary mental communion with other human beings. $B UҮ@ m )H の 1 [ z ") A& J L b ... _ ; ^ 2 mu $ą h :r q3 mt a {ė < 5 l b _y /} ` It is from such influences we discern the elevation of an increased proportion of working people from... | |
| Nadia Urbinati, Alex Zakaras - Philosophy - 2007 - 349 pages
...economies of scale.32 Therefore, most people cannot be made free in the economic domain by placing them "in a condition in which they will be able to do without one another." Instead, extending economic freedom fully to all will require establishing practices of democratic... | |
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