| Hans Theodorus Blokland - 1997 - 340 oldal
...there are valuable matters whose use is not always clear to the parties involved. These are matters: of which the utility does not consist in ministering...and the want of which is least felt where the need is greatest. This is peculiarly true of those things which are chiefly useful as tending to raise the... | |
| Patrick Murray - 1997 - 504 oldal
...may be presumed to be judges of the things required in their own habitual employment. But there are other things, of the worth of which the demand of...test; things of which the utility does not consist in mmistering to inclinations, nor in serving the daily uses ot life, and the want of which is least felt... | |
| John Stuart Mill - 1998 - 516 oldal
...may be presumed to be judges of the things required in their own habitual employment. But there are other things, of the worth of which the demand of...and the want of which is least felt where the need is greatest. This is peculiarly true of those things which are chiefly useful as tending to raise the... | |
| John Stuart Mill - 1998 - 444 oldal
...that part of education which is directed towards character formation. People are unable to evaluate things 'of which the utility does not consist in ministering...to inclinations, nor in serving the daily uses of life'.18" 'Those who most need to be made wiser and better, usually desire it least.'18 Mill believed... | |
| Dan E. Beauchamp, Bonnie Steinbock - 1999 - 399 oldal
...enactment of the legislature, or pointed out in the particular case by a public functionary. Thus there are things of which the utility does not consist in ministering...and the want of which is least felt where the need is greatest. This is peculiarly true of those things which are chiefly useful as tending to raise the... | |
| Keith Culver - 1999 - 580 oldal
...enactment of the legislature, or pointed out in the particular case by a public functionary. Thus there are things of which the utility does not consist in ministering...and the want of which is least felt where the need is greatest. This is peculiarly true of those things which are chiefly useful as tending to raise the... | |
| Samuel Fleischacker - 1999 - 351 oldal
...It follows that there can be commodities of which the average consumer is not "a competent judge," "of the worth of which the demand of the market is by no means a test." These will tend to be things that, instead of "ministering to inclinations [or] serving the daily uses... | |
| Nigel Warburton, Jonathan E. Pike, Derek Matravers - 2000 - 416 oldal
...enactment of the legislature, or pointed out in the particular case by a public functionary. Thus there are things of which the utility does not consist in ministering...and the want of which is least felt where the need is greatest. This is peculiarly true of those things which are chiefly useful as tending to raise the... | |
| Mark Gradstein, Moshe Justman, Volker Meier - 2004 - 192 oldal
...interest. John Stuart Mill (1848, bk. 5, ch. 11, sec. 8) was an early proponent of this view: But there are other things, of the worth of which the demand of...uses of life, and the want of which is least felt when the need is greatest— It will continually happen, on the voluntary system, that, the end not... | |
| 1874 - 780 oldal
...sums dribbled and doled out by ill-considered philanthropy. I give his words : — " But there are other things of the worth of which the demand of the...and the want of which is least felt where the need is greatest. This is peculiarly true of those things which are chiefly useful as tending to raise the... | |
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