| James Tully - 1995 - 276 oldal
...great advantages towards the knowledge of human Nature ... But now the Great Map of Mankind is unrolld at once; and there is no state or Gradation of barbarism, and no mode of refinement which we have not at the same instance under our View. The third feature of modern... | |
| Gillian M. Bediako - 1997 - 418 oldal
...of human progress could be observed in the present. Edmund Burke graphically expresses this outlook: But now the Great Map of Mankind is unrolled at once;...and there is no state or Gradation of barbarism and no mode of refinement which we have not at the same instant under our View. The very different Civility... | |
| David N. Livingstone, Charles W. J. Withers - 1999 - 470 oldal
...its comparative youth, is but a poor instructour... But now that the Great Map of Mankind is unrolld at once; and there is no state or Gradation of barbarism, and no mode of refinement which we have not at the same instant under our View. The different Civility... | |
| Mark Salber Phillips - 2000 - 390 oldal
...from its comparative youth, is but a poor instructor. When the Egyptians called the Greeks children in antiquities, we may well call them children; and...their own limits. But now the great map of mankind is unravelled at once, and there is no state or gradation of barbarism, and no mode of refinement, which... | |
| Nicholas Boyle, John Guthrie - 2002 - 304 oldal
...its comparative youth, is but a poor instructour. [. . .] But now the Great Map of Mankind is unrolld at once; and there is no state or Gradation of barbarism, and no mode of refinement which we have not at the same instant under our View. The very different Civility... | |
| John Gascoigne - 2003 - 344 oldal
...its comparative youth, is but a poor instructour . . . But now the great map of mankind is unrolld at once; and there is no state or gradation of barbarism, and no mode of refinement which we have not at the same instant under our view.354 In the introduction... | |
| Merete Falck Borch - 2004 - 346 oldal
...period. History to trace it in all its stages and periods [....] now the Great Map of Mankind is unrolld at once; and there is no state or Gradation of barbarism, and no mode of refinement which we have not at the same instant under our View. The very different Civility... | |
| Deborah Cohen, Maura O'Connor - 2004 - 238 oldal
...Enlightenment project of a history of humanity might finally be in sight: "The Great Map of Mankind is unrolld at once; and there is no state or Gradation of barbarism, and no mode of refinement which we have not at the same instant under our View."20 The decades following... | |
| William Hodges, David Attenborough - 2004 - 236 oldal
...Forster (1777; 2000), 2fnj. '- 1 For Burke's remark in 1777. "the Great Map of mankind is uiirolld at once; and there is no state or Gradation of barbarism, and no mode of refinement which \\c have not at the same instant under our View'see Geoff Quilley, ' "Tahiti... | |
| Vincent Carretta - 2005 - 472 oldal
...called the Greeks children in antiquities, we may call them children; and so we may call all those I nations which were able to trace the progress of society...their own limits. But now the great map of mankind is unraveled at once, and there is no state or gradation of barbarism, and no mode of refinement, which... | |
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