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Word: conformance (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...nevertheless be sure that our world of seeming things in space and time must conform to rigid laws, such as the law of causation. For our active understanding, in thinking our world, is bound by its own nature, in order to preserve as it were our very sanity (or, as Kant would say, the Unity of our self-consciousness), to regard all observed facts as conforming to laws. Yet these laws of Nature, which science studies, are the very creation of our own understanding acting upon the data of our senses. Such laws are not the laws of an unknowable...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Course on Modern Thinkers. | 11/12/1890 | See Source »

...contributions to the government which do not conform to the above rules are unscientific taxes and consequently their justice cannot be predicated. While it is true that no highly civilized community can exist without high taxation, it is not true on the other hand that hight axation implies a highly civilized community. Taxation is no more an evil than any other desirable form of expenditure, for taxes represent the investment of a certain part of the capital of a state. It is an evil when, through the injudicious management of the state, taxation is made the instrument for extorting money...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Hon. David A. Wells on Taxation. | 3/20/1890 | See Source »

...European universities. But after which, English, French, or German? If there are three different types of universities abroad, why should there not be an American type? Harvard has certain functions to perform, and if they differ from those of a German university, Harvard ought not to be forced to conform to a German standard. Harvard aims to give her students culture in a broad sense, improve their moral character, and not merely offer them a chance to study as German universities do. As for our professors they must soon be given their true rank abroad as our university becomes better...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 2/24/1890 | See Source »

...demonstrated in his judgment of Shakespeare, whom he understood far better than his English contemporary, Johnson. His literary reviews were fearless, and even his personal friends were not spared. He freed the German drama from its slavery to the French school, and showed how the French drama failed to conform not only to the German character, but to the fundamental principles of art. In the Laocoon he drew the distinction between painting and poetry, and made evident the great harm that had been done by the confusion of the two arts. Nathan the Wise, though written in five months...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Prof. von Jagemann's Lecture. | 12/6/1889 | See Source »

...kind was not brought about, or does not continue, because of any mutual understanding, expressed or implied, whereby his becoming or continuing a member of such a club would be of any becuniary benefit to him whatever, direct or indirect; and who shall in other and all respects conform to the rules and regulations of the organization...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Boston Athletic Association. | 11/20/1889 | See Source »

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