Word: rightly
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...Amherst College nine will be made up as follows: Sullivan and Wheeler, catchers; Hawes, pitcher and captain; Gardner, first base; Buffum, second base; Marble, third base; Taylor, short stop; Hunt, left field; Kimble, centre field, and Sturat, right field...
...labored for as a whole, as a "body fitly framed together." The moral ideal of utilitarianism views society as a mass of individuals, whose happiness is to be treated as a mere aggregate or sum, this sum being rendered as large as possible. Which of these ideals is the right...
...lecturer began the comparison of the two, by saying that if the emotion of sympathy be, as many have thought, the true basis of moral action, then the utilitarian view would appear to be the only right one. Sympathy with suffering would increase with the suffering that was the object of sympathy, and would estimate it as a mass. But is sympathy the real basis of moral conduct? One of the best arguments in favor of mere sympathy as the principle of morals is Schopenhauer's. He insists that sympathy or pity is unselfish, is in fact the only...
...this advantage ought to be given to Yale every year. Although their men may desire to "take the fence" together they should not make the fact an excuse for taking an undue advantage of their adversaries. We strongly urge our freshman ball-players to get what is their just right, the first game this year in Cambridge...
...Even if the fact be as President Eliot states it, as to the proportion of liberally educated men in the professions, the Times says it is evident that the tendency is not toward keeping it true. The "public service" is in a condition so anomalous that it is not right to argue from it. But whereas a generation ago, college-bred men were to be found only in the three "learned professions," they are now to be found, and every year in greater numbers, in occupations not at that time recognized as professions at all. In journalism there will...