Word: thinks
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...maximum of forty-two; and at each of six meetings no one of them appeared. Theoretically this state of things is dangerous; practically it is only inconvenient. It is inconvenient and not dangerous because of the fine spirit shown by the undergraduate members. If the three Faculty members think one way, and the three undergraduates another, the undergraduates may put through what they please, since one of the Faculty members is in the chair and cannot vote, to make a tie. At such times, when the combined undergraduate and graduate experience of the absent members would be the most persuasive...
...were surreptitiously sneaked past the attendant who sits at the door. This, of course, may have been done with the best of intentions, but the men who "borrowed" these books must be either very lazy or very spineless not to have returned them. Perhaps if these students do not think that they should be fined, they will do the next best thing, and return the books by the same means which their abstraction probably necessitated...
Suffrage is a form of education; many men think that education comprises merely school and college life; in reality, this is wholly preparatory, for education continues during a man's business and professional life in the development of his personal power. Suffrage, moreover, leads to greater ideals, for the voter must took forward to doing for coming generations what eight generations have done for him; he must realize that he is sowing the seeds of future prosperity or future poverty, of domestic joy or suffering...
Professor James says of M. Boutroux, "The word 'liberal' seems to have been coined especially to apply to him, so sympathetically has he entered, into the most diverse states of mind interpreting scientific men, philosophers and religious men to each other. His own way of thinking has many points of resemblance to what is known as pragmatism in this country. His effort, since the publishing of his first book, has been to show that concrete life exceeds our powers of abstract formulation, that what we see, feel and think in the world of reality are only approximations which the intellect...
...first-rate piece of work, for it points out clearly the faults of the play without making the reader any less interested in seeing it for himself. Dr. Kallen's essay on the cinematograph is a valuable reminder that the moving-picture show whatever we may think of it, has come to be an important part of the national drama. His statement of the value of melodrama, based largely on a theory that "there is no truth in the superstition that it is good for the public to think" is unfortunate; and his explanation of the appeal made...