... scope and evil of war and of international hostility as to give what was formerly a generous aspiration more and more of the aspect of an imperative necessity. Under the lurid illumination of the world-war, the idea of world-unification has passed... The Idea of a League of Nations - Page 6by Herbert George Wells, Edward Grey Grey of Fallodon (Viscount), Lionel Curtis, William Archer, Henry Wickham Steed, Alfred Zimmern, John Alfred Spender, James Bryce Bryce (Viscount), Gilbert Murray - 1919 - 44 pagesFull view - About this book
| American essays - 1919 - 1066 pages
...and the world awoke out of a dream of intensified nationality to a new system of realities which were entirely antagonistic to the continuance of national...means by which mind may react upon mind and life upon life, that is to say upon the intensity, rapidity, and reach of mental and physical communication.... | |
| Herbert George Wells, Edward Grey Grey of Fallodon (Viscount), Lionel Curtis, William Archer, Henry Wickham Steed, Alfred Zimmern, John Alfred Spender, James Bryce Bryce (Viscount), Gilbert Murray - World politics - 1919 - 56 pages
...such as it has never confronted before. \ It is maintained that, on the one hand, they render'possible such a reasoned coordination of human affairs as has...means by which mind may react upon mind and life upon life — that is to say, upon the intensity, rapidity, and reach of mental and physical communication.... | |
| William Heard Kilpatrick - Education - 1923 - 408 pages
...in Educational Review* 48:496-7 I.Dec., 1914). 65. SOCIAL RELATIONSHIPS DEPENDENT ON COMMUNICATION "All political and social institutions, all matters...relationship, are dependent upon the means by which mind reacts upon mind and life upon life, that is to say, upon the intensity, rapidity and reach of mental... | |
| American essays - 1919 - 902 pages
...as has never hitherto been conceivable, and that, on the other, they so enlarge and intensify t he scope and evil of war and of international hostility...means by which mind may react upon mind and life upon life, that is to say upon the intensity, rapidity, and reach of mental and physical communication.... | |
| American essays - 1919 - 950 pages
...the scale which the near probability of an actual experiment demands, is thrust upon the world. AH political and social institutions, all matters of...means by which mind may react upon mind and life upon life, that is to say upon the intensity, rapidity, and reach of mental and physical communication.... | |
| Daniel Deudney - Philosophy - 2007 - 418 pages
...primacy, but the most important fall into two classes: communication and transportation, and destruction. "All political and social institutions, all matters...means by which mind may react upon mind and life upon life" and thus "the intensity, rapidity, and reach of mental and physical communication." All the "great... | |
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