| Books - 1856 - 768 pages
...паф bem Utt^eil beö SSetf., auf brei ¡Doctrinen unb auf einer 3>nfiitution. £)te evfieren finb : that the nation must be governed by moral agency in preference to physical force ; that the services of the wisest and ablest men in the nation are indispensable to its good government;... | |
| Thomas Taylor Meadows - China - 1856 - 732 pages
...living practical belief in all three is maintained in the mind of the nation. The doctrines are : — I. That the nation must be governed by moral agency in preference to physical force. II. That the services of the wisest and ablest men in the nation are indispensable to its good government.... | |
| Thomas Taylor Meadows - 1856 - 746 pages
...living practical belief in all three is maintained in the mind of the nation. The doctrines are : — I. That the nation must be governed by moral agency in preference to physical force. II. That the services of the wisest and ablest men in the nation are indispensable to its good government.... | |
| Australian periodicals - 1859 - 182 pages
...maxims laid down in the Shoo-king, or historical canon, one of the oldest of the sacred books : — " That the -nation must be governed by moral agency in preference to physical forced " That the services of tJie wisest and ablest men in the iMtion arc indispensable to its good... | |
| Samuel Lucas - 1860 - 368 pages
...living practical belief in all three is maintained in the mind of the nation. The doctrines are : — 1. That the nation must be governed by moral agency, in preference to physical force. 2. That the services of the wisest and ablest men in lhe nation are indispensable to its good government. 3. That... | |
| Charles Staniland Wake - Ethics - 1878 - 496 pages
...that the influence of philosophy led to the establishment of certain political principles, such as that " the nation must be governed by moral agency in preference to physical force," and " the services of the wisest and ablest men iii the nation are indispensable to its good government."1... | |
| Encyclopedias and dictionaries - 1879 - 876 pages
...literature of the country, and the true causes Chinese 236 of the wonderful duration of the Chinese empire. 1. That the nation must be governed by moral agency, in preference to physical force. 2. That the services of the wisest and ablest men in the nation are indispensable to its good government. 3, That... | |
| Lowe Kong Meng, Cheok Hong Cheong, Louis Ah Mouy - Australia - 1879 - 76 pages
...back 4,000 years, you will find them to be these : — 1. The universal acceptance of the principle that the nation must be governed by moral agency, in preference to physical force. 2. The no less universal conviction that the services of the wisest and ablest men in the nation are essential... | |
| Henry Allon - Christianity - 1857 - 596 pages
...practical belief in ' all three is maintained in the mind of the nation. The doctrines ' are :—I. That the nation must be governed by moral agency in ' preference to physical force. II. That the services of the wisest ' and ablest men in the nation are indispensable to its good '... | |
| Encyclopedias and dictionaries - 1897 - 878 pages
...classic literature of the country, and the true causes of the wonderful duration of the Chinese empire. 1. That the nation must be governed by moral agency in preference to physical force. 2. That the services of the wisest and ablest men in the nation are indispensable to its good government. 3. That... | |
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