Natural Right and Political Right: Essays in Honor of Harry V. JaffaThomas B. Silver, Peter W. Schramm |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 83
Page 144
... become just any- thing ; it becomes a man or a woman . Its end may be said to have been present in its beginning , and it is the presence of this end that allows the beginning to hold sway over the development of what it initiates . If ...
... become just any- thing ; it becomes a man or a woman . Its end may be said to have been present in its beginning , and it is the presence of this end that allows the beginning to hold sway over the development of what it initiates . If ...
Page 376
... become kings or kings philosophers . Charles Garman never became a king , nor did his three students become philosophers ; nor for that matter did evils cease from the world . But Garman did impart to his students a structure of ideas ...
... become kings or kings philosophers . Charles Garman never became a king , nor did his three students become philosophers ; nor for that matter did evils cease from the world . But Garman did impart to his students a structure of ideas ...
Page 403
... become : Envisaging political parties as limited , homogeneous , fiercely aggres- sive , special interests , he failed to see that parties themselves might become great , bland , enveloping coalitions , eschewing the assertion of firm ...
... become : Envisaging political parties as limited , homogeneous , fiercely aggres- sive , special interests , he failed to see that parties themselves might become great , bland , enveloping coalitions , eschewing the assertion of firm ...
Contents
Introduction | 3 |
Dante and the Rediscovery of Political Philosophy | 9 |
Jefferson and the Practice of Empire | 27 |
Copyright | |
18 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
Agathocles American Conservatism American Political ancient argued argument Aristotle Aristotle's Aristoxenus become Book Burke Caesar Christian Churchill citizens civil claim common Communist Constitution conventional Dante defend deliberate democracy democratic Dickinson Disc equality essay Ethics existence Federalist France Frederick freedom Garman Germany Greek Harry Jaffa Henry Henry's Herbert Wehner Hobbes Holmes human Ibid ideas individual interests Jaffa Jefferson John Dickinson John Locke justice king Leo Strauss liberal liberty Lincoln Locke Locke's Machiavelli Madison means ment modern modes moral nation National Review natural right never offices oligarchy opinions party passions phenomenology piety Plato political philosophy prince principles problem question radical Rawls Rawls's reason regime Reprinted republic republican Romulus Roosevelt Rousseau rule sense Silesia slaves social society Socrates soul statesman statesmanship Statius Strauss theory things thought tion tone tyranny Umphrey understanding University Press virtue Wehner Wilson women York