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Word: ideale (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...city containing University, Brazenose, St. Mary's, Queen's and New College. Some charming views were shown of St. Mary's Chapel, and its quaint door way flanked by two twisted pillars. A view of the Bodleian Library drew forth the remark from Professor Cooke that it was his ideal library where the rooms were low and the books within easy reach...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Professor Cooke's Lecture. | 3/28/1891 | See Source »

...York Times publishes a few interesting facts about the coaching of the Oxford and Cambridge crews. It is almost an ideal system of amateur and intercollegiate athletics when such good feeling as exists between Oxford and Cambridge is established. The Times says...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Oxford and Cambridge. | 3/24/1891 | See Source »

...contemporaneous Greek writings, the philosophers dealing with science, politics, literature; but the Jews were so completely absorbed in the religious aspect that they lost sight of everything else. In the prophetic literature there is an ideal picture, a conception found in no other literature. The ultimate end is a great world kingdom fashioned by the hand of God out of his chosen people...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: College Conference. | 2/25/1891 | See Source »

Last evening Rev. M. J. Savage took for his text "The Lord is good to all." He said: That life is good in which satisfaction outweighs its opposite. Because a man falls short of his ideal is no sign that his life is bad. Those only who are extremely conceited or who have no high ideals ever feel perfectly satisfied with their work. A man's pleasure is not in what he has done but in the doing. The existence of moral evil and death do not prove that the Lord is not good to all. The experience of pain...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Appleton Chapel. | 2/9/1891 | See Source »

Such being the general point of view of the lecture, the particular topics next discussed were: (1) The objection that the modern doctrine of evolution, in assigning a "low origin" to all significant things, deprives the world of all higher and ideal significance. (2) The objection that empirical students of evolution are often unaware of the teleological and ideal nature of their own presuppositions, so that it seems doubtful whether their presuppositions actually have this ideal character. To both these objections the same response was made. The doctrine of evolution has its purely naturalistic as well as its teleological side...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Course on Modern Thinkers. | 1/9/1891 | See Source »

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