| William Temple - 1731 - 506 trang
...Men, and even in the famo Men at feveral Times, I very much doubt they muil be divided into fever.) 1 Forms. Nor do I know, if Men are like Sheep, why they...Government : Or, if they are like Wolves, how they can fuffer it. Nor have I -read where the Orders of any State have been agreed on by mutual Contract among... | |
| Sir William Temple - 1757 - 530 trang
...times, I very much doubt they muft be divided into feveral forms. Nor do I know, if men are like fheep, why they need any government ; or, if they are like wolves, how they can fufier. it. .. Nor have I read where the orders of any ftate have been agreed on by mutual contract... | |
| Anthony Ashley Cooper Earl of Shaftesbury - 1900 - 420 trang
...passing it on. For as urbane had already put the two sides of the case shrewdly enough in the phrase : " Nor do I know, if men are like sheep, why they need...or, if they are like wolves, how they can suffer it " (Essay upon the Original and Nature qf Government, 1672 ; Works, ed. 1814, i. 9, 10). as he is —... | |
| John Mackinnon Robertson - 1907 - 416 trang
...Shaftesbury's attack. Temple had already put the two sides of the case shrewdly enough in the phrase : " Nor do I know, if men are like sheep, why they need...or, if they are like wolves, how they can suffer it " (Essay upon the Original and Nature of Government, 1672; Works, ed. 1814, i, 9, 10). aiming at influencing... | |
| John Mackinnon Robertson - 1912 - 510 trang
...points to food conditions as mainly determining gregation or segregation among animals, observing : " Nor do I know, if men are like sheep, why they need...or, if they are like wolves, how they can suffer it " (Works, ed. 1814, i, 9, 10). In the next generation, again, the ultra-Hobbesian view was keenly attacked... | |
| Mark Irving Lichbach - 1996 - 342 trang
...rational choice problem of CA seems to guarantee CA. As Temple (cited in Macpherson 1968, 61) writes. "Nor do I know, if men are like Sheep, why they need any government: Or if they are like wolves, how can they suffer it." And as Sabine (1973, 430) put it: "If men were as savage and anti-social as they... | |
| Mark Irving Lichbach, Adam B. Seligman - 2010 - 194 trang
...public good seems to guarantee collective action. As Temple (cited in Macpherson 1968, 61l writes, "Nor do I know, if men are like Sheep, why they need any government: Or if they are like wolves, how can they suffer it." And as Sabine (1973, 430l put it, "If men were as savage and anti-social as they... | |
| Jonathan Haslam - 2002 - 278 trang
...(Cumberland). Temple shared neither assumption: "if Mankind must be ranged to one of these Sorts," he argued, "I know not well to which it will be: And considering...Government: Or, if they are like Wolves, how they can suffer it."261 It was Macaulay who later suggested that Temple's instinct to split the difference between... | |
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