But when things are matter of public concern, the discipline pertaining to them must also be matter of public concern ; and we must not consider any citizen as belonging to himself, but all as belonging to the state ; for each is a part of the state,... An Old Man's Thoughts about Many Things - Stran 264avtor: George Long - 1872 - 379 straniCelotni ogled - O knjigi
| 1837 - 1032 strani
...chooses. But when things are matter of public concern, the discipline pertaining to them must also be matter of public concern ; and we must not consider...the state ; for each is a part of the state, and the superintendence of each part has naturally a reference to the superintendence of the whole. In the... | |
| 1838 - 530 strani
...chooses. But when things are matter of public concern, the discipline pertaining to them must also be matter of public concern ; and we must not consider...the state; for each is a part of the state, and the superintendence of each part has naturally a reference to the superintendence of the whole. In the... | |
| 1843 - 314 strani
...chooses. But when things are matter of public concern, the discipline pertaining to them must also be matter of public concern ; and we must not consider...the state ; for each is a part of the state, and the superintendence of each part has naturally a reference to the superintendence of the whole." — (Aristotle,... | |
| 1848 - 476 strani
...also be matter of public concern 5 and we must not consider any citizen ae belonging to himself, hut all as belonging to the state ; for each is a part of the state, and the superintendence of each part has naturally a reference to the superintendence of the whole. In the... | |
| 1853 - 448 strani
...chooses. But when things are matter of public concern, the discipline pertaining to them must also be matter of public concern ; and we must not consider...the state ; for each is a part of the state, and the superintendence of each part has naturally a reference to the superintendence of the whole. In the... | |
| Kevin J. Wetmore, Jr. - 2001 - 244 strani
...either that any of the citizens should think he just belongs to himself; he must regard all citizens as belonging to the state, for each is a part of the state; and the responsibility for each part naturally has regard to the responsibility for the whole. — Aristotle,... | |
| Frank M. Flanagan - 2005 - 242 strani
...terminology) individual. No one, in Aristotle's words, 'belongs just to himself, all citizens belong to the state, 'for each is a part of the state; and the responsibility for each part naturally has regard to the responsibility for the whole'.11 The state... | |
| 1857 - 772 strani
...? When we read in Aristotle, that " no citizen ought to think himself his own, but that all belong to the State, for each is a part of the State, and the attention paid to each part ought to look towards the care of the whole," we see, indeed, in such sentiments,... | |
| Ernest Barker - 1967 - 390 strani
...could say, as he does in the beginning of the eighth book of his Politics, that 'we must not regard any citizen as belonging to himself, but all as belonging to the state'; but the saying is an echo, and almost a quotation, of a passage in Plato's Laws, and there is much... | |
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