 | United States. Office of Education - 1896
...Italian leaders understood perfectly well. Mazzini, the republican idealist, who defined democracy as " the progress of all through all under the leadership of the best and wisest," placed equal stress upon education and instruction as means for accomplishing his purposes.... | |
 | United States. Bureau of Education - 1896 - Liczba stron: 100
...Italian leaders understood perfectly well. Mazzini, the republican idealist, who defined democracy as " the progress of all through all under the leadership of the best and wisest," placed equal stress upon education and instruction as means for accomplishing his purposes.... | |
 | United States. Bureau of Education - 1896
...Italian leaders understood perfectly well. Mazzini, the republican idealist, who defined democracy as " the progress of all through all under the leadership of the best aud wisest," placed equal stress upon education and instruction as means for accomplishing his purposes.... | |
 | John Atkinson Hobson - 1898 - Liczba stron: 347
...will. Mr. Ruskin's criticism of democracy glances scatheless from the strong formula of Mazzini, " The progress of all through all, under the leadership of the best and wisest." CHAPTER IX. MACHINERY AND INDUSTRIAL TOWNS. f 1. Mr. Buskin's discriminative attitude towards... | |
 | Nicholas Murray Butler - 1907 - Liczba stron: 111
...lesson of Rome for America ? LWe come back to the conception which Mazzini - .. ... had of democracy : " The progress of all through all, under the leadership of the best and wisest." ' A/ True democracy will carry on an insistent search! for these wisest and best, and will... | |
 | Ray Stannard Baker - 1908 - Liczba stron: 314
...street-sweeper ? And Tillman and the Negro farmhand?" CHAPTER XIII THE NEW SOUTHERN STATESMANSHIP Democracy is the progress of all through all, under the leadership of the best and the wisest." — taaaini, TN FORMER chapters I have had much to tell that was *- unpleasant and perhaps discouraging;... | |
 | Westel Woodbury Willoughby, John Archibald Fairlie, Frederic Austin Ogg - 1908
...mention of "primary" or "referendum." Mazzini's definition of democracy is the one which he accepts: "the progress of all through all, under the leadership of the best and the wisest." "Least of all," he holds, "can a democracy hope to succeed without an elite of its own, * * * recruited... | |
 | Edwin Holt Hughes - 1909 - Liczba stron: 240
...CHAPTER VII THE LESSON OF DEMOCRACY We come back to the conception which Mazzini had of democracy : " The progress of all through all, under the leadership of the best and wisest." True democracy will carry on an insistent search for these wisest and best, and will elevate... | |
 | Edwin Holt Hughes - 1909 - Liczba stron: 240
...pardon for having loved Italy beyond all earthly things " deserves to be heard. He says: Democracy is " the progress of all through all, under the leadership of the wisest and best." Even as a study of these words will show how they fit the theory of democracy, so... | |
 | Edwin Du Bois Shurter - 1910 - Liczba stron: 406
...democracy? An aristocracy of blackguards!" or was the truth not with Mazzini, who defined democracy as "the progress of all through all, under the leadership of the best and wisest"? Everything depends upon the answer. The state is founded upon justice, and justice involves... | |
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