| 1914 - 416 pages
...have speculated on the significance of life and the destiny of man have not sufficiently remarked that Nature has taken pains to give us notice every time...sign which apprises us every time our activity is full of expansion; this sign is joy. I say joy ; I do not say pleasure. Pleasure, in point of fact,... | |
| Michael Vincent O'Shea, Ellsworth D. Foster, George Herbert Locke - 1917 - 858 pages
...to give us notice every time her destiny is accomplished; . . . she has set up a sign which apprizes us every time our activity is in full expansion: this sign is joy ... we find that wherever joy is, creation has been, and that the richer the creation the deeper the... | |
| Olive Annie Wheeler - 1922 - 152 pages
...the significance of life and the destiny of man [says Bergson] have not sufficiently remarked that Nature has taken pains to give us notice every time...accomplished ; she has set up a sign which apprises 104 us every time our activity is in full expansion ; this sign is joy. I say joy; I do not say pleasure.... | |
| Beatrice M. Hinkle - 1923 - 500 pages
...have speculated on the significance of life and the destiny of man have not sufficiently remarked that Nature has taken pains to give us notice every time...activity is in full expansion; this sign is joy; I do not say pleasure. Pleasure, in point of fact, is no more than an instrument contrived by Nature... | |
| Beatrice M. Hinkle - 1923 - 502 pages
...have speculated on the significance of life and the destiny of man have not sufficiently remarked that Nature has taken pains to give us notice every time...our activity is in full expansion; this sign is joy; il do not say pleasure. Pleasure, in point of fact, is no more than an instrument contrived by Nature... | |
| David Seabury - 1924 - 438 pages
...that emotion given little place in lists offered by technical psychologies. Bergson writes of joy, "Nature has taken pains to give us notice every time this destiny (of right living) is accomplished ; she has set up a sign which apprises us every time our activity... | |
| 1926 - 462 pages
...speculated on the significance of life i^^ and the destiny of man have not sufficiently remarked that Nature has taken pains to give us notice every time...sign which apprises us every time our activity is a full expansion; this sign is joy. . . True joy is always an emphatic signal of the triumph of life.... | |
| 1926 - 504 pages
...have speculated on the significance of life and the destiny of man have not sufficiently remarked that Nature has taken pains to give us notice every time this destiny is accomplished; she has setup a sign which apprises us every time our activity is a full expansion; this sign is joy. . . True... | |
| David Seabury - 1928 - 746 pages
...have speculated on the significance of life and the destiny of man have not sufficiently remarked that nature has taken pains to give us notice every time...activity is in full expansion; this sign is joy; I do not say pleasure. Pleasure, in point of fact, is no more than an instrument contrived by nature... | |
| 1914 - 412 pages
...have speculated on the significance of life and the destiny of man have not sufficiently remarked that Nature has taken pains to give us notice every time...sign which apprises us every time our activity is full of expansion ; this sign is joy. I say joy ; I do not say pleasure. Pleasure, in point of fact,... | |
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