| National Association of Life Underwriters - 1905 - 302 pages
...this question. You know the able editorial writers all over this country are telling us just exactly what we ought to do and what we ought not to do, and we might as well express ourselves. I do not like the motion to refer indefinitely. If the executive... | |
| National Association of Life Underwriters - 1905 - 302 pages
...this question. You know the able editorial writers all over this country are telling us just exactly what we ought to do and what we ought not to do, and we might as well express ourselves. I do not like the motion to refer indefinitely. If the executive... | |
| Mayo Williamson Hazeltine - 1905 - 464 pages
...our offices and on our streets, and there makes known in the actual circumstances of our daily life what we ought to do and what we ought not to do — that ia 9936 the wonder of his revelation; that is what proclaims him to be the Son of v*od and... | |
| Oliver Joseph Thatcher - 1907 - 466 pages
...beautiful and ugly, and becoming and unbecoming, and happiness and misfortune, and proper and improper, and what we ought to do and what we ought not to do, whoever came into the world without having an innate idea of them? Wherefore we all use these names,... | |
| Jeremiah Zimmerman - 1914 - 360 pages
...conscience and which is the common heritage of mankind. That inner and silent monitor which prompts us as to what we ought to do, and what we ought not to do, struggles to secure obedience and cannot be intimidated by threat nor silenced by sophistry and ruled... | |
| Arthur W. Warrington - 1920 - 196 pages
...permanently harmonizing impulse. We can define conscience simply as the voice within us, which tells us what we ought to do, and what we ought not to do. And we maintain that the sole object of the conscience is the production of a better and nobler race of... | |
| Henry Dwight Sedgwick - 1922 - 322 pages
...evil, the beautiful and the ugly, the becoming and the unbecoming, the proper and the improper, and what we ought to do and what we ought not to do, who has ever come into the world without an innate idea of them?" (Discourses, II, 11.) These innate... | |
| George Stuart Fullerton - 1922 - 404 pages
...beautiful and ugly, and becoming and unbecoming, and happiness and misfortune, and proper and improper, and what we ought to do and what we ought not to do, who ever came into the world without having an innate idea of them? " 1 Seneca adds his testimony to... | |
| 1924 - 592 pages
...do. But this joy of living will come only to the man who has learned self-discipline. Most of us know what we ought to do, and what we ought not to do. ln nine cases out of ten, physical breakdowns are not due to ignorance. They are due to lack of selfcontrol!... | |
| |