You Learn by LivingHarper, 1960 - 211 pages "Never, perhaps, have any of us needed as much as we do today to use all the curiosity we have, needed to seek new knowledge, needed to realize that no knowledge is terminal. For almost eveything in the world is new; startlingly new"....Elli Roosevelt's Copyright © Libri GmbH. All rights reserved. |
From inside the book
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Page 13
... realize income , and , like other wealthholders , they tend to realize lower rates of return as their wealth increases . However , persons who show greater amounts of other assets include both those who are diversifying in order to ...
... realize income , and , like other wealthholders , they tend to realize lower rates of return as their wealth increases . However , persons who show greater amounts of other assets include both those who are diversifying in order to ...
Page 103
... realize the Truth, realize that as the Divine Soul, we are immortal. While we are blessed to go on a quest to realize the Truth, let us never forget and accept the limitation of human comprehension. The Creator has designed human beings ...
... realize the Truth, realize that as the Divine Soul, we are immortal. While we are blessed to go on a quest to realize the Truth, let us never forget and accept the limitation of human comprehension. The Creator has designed human beings ...
Page 141
... realize consciousness's practical freedom discloses that, for Hegel, consciousness's ontological structure and identity is constitutively related to its social identity, that developing the ontological potential implicit to its ...
... realize consciousness's practical freedom discloses that, for Hegel, consciousness's ontological structure and identity is constitutively related to its social identity, that developing the ontological potential implicit to its ...
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ability able accept acquire adjust afraid answer asked aware become believe better boys capital punishment Charitable organizations child choices citizen comes conformity courage course customs deal develop discipline discover Eleanor Roosevelt essential experience face fact fear feel freedom friends give grow Harry Belafonte human husband Hyde Park ideas important individual interest keep kind lems live look mass media mature meet ment mind never oasis of peace one's parents particular perhaps person politics possible problems public servant question quires readjustment realize remember responsibility rience Rotary Club seems sense situation someone sometimes square dance stand sure sweatshop talk Theodore Roosevelt things thought tion told understand United Nations viduality White House whole woman women young