 | P. J. A. Levine - 2003 - 224 Seiten
...Thomas Arnold took the argument a further teleological step in regarding modern history as bearing the 'marks of the fulness of time, as if there would be no future history beyond it'.129 History fulfilled a specific ideological role which comprised all the most important elements... | |
 | Peter Bingham Hinchliff, Peter Hinchliff - 1992 - 267 Seiten
...the heirs of ancient Greece. For the last eighteen hundred years, Greece has fed the human mtellect; Rome, taught by Greece and improving upon her teacher,...has been the source of law and government and social civilization; and what neither Greece nor Rome could furnish, the perfection of moral and spiritual... | |
 | Frank Ankersmit, Hans Kellner - 1995 - 289 Seiten
...had suggested that the 'modern age' coincided with 'the last step' in the story of man - that it bore marks 'of the fulness of time, as if there would be no future history beyond it.' 3i Bury demurred, but not because he objected to the idea of a single History per se. He believed that... | |
 | Frank Ankersmit, Hans Kellner - 1995 - 289 Seiten
...had suggested that the 'modern age' coincided with 'the last step' in the story of man - that it bore marks 'of the fulness of time, as if there would be no future history beyond it.'3i Bury demurred, but not because he objected to the idea of a single History per se. He believed... | |
 | Matthew Grimley - 2004 - 268 Seiten
...the development of humanity. 'For the last eighteen hundred years,' he argued, 'Greece has fed the intellect; Rome, taught by Greece, and improving upon...has been the source of law and government and social civilization; and what neither Greece nor Rome could furnish, the perfection of moral and spiritual... | |
 | Allan Megill, Steven Shepard, Phillip Honenberger - 2007 - 288 Seiten
...Oxford had suggested that the "modern age" coincided with "the last step" in the story of man, bearing marks "of the fulness of time, as if there would be no future history beyond it."32 Bury demurred, but not because he objected to the idea of a single History per se. He believed... | |
 | Gerardus van der Leeuw - 1935 - 20 Seiten
...appears to be not only a step in advance of ancient history, but the last step; it appears to bear marks of the fulness of time, as if there would be no future history beyond it." THOMAS ARNOLD, An inaugural lecture on the study of modern history, delivered at Oxford in December... | |
 | 1848
..."appears to be not only a step in advance of ancient history, but the very last step ; it appears to bear marks of the fulness of time, as if there would be no future liistory beyond it." As a commentary upon which it may be observed, that Europe lias been for centuries... | |
 | 1863
...a step in advance of ancient history, but the last step ; it appears to bear marks of the fullness of time — as if there would be no future history beyond it. My sense of the evils of the times that are coming, and of the prospects to which 1 am bringing up... | |
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