| John Locke - 1693 - 290 str.
...have laid in the be- MM ginning of this Dilcourfe, be true, as I do not doubt but it is, viz. That the difference to be found in the Manners and Abilities...is owing more to their Education, than to any thing clic, we have reafbn to conclude, that great care is to be had of the forming Children's Minds, and... | |
| John Locke - 1779 - 336 str.
...in the beginning of this difcomfe be true, as I do not doubt but it is, viz. That the difference-to be found in the manners and abilities of men is owing...conclude, that great care is to be had of the forming children's minds, and giving them that feafoning early, which fhill influence their lives always after:... | |
| John Locke - 1812 - 492 str.
...what I have said in the beginning of this dis. course be true, as I do not doubt but it is, viz. that the difference to be found in the manners and abilities...is owing more to their education than to any thing else ; we have reason to conclude, that great care is to be had of the forming children's minds, and... | |
| John Locke - 1823 - 496 str.
...what I have said in the beginning of this discourse be true, as I do not doubt but it is, viz. that the difference to be found in the manners and abilities...is owing more to their education than to any thing else ; we have reason to conclude, that great care is to be had of the forming children's minds, and... | |
| Thomas Hancock - 1824 - 584 str.
...orginally blank paper, should manifest the least variety, conformably to what he says afterwards, " that the difference to be found in the manners and abilities...is owing more to their education than to any thing else." Is there not, here, some appearance of contradiction ? Now, with regard to the second point,... | |
| Alexander Campbell, Charles Louis Loos - 1841 - 628 str.
...attention while 1 attempt to explain to yon its full meaning." "A great man, (Mr. Locke,) said that 'the difference to be found in the manners and abilities of men, is owing more to their education than any thing else.' Now, as you are acquainted with men who have never seen the inside of a College, and... | |
| Henry Barnard - 1839 - 1066 str.
...ideas on this subyour attention while I at¡pi lo explain to you " A great man, Mr. Locke, said, ' that the difference to be found in the manners and abilities of men, is i.wing more to their educa. i tion than any thing ilsc.' Now, as you are all acquainted with men burope,... | |
| Catharine Maria Sedgwick - 1839 - 290 str.
...attention while I attempt to explain to you its full meaning. " A great man, Mr. Locke, said, ' that the difference to be found in the manners and abilities of men is owing more to their education than any thing else.' Now, as you are all acquainted with men who have never seen the inside of a college,... | |
| George Merriam - 1841 - 308 str.
...when they mean merely that he has been through college." 8. " A great man, Mr. Locke, said, ' that the difference to be found in the manners and abilities of men is owing more to their education than any thing else.' Now, as you are all acquainted with men who have never seen the inside of a college,... | |
| 1843 - 686 str.
...attention, while I attempt to explain to you its full meaning. " A great man, Mr. Locke, said, ' that the difference to be found in the manners and abilities of men, is owing more to their education than any thing else.' Now, as you are acquainted with men who have never seen the inside of a college, and... | |
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