Let this development precede, and contributions, numberless, and of inestimable value, will be sure to follow. That political economy, therefore, which busies itself about capital and labor, supply and demand, interest and rents, favorable and unfavorable... To Promote General University Extension Education.87-1 - Página 79de United States. Congress. House. Education and Labor - 1961 - 103 páginasVisualização completa - Sobre este livro
| Horace Mann - 1868 - 788 páginas
...political economy, therefore, which busies itself about capital and labor, supply and demand, interest and rents, favorable and unfavorable balances of trade, but leaves out of account the element of a widespread mental development, is nought but stupendous folly. The greatest of all the... | |
| United States. Office of Education, Isaac Edwards Clarke - 1892 - 1520 páginas
...Economy, therefore, which busies itself above capital and labor, supply and demand, interest and rente, favorable and unfavorable balances of trade; but leaves out of account the element of a wide-spread mental development, is nought but stupendous folly. The greatest of all the... | |
| Horace Mann - 1891 - 426 páginas
...political economy, therefore, which busies itself about capital and labor, supply and demand, interest and rents, favorable and unfavorable balances of trade, but leaves out of account the clement of a widespread mental development, is nought but stupendous folly. The greatest of all the... | |
| Isaac Edwards Clarke - 1892 - 1690 páginas
...Political Economy, therefore, which busies itself above capital and labor, supply and demand, interest and rents, favorable and unfavorable balances of trade; but leaves out of account the element of a wide-spread mental development, is nought but stupendous folly. The greatest of all the... | |
| Frank Tracy Carlton - 1908 - 150 páginas
...political econ4/tromy, therefore, which busies itself about capital and labor, supply and demand, interest and rents', favorable and unfavorable balances of trade, but leaves out of account the element of a wide-spread mental development, is naught but stupendous folly."30 He also asserts that... | |
| George Leroy Jackson - 1918 - 152 páginas
...development.69 In the same vein, Horace Mann writes in his Report of 1848: That political economy, therefore, which busies itself about capital and labor, supply...demand, interests and rents, favorable and unfavorable balance of trade, but leaves out of account the element of a wide-spread mental development, is naught... | |
| Massachusetts. Board of Education - 1848 - 582 páginas
...Political Economy, therefore, which busies itself about capital and labor, supply and demand, interest and rents, favorable and unfavorable balances of trade; but leaves out of account the element of a wide-spread mental development, is nought but stupendous folly. The greatest of all the... | |
| Ellwood Patterson Cubberley - 1920 - 720 páginas
...political economy, therefore, which busies itself about capital and labor, supply and demand, interest and rents, favorable and unfavorable balances of trade, but leaves out of account the element of a wide-spread mental development, is naught but stupendous folly. The greatest of all the... | |
| United States. Congress. Senate. Labor and Public Welfare - 1962 - 130 páginas
...clocks are running down. PREPARED STATEMENT OF CARROLL BUTTON, UNITED AUTOMORILE WORKERS EDUCATIONAL DIRECTOR In the year 1848, Horace Mann, reporting...after the struggle for free public schools, meaning primary schools, had largely been won. Some 8 years later, a college which combined manual labor and... | |
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