Quarto-centennial Celebration, University of Colorado, November 13,14 and 15, 1902, Boulder, Colo, ฉบับที่ 4

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Regents of the University of Colorado, 1902 - 112 หน้า

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หน้า 27 - ... had a profound disbelief in theory, and knew better than to commit the folly of breaking with the past. They were not seduced by the French fallacy that a new system of government could be ordered like a new suit of clothes. They would as soon have thought of ordering a new suit of flesh and skin.
หน้า 24 - The rule of the common law, that statutes in derogation thereof are to be strictly construed, has no application to this code. The code establishes the law of this state respecting the subjects to which it relates, and its provisions and all proceedings under it are to be liberally construed, with a view to effect its objects and to promote justice.
หน้า 103 - That life is not as idle ore, But iron dug from central gloom, And heated hot with burning fears, And dipt in baths of hissing tears, And batter'd with the shocks of doom To shape and use.
หน้า 61 - ... our faculties to the greatest advantage of ourselves and others — how to live completely? And this being the great thing needful for us to learn, is, by consequence, the great thing which education has to teach. To prepare us for complete living is the function which education has to discharge ; and the only rational mode of judging of any educational course is, to judge in what degree it discharges such function.
หน้า 35 - But that which it behoves the physician to see, not indeed with his bodily eye, but with clear intellectual vision, is a process, and the chain of causation involved in that process. Disease, as we have seen, is a perturbation of the normal activities of a living body ; and it is, and must remain, unintelligible, so long as we are ignorant of the nature of these normal activities. In other words, there could be no real science of pathology, until the science of physiology had reached a degree of...
หน้า 60 - ... two branches of science, would at once admit that they agree in their principles, and assist each other's progress, and that such distinction as exists between them arises from the difference of the purposes to which the same body of principles is applied. If this doctrine had as strong an influence over the actions of men as it now has over their reasonings, it would have been unnecessary for me to describe, so fully as I have done, the great scientific fallacy of the ancients. I might, in fact,...
หน้า 9 - The time has gone by when an eminent lawyer, in full practice, can take a class of students Into his office and become their teacher. Once that was practicable, but now It Is not. The consequence is that law schools are now a necessity.
หน้า 25 - The vain titles of the victories of Justinian are crumbled into dust ; but the name of the legislator is inscribed on a fair and everlasting monument. Under his reign, and by his care, the civil jurisprudence was digested in the immortal works of the CODE, the PANDECTS, and the...
หน้า 38 - Gases, fluids, electricity, magnetism, ozone, things known or things occult, there is nothing in the air that is conditional to life except the germs that it carries.
หน้า 15 - ... progressive jurisprudence. Forms were regarded with superstitious reverence in the early stages of society, but we now recognize that the simpler the procedure, the better it serves the purpose.

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