Found 64,142 results for "Lectures and lecturing"
by John Dewey
MANKIND likes to think in terms of extreme opposites.
by Alfred North Whitehead
The progress of civilisation is not wholly a uniform drift towards better things
by Hugh Blair
One of the most distinguished privileges which Providence has conferred upon mankind, is the power of communicating thei...
by Walter Pater
[5] WITH the world of intellectual production, as with that of organic generation, nature makes no sudden starts.
by Andrew Cecil Bradley
IN these lectures I propose to consider the four principal tragedies of Shakespeare from a single point of view.
by Bertrand Russell
The fundamental problem I propose to consider in these lectures is this: how can we combine that degree of individual in...
by John Ruskin
I. Architecture is the art which so disposes and adorns the edifices raised by man, for whatsoever uses, that the sight ...
by John Henry Newman
IN ADDRESSING MYSELF, GENTLEMEN, to the consideration of a question which has excited so much interest, and elecited so ...