| 1906 - 880 pages
...should have dealt, in some measure at least, with the problem of international peace. His statement that "it is not brute force, but moral power, that commands predominance in the world," is in line with the teachings of the Master, and his further statement that "perhaps the time is near... | |
| Richard Burdon Haldane Haldane (Viscount) - 1907 - 332 pages
...but it insists on that without which there cannot be real stability. The foundation of purpose in the State, through all changes of party policy, must,...moral power, that commands predominance in the world. That it is so becomes more and more plain as civilisation at large progressively emerges from barbarism,... | |
| Richard Burdon Haldane Haldane (Viscount) - 1912 - 184 pages
...but it insists on that without which there cannot be real stability. The foundation of purpose in the State, through all changes of party policy, must,...in the world. This becomes more and more plain as civilisation at large progressively emerges from barbarism, and other nations increase in capacity... | |
| Richard Burdon Haldane Haldane (Viscount) - 1912 - 184 pages
...the State, through all changes of party policy, must, if the national life is to grow perma^ nently and not diminish, to prosper and not to fade, be ethical....in the world. This becomes more and more plain as civilisation at large progressively emerges from barbarism, and other nations increase in capacity... | |
| Frederick Henry Lynch - 1914 - 170 pages
...moral and spiritual grounds that war will ultimately be stopped. "We believe with Lord Haldane that, 'It is not brute force, but moral power that commands predominance in the world,' and we are here to see if it be not possible to unite these moral forces, as we know them to exist... | |
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