| 1924 - 420 pages
...influence that came from the Russian system of joints ; (6th) the aesthetic influence that came out of the Arts and Crafts movement in England and the United States; (7th) the formalizing effect that came with child study and psychology; (8th) the industrializing effect... | |
| Loren R. Graham - 1998 - 208 pages
...the United States, where the idea of progress was often linked to the advance of technology.1 In the United States at the end of the nineteenth and beginning of the twentieth centuries, the doctrine of progressivism included the belief that good public works projects could be built and... | |
| Slavko Splichal - 1999 - 384 pages
...interview" (as was the whole literary circle around Charles Dickens). Research into social questions spread in England and the United States at the end of the nineteenth century and predominantly retained its traditional socially reformistic orientation. In the foreword... | |
| James Franklin Harris - 2002 - 458 pages
...Absolute. So far as the philosophy of religion is concerned, the rise of Neo-Hegelian, absolute idealism in England and the United States at the end of the nineteenth century was important for at least two reasons. First, the content or substance of the theory of absolute... | |
| Joel C. Moses - 2003 - 234 pages
...and democracy in post-Soviet countries often compare this situation with the "robberbaron" era in the United States at the end of the nineteenth and beginning of the twentieth centuries (Martin Walker 1998; Rudand and Kogan 1998). For them, the robber-baron era was merely a brief and... | |
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