| Herbert Spencer - Economics - 1851 - 492 pages
...good. § 10. Thus it has been shown that the rights of women must stand or fall with those of men ; derived as they are from the same authority ; involved in the same axiom ; demonstrated by the same argument. That the law of equal freedom applies alike to both sexes,... | |
| Herbert Spencer - Economics - 1868 - 544 pages
...good. § 10. Thus it has been shown that the rights of women must stand or fall with those of men ; derived as they are from the same authority ; involved in the same axiom; demonstrated by the same argument. That the law of equal freedom applies alike to both sexes,... | |
| 1870 - 764 pages
...have some rights — but to show that the " rights of women must stand or fall with those of men ; derived as they are from the same authority ; involved in the same axiom ; demonstrated by the same argument." Much more could be said in defence of the assertion that... | |
| 1870 - 770 pages
...have some rights — but to show that the " rights of women must stand or fall with those of men ; derived as they are from the same authority ; involved in the same axiom ; demonstrated by the same argument." Much more could be said in defence of the assertion that... | |
| Henry Fawcett, Dame Millicent Garrett Fawcett - Business & Economics - 1872 - 392 pages
...willing to concede that, — but to "show that the rights of women must stand or fall with those of men; derived as they are from the same authority; involved in the same axiom; demonstrated by the same argument." Much more could be said in defence of the assertion that... | |
| Mary Putnam Jacobi - Feminism - 1894 - 246 pages
...philosopher. " Thus it has been shown that the rights of women must stand or fall with those of men, derived as they are from the same authority, involved in the same axiom, demonstrated by the same argument. That the law of equal freedom applies alike to both sexes... | |
| Kate Trimble Woolsey - Representative government and representation - 1903 - 200 pages
...staunchest advocates of democracy who ever lived, confessed the following to a gentleman in his latter days. "Strange as it may sound I fear our republic will...nurtures sex-prejudice — the prejudice of men in go favor of men against woman, a prejudice compared with which that of race or class is of trifling... | |
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