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" I here apply to America may indeed be addressed to almost all our contemporaries. Variety is disappearing from the human race ; the same ways of acting, thinking, and feeling are to be met with all over the world. "
The Economy of the Earth: Philosophy, Law, and the Environment - Page 150
by Mark Sagoff - 2007
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Democracy in America, Volume 4

Alexis de Tocqueville - Democracy - 1840 - 676 pages
...lives. The remark I here apply to America may indeed be addressed to almost all our contemporaries. Variety is disappearing from the human race ; the...only because nations work more upon each other, and are more faithful in their mutual imitation ; but as the men of each country relinquish more and more...
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The Republic of the United States of America: And Its Political Institutions ...

Alexis de Tocqueville - Democracy - 1851 - 954 pages
...lives. The remark I here apply to America may indeed be addressed to almost all our contemporaries. Variety is disappearing from the human race ; the...only because nations work more upon each other, and are more faithful in their mutual imitation ; but as the men of each country relinquish more and more...
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Democracy in America, Volume 2

Alexis de Tocqueville - Democracy - 1862 - 526 pages
...lives. The remark I here apply to America may indeed be addressed to almost all our contemporaries. Variety is disappearing from the human race ; the...more the peculiar opinions and feelings of a caste, a profession, or a family, they simultaneously arrive at something nearer to the constitution of man,...
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Democracy in America, tr. by H. Reeve, Volume 1

Alexis Henri C.M. Clérel comte de Tocqueville - 1862 - 456 pages
...lives. The remark I here apply to America may indeed be addressed to almost all our contemporaries. Variety is disappearing from the human race ; the...only because nations work more upon each other, and are more faithful in their mutual imitation ; but as the men of each country relinquish more and more...
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Democracy in America, Volume 2

Alexis de Tocqueville - Democracy - 1863 - 522 pages
...lives. The remark I here apply to America may indeed be addressed to almost all our contemporaries. Variety is disappearing from the human race; the same ways of acting, dunking, and feeling are to be met with all over the world. This is not only because nations work more...
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The World's Great Classics: Democracy in America, by A. de Tocqueville

Timothy Dwight, Julian Hawthorne - Literature - 1899 - 452 pages
...lives. The remark I here apply to America may indeed be addressed to almost all our contemporaries. Variety is disappearing from the human race ; the...only because nations work more upon each other, and are more faithful in their mutual imitation ; but as the men of each country relinquish more and more...
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Diogenes, Issues 33-36

Electronic journals - 1961 - 612 pages
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The Character of Americans: A Book of Readings

Michael McGiffert - National characteristics, American - 1964 - 404 pages
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The American Family in Social-historical Perspective

Michael Gordon - Families - 1973 - 450 pages
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Understanding: A Phenomenological-Pragmatic Analysis

Gary Brent Madison - History - 1982 - 376 pages
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