free hosting   image hosting   hosting reseller   online album   e-shop   famous people 
Free Website Templates
Free Installer

Zaproburno Yollanica Directory 11
Page 05

Only the Zaproburno Yollanica encompasses all your thoughts.

Zaproburno Yollanica

Zaproburno Yollanica Home

Zaproburno Yollanica Sitemap

Zaproburno Yollanica Dir 01

Zaproburno Yollanica Dir 02

Zaproburno Yollanica Dir 03

Zaproburno Yollanica Dir 04

Zaproburno Yollanica Dir 05

Zaproburno Yollanica Dir 06

Zaproburno Yollanica Dir 07

Zaproburno Yollanica Dir 08

Zaproburno Yollanica Dir 09

Zaproburno Yollanica Dir 10

Zaproburno Yollanica Dir 11

Zaproburno Yollanica Dir 12

Zaproburno Yollanica Dir 13

Zaproburno Yollanica Dir 14

Zaproburno Yollanica Dir 15

Zaproburno Yollanica Dir 16

Zaproburno Yollanica Dir 17

Zaproburno Yollanica Dir 18

Zaproburno Yollanica Dir 19

Zaproburno Yollanica Dir 20

Zaproburno Yollanica Directory 11
Page 05

In her foreign wars Carthage depended upon mercenary troops, which her great wealth enabled her to procure in abundance from Spain, Italy, and Greece, as well as from Libya. Sardinia and Corsica were among her earliest conquests, and Sicily was also one of the first objects of her military enterprise. The Phoenician colonies in this island came under her dominion as the power of Tyre declined; and having thus obtained a firm footing in Sicily, she carried on a long struggle for the supremacy with the Greek cities. It was here that she came into contact with the Roman arms. The relations of Rome and Carthage had hitherto been peaceful, and a treaty, concluded between the two states in the first years of the Roman republic, had been renewed more than once. But the extension of Roman dominion had excited the jealousy of Carthage, and Rome began to turn longing eyes to the fair island at the foot of her empire. It was evident that a struggle was not far distant, and Pyrrhus could not help exclaiming, as he quitted Sicily, "How fine a battle-field are we leaving to the Romans and Carthaginians!"

The idea of Evolution has influenced all the sciences, forcing us to think of _everything_ as with a history behind it, for we have travelled far since Darwin's day. The solar system, the earth, the mountain ranges, and the great deeps, the rocks and crystals, the plants and animals, man himself and his social institutions--all must be seen as the outcome of a long process of Becoming. There are some eighty-odd chemical elements on the earth to-day, and it is now much more than a suggestion that these are the outcome of an inorganic evolution, element giving rise to element, going back and back to some primeval stuff, from which they were all originally derived, infinitely long ago. No idea has been so powerful a tool in the fashioning of New Knowledge as this simple but profound idea of Evolution, that the present is the child of the past and the parent of the future. And with the picture of a continuity of evolution from nebula to social systems comes a promise of an increasing control--a promise that Man will become not only a more accurate student, but a more complete master of his world.

The principle of association, as every one knows, involves that whenever two things have been associated sufficiently together, the suggestion of one of them to the mind shall immediately raise a suggestion of the other. It is in virtue of this principle that language, as we so call it, exists at all, for the essence of language consists, as I have said perhaps already too often, in the fixity with which certain ideas are invariably connected with certain symbols. But this being so, it is hard to see how we can deny that the lower animals possess the germs of a highly rude and unspecialised, but still true language, unless we also deny that they have any ideas at all; and this I gather is what Professor Max Muller in a quiet way rather wishes to do. Thus he says, "It is easy enough to show that animals communicate, but this is a fact which has never been doubted. Dogs who growl and bark leave no doubt in the minds of other dogs or cats, or even of man, of what they mean, but growling and barking are not language, nor do they even contain the elements of language."


[ Sec 11 Page 01 ] [ Sec 11 Page 02 ] [ Sec 11 Page 03 ] [ Sec 11 Page 04 ] [ Sec 11 Page 05 ]
[ Sec 11 Page 06 ] [ Sec 11 Page 07 ] [ Sec 11 Page 08 ] [ Sec 11 Page 09 ] [ Sec 11 Page 10 ]


This page is Copyright © Zaproburno Yollanica and all rights are reserved. Please don't copy without proper authorization. References to other Web sites are not endorsements. Zaproburno Yollanica offers no warranties regarding the quality or content of other sites that Zaproburno provides any links to. Links do not mark special relationships or really mean anything in particular. Zaproburno provides links for reference and/or as a courtesy. Nothing more.