| James Matheson Thompson - 1990 - 572 pages
...administrative measures are used to impose one particular school of art or school of thought and to ban another. Questions of right and wrong in the arts and sciences...should be settled through free discussion in artistic circles and through practical work in these fields. They should not be settled in summary fashion.... | |
| Alan L. Mackay - 1991 - 312 pages
...administrative measures are used to impose one particular style of art or school of thought and to ban another. Questions of right and wrong in the arts and sciences...discussion in artistic and scientific circles and through practical work in these fields. They should not be settled in summary fashion. 48 Marxist philosophy... | |
| Suman Gupta - 2000 - 284 pages
...administrative measures are used to impose one particular style of art or school of thought and ban another. Questions of right and wrong in the arts and sciences...discussion in artistic and scientific circles and through practical work in these fields. 34 But this alluring introduction of what Mao is recommending... | |
| Mercy Kuo - 2001 - 214 pages
...respond to them. Framing a historical justification for the Hundred Flowers campaign, Mao asserted, "A period of trial is often needed to determine whether something is right or wrong. Throughout history, at the outset new and correct things often failed to win recognition from the majority... | |
| Zedong Mao - 2002 - 244 pages
...administrative measures are used to impose one particular style of art or school of thought and to ban another. Questions of right and wrong in the arts and sciences...discussion in artistic and scientific circles and through practical work in these fields. They should not be settled in an over-simple manner. A period... | |
| 1957 - 352 pages
...forms and styles in art can develop freely and different schools in science can contend freely. . . . Questions of right and wrong in the arts and sciences...free discussion in artistic and scientific circles." While all this seems to recognize a certain autonomy for science and a somewhat lesser autonomy for... | |
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