Show Rational social progress Editor's This is an excerpt from the tee- ond place By ED L. If man's physical and cultural environment were not susceptible to and thus if there were no such stimulus as change confronting civilization or if there were no profound aspirations found in the race of men toward achieving j sublime social ideal then the world could profitably be rid of the External circumstances facing are continually being and even in the twelfth occasionally waxes From an acceptance of these obvious facts we are able to conclude that conditions social and political must ever be in a state of Our human the means we haw as a group of coping with these are established and applied at static periods of The liberal is the person among us who recognizes this relationship and formulates as his first principle that an institution is an inflexible and can rarely be perfectly correlated with the society it is expected to New institutions or modifications of the old ones are necessary complete harmony between man and his unstable environment is to be continuously maintained |