What takes place among the labourers in a particular workhouse, takes place, for the same reason, among those of a great society.
In the first chapter, I have endeavoured to shew what are the different parts or branches into which the stock, either of an individual, or of a great society, naturally divides itself.
Great society is a community of groups, each with its own life to live, its own independence to maintain, and its own service to perform.
The individual may report for life service in many departments, through which his relation to great society must be manifested.
The great city is inevitable so long as great society insists on gigantic production and as great consumption, but the city idea is overwrought beyond its natural condition.
In this scene Wells has judged everything by his ideal of a great society, just as Conrad, faced with the same material, would have judged everything by his ideal of personal character.
In the end, of course, both these views of life come to the same thing, for you cannot have a great society which is not composed of greatly living individuals, or vice versa.
Wells is to be appeased by working through the established fact, by altering the environment in which man lives, contributing in this way to the ideal of a great society of which personal character is at once the essence and the product.
The extension of the relations of the market place to practically all aspects of life having to do with livelihood has been the outcome of the industrial revolution and the growth of Great Society.
Graham Wallas in his Great Society interprets modern society as a creation of the machine and of the artificial means of communication.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "great society" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.