The proportional relation between two divisions of line or two dimension of a plane figure such that short : long :: long : (short + long)
1Lincoln's doctrine of the golden mean, became for once a political power.
2He was content with his ringing assertion of the golden mean.
3The golden mean, the truth, is no longer recognized or valued.
4Yet here, as so often, cannot we find a golden mean between them?
5Not puffed up in prosperity, nor shaken in adversity, always holding the golden mean.
6He easily keeps to the golden mean; he is inspired.
7You'll always have a world full of people who keep to the golden mean.
8It 's what they call the golden mean; too close, too far, we're strangers.
9To do what one could under the circumstances, was not that the golden mean?
10It is the extremes which are ever the vices; the golden mean is the virtue.
11It certainly would be convenient if this golden mean could be determined automatically and consistently.
12It was therefore necessary, for the well-being of both services, to discover the golden mean.
13The snail shell is a symbol of the golden mean and the cycles of life.
14The " golden mean" is the "high water mark" of real cultivation.
15His instinctive aversion to fanaticism found expression in a plea for the golden mean in politics.
16They are the two objectionable extremes; colonizationists and moderate slave-holders being, I suppose, the golden mean.
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Golden mean a través del tiempo
Golden mean por variante geográfica