American Anthropologist, Volumen1American Anthropological Association, 1888 |
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Página 3
... race would increase as 1 , 2 , 4 , 8 , 16 , 32 , 64 , 128 , 256 in the course of two hundred years ; and in case food should increase during the same period only as 1 , 2 , 3 , 4 , 5 , 6 , 7 , 8 , 9 , would follow that at the end of ...
... race would increase as 1 , 2 , 4 , 8 , 16 , 32 , 64 , 128 , 256 in the course of two hundred years ; and in case food should increase during the same period only as 1 , 2 , 3 , 4 , 5 , 6 , 7 , 8 , 9 , would follow that at the end of ...
Página 6
... race ; or that he was a reactionary politician - in politics he was a liberal Whig . It has , indeed , been charged that he favored the slave - trade as an economic expedient justified by the necessities of population in Europe . In ...
... race ; or that he was a reactionary politician - in politics he was a liberal Whig . It has , indeed , been charged that he favored the slave - trade as an economic expedient justified by the necessities of population in Europe . In ...
Página 10
... race may be cited to show , as indeed Malthus is frank to admit , that there are causes from without , in nature , which conspire with causes from within , in the mind of man , to break the cast - iron moulds of a stationary state in ...
... race may be cited to show , as indeed Malthus is frank to admit , that there are causes from without , in nature , which conspire with causes from within , in the mind of man , to break the cast - iron moulds of a stationary state in ...
Página 12
... race in its file - leaders is darkly striving to - day , and striving darkly because it has not yet caught the teleologic principles which should be the guides of its rational selections in social science , and so it suffers itself , in ...
... race in its file - leaders is darkly striving to - day , and striving darkly because it has not yet caught the teleologic principles which should be the guides of its rational selections in social science , and so it suffers itself , in ...
Página 13
... race if he had followed their advice . The request was in entire keeping with the social status of savagery . The maxim of savagery is " kill and let kill , " for this with savages is at once the law of self - preservation and of nature ...
... race if he had followed their advice . The request was in entire keeping with the social status of savagery . The maxim of savagery is " kill and let kill , " for this with savages is at once the law of self - preservation and of nature ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Términos y frases comunes
Adostcisde American animal Anthropological appear barbarism bikic black wand opens blackberry wine blue wand opens body Chane-abal character Chiapas civilization clepsydra climbs up returning Comitan competition copper Ctesibius culture customs daqonikade binakade developed dialects earth endeavor Eskimos evolution fact fingers go out returning Greenland hand hatchets human Indians indicated invention Iroquoian Iroquois jadeite known labor Lake Lake Superior language living lodge Malthus mankind means Mede Mede'win Medicine Lodge mountains Nagaynezgani nations natives natural selection nature Navajo nephrite objects observed Ojibwa organization origin persons plants Point Barrow population Prof progress race REGULAR MEETING represents ring river Roman sake he arrives savage savagery Siberia side thereof social Society stone street N. W. struggle for existence Thobajischeni THOMAS HAMPSON time-keeper tion tobacco tribes vocabulary water clock word Nagenezgani
Pasajes populares
Página 60 - Not poppy, nor mandragora, Nor all the drowsy syrups of the world, Shall ever medicine thee to that sweet sleep Which thou ow'dst yesterday.
Página 107 - Every child is born destitute of things possessed in manhood which distinguish him from the lower animals. Of all industries he is artless; of all institutions he is lawless; of all languages he is speechless; of all philosophies he is opinionless; of all reasoning he is thoughtless; but arts, institutions, languages, opinions and mentations he acquires as the years go by from childhood to manhood. In all these respects the new-born babe is hardly the peer of the new-born beast; but as the years...
Página 308 - Every one is now familiar with the general nature of animal economics. It is the survival of the fittest in the struggle for existence.
Página 4 - In two centuries the population would be to the means of subsistence as 256 to 9; in three centuries as 4,096 to 13, and in two thousand years the difference would be almost incalculable.
Página 107 - ... the great classes of activities, until the distance by which he is separated from the brute is so great that his realm of existence is in another kingdom of nature.1 Human progress is possible because of the long period of infancy of the human being.
Página 15 - Every obstruction to a free exchange is born of the same narrow despotic spirit which planted castles upon the Rhine to plunder peaceful commerce. Every obstruction to commerce is a tax upon consumption ; every facility to a free exchange cheapens commodities, increases trade and production, and promotes civilization.
Página 224 - Pointe, and here, long before the pale face appeared among them, it was practiced in its purest and most original form. Many of our fathers lived the full term of life granted to mankind by the Great Spirit, and the forms of many old people were mingled with each rising generation. This, my grandson, is the meaning of the words you did not understand; they have been repeated to us by our fathers for many generations.
Página 42 - ... failed to warn him of the hour — to dine. Then sturdy Romans sauntered through the Forum. Fat, hale, content ; for trouble ne'er came o'er them. But now these cursed dials show their faces, All over Rome, in streets and public places; And men, to know the hour, the cold stone question, That lias no heart, no stomach, no digestion.
Página 83 - The Finger on which this Ring is to be worn is the fourth Finger of the left hand, next unto the little Finger ; because by the received Opinion of the Learned and Experienced in Ripping up, and anatomizing...
Página 295 - Chickamy, chickamy, cramery, crow, I went to the well to wash my toe, When I came back my chicken was gone. Pausing before the fire-builder, the mother asks, in continuation of the song, "What time is it, old witch?" The witch replies, "One o'clock.