The Role of the Aged in Primitive Society |
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It seemed insufficient to show merely the presence or absence of a trait or social practice , since this would give no indication of its relative importance in the culture . To give the same rating for hunting , for example , to two ...
It seemed insufficient to show merely the presence or absence of a trait or social practice , since this would give no indication of its relative importance in the culture . To give the same rating for hunting , for example , to two ...
Página 32
The practice is reported to be fairly common for aged men in 13 tribes , and for women in 12 , and pronounced for men in 12 , and for women in 8. Therefore in 25 tribes for men and 22 for women , out of a total of 71 , or 33 for both ...
The practice is reported to be fairly common for aged men in 13 tribes , and for women in 12 , and pronounced for men in 12 , and for women in 8. Therefore in 25 tribes for men and 22 for women , out of a total of 71 , or 33 for both ...
Página 228
Both practices seem to have been associated with impermanency of ... It is mentioned in only 38 of 71 tribes ; of these it is reported as a regular practice in 7 or 8 , fairly common in 5 or 6 , rare in 4 or 5 , and nonexistent in 21.
Both practices seem to have been associated with impermanency of ... It is mentioned in only 38 of 71 tribes ; of these it is reported as a regular practice in 7 or 8 , fairly common in 5 or 6 , rare in 4 or 5 , and nonexistent in 21.
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Contenido
Research Procedure | 1 |
The Assurance of Food | 20 |
Property Rights | 36 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Términos y frases comunes
abandonment able activities aged men aged women Agriculture appear association become believed called ceremony chief child Codified laws coefficients Collection correlations council cultural custom dance death dwelling dying elders Eskimo especially family rights family support father favorable fear Fishing give hand head Herding Hunting important including seniority rights influence judges land legends live magic married Matrilineal descent Matrilineal inheritance Matrilineal succession Matrilocal residence Matripotestal family authority medicine mother natural Numbers old age old men old woman Organized priesthood ownership parents Permanency person position possessed practice present prestige priests primitive property rights Ratio received regarded relatives reported respect rights of aged shamans sharing social societies sometimes son-in-law spirits statistical subjection support of aged traits tribes usually village wife young mates younger youth