A Manual of Anthropology, Or Science of Man Based on Modern Research by Charles BrayLongmans, Green, Reader and Dyer, 1871 - 358 pages |
From inside the book
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Page v
... appear to have existed between Cuvier and St. Hilaire ; as Mr. Lecky ob- serves , in his " History of European Morals , " " in the eyes of both the philanthropist and the philosopher , the greatest of all results to be expected in this ...
... appear to have existed between Cuvier and St. Hilaire ; as Mr. Lecky ob- serves , in his " History of European Morals , " " in the eyes of both the philanthropist and the philosopher , the greatest of all results to be expected in this ...
Page vii
... appear to be still in the dark as to whether the part the brain has to play is that of a pot of pomatum - its function , according to the barber , being to " percolate through the skull and nourish the roots of the hair " . ' -or to ...
... appear to be still in the dark as to whether the part the brain has to play is that of a pot of pomatum - its function , according to the barber , being to " percolate through the skull and nourish the roots of the hair " . ' -or to ...
Page xii
... appear to be their legitimate conclusions , although it may perhaps take the labours of another genera- tion of workers to test and verify the deductions that have been here made . This task has been done without dread of the ...
... appear to be their legitimate conclusions , although it may perhaps take the labours of another genera- tion of workers to test and verify the deductions that have been here made . This task has been done without dread of the ...
Page xiii
... appear in language as there is in that which speech is supposed to represent . It has also been said that the doctrines here propounded tend to lower our ideal . This also may be partially true , but our real good will be found in the ...
... appear in language as there is in that which speech is supposed to represent . It has also been said that the doctrines here propounded tend to lower our ideal . This also may be partially true , but our real good will be found in the ...
Page xxi
... appear in this consciousness . Our road lies , therefore , from metaphysics to physics , and not from physics to metaphysics , for the world is created in the mind by our forms of thought , " which " forms " are dependent upon the ...
... appear in this consciousness . Our road lies , therefore , from metaphysics to physics , and not from physics to metaphysics , for the world is created in the mind by our forms of thought , " which " forms " are dependent upon the ...
Common terms and phrases
according animals anthropomorphic Atheism bodily body brain called cause civilisation colour consciousness consequences creation creatures creed Darwin death depends doubt duty earth effect enjoyment equally evil existence external fact faculties feeling force functions George Combe give happiness heat Hegel Henry Maudsley Herbert Spencer human Huxley ideas increase individual infinite instinct intellectual intelligence J. S. Mill labour larvæ living man's manifestation matter Max Müller ment mental millions mind modes of action moral motion Natural Selection Neil Arnott nervous system object opinion organ organisation pain Pall Mall Gazette passed persons phenomena Philosophy Phrenology physical Physiology pleasure present principle probably produce Prof proportion race recognised relation Religion requires result says sense Sir John Lubbock social society soul Spinoza spirit supposed tells things thought tion tissue truth unity universe wants whole