... their common defence. It is no argument against savage man being a social animal, that the tribes inhabiting adjacent districts are almost always at war with each other; for the social instincts never extend to all the individuals of the same species.... The History of Human Marriage - Page 43by Edward Westermarck - 1894 - 644 lehteFull view - About this book
| Charles Darwin - 1871 - 432 lehte
...never extend to all the individuals of the same species. Judging from the analogy of the greater number of the Quadrumana, it is probable that the early apelike progenitors of man were likewise social; but this is not of much importance for us. Although man, as he now exists. has few special... | |
| Charles Darwin - 1871 - 554 lehte
...extend .to all the individuals of the same species. Judging from the analogy of the greater number of the Quadrumana, it is probable that the early ape-like progenitors of man were likewise social ; but this is not of much importance for us. Although man, as he now •exists, has few special... | |
| 1871 - 488 lehte
...assumed as proven in dozens of passages scattered throughout the volumes before me ; for instance — " It is probable that the early ape-like progenitors of man were likewise social" (vol. ip 85) : again, " the social instincts which must have been acquired by man in a very... | |
| Charles Darwin - 1896 - 890 lehte
...with each other ; for the social instincts never extend to all the individuals of the same species. Judging from the analogy of the majority of the Quadrumana,...the early ape-like progenitors of man were likewise social ; but this is not of much importance for us. Although man, as 11 This fact, the Rev. L. Jenyns... | |
| William Prall - 1900 - 282 lehte
...children, and often also of their next descendants, is a universal institution among existing peoples. And it seems extremely probable that, among our earliest...not the society itself, at least the nucleus of it." l And again, he says, " I do not, of course, deny that the tie which bound the children to the mother... | |
| 1905 - 462 lehte
...with each other; for the social instincts never extend to all the individuals of the same species. Judging from the analogy of the majority of the Quadrumana,...the early ape-like progenitors of man were likewise social; but this is not of much importance for us. Although man, as he now exists, has few special... | |
| William Isaac Thomas - 1909 - 956 lehte
...children, and often also their next descendants, is a universal institution among existing peoples. And it seems extremely probable that, among our earliest...remarks, "Judging from the analogy of the majority of the Cuadrumana, it is probable that the early ape-like progenitors of man were likewise social." But it... | |
| George William Nasmyth - 1916 - 458 lehte
...same district. Such families occasionally meet in council, and unite for their common defence. . . . Judging from the analogy of the majority of the Quadrumana,...the early ape-like progenitors of man were likewise social.1 According to the distorted social Darwinism, force is the basis of society, but in the true... | |
| Alfred Seabold Eli Ackermann - 1923 - 1010 lehte
...... primeval men, and even their ape-like progenitors, probably lived in society." ; p. 166, " ... it is probable that the early ape-like progenitors of man were likewise social ; " ; p. 239, " And as man from a genealogical point of view belongs to the Catarhine or Old... | |
| Francis Fisher Browne - 1892 - 466 lehte
...evidence for the notion that promiscuity ever formed a general stage in the social history of mankind It seems extremely probable that, among our earliest...not the society itself, at least the nucleus of it. .' . All the evidence we possess tends to show that, among our earliest human ancestors, the family,... | |
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