The Anthropological Review, 2권;6권Trübner and Company, 1868 |
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28 페이지
... truth when it brings him any profit . He tries to oppress every one who had been of use to him , as he despises gratitude , and cannot bear the idea of being under an obligation to any one . He is fit for every- thing , be it a minister ...
... truth when it brings him any profit . He tries to oppress every one who had been of use to him , as he despises gratitude , and cannot bear the idea of being under an obligation to any one . He is fit for every- thing , be it a minister ...
29 페이지
... truth . Ever since the poet Sadi sang " A lie for a good object is to be preferred to truth if it excites quarrels , " every untruth is considered as a necessary lie . The Persian certainly does not insist on being believed . It is a ...
... truth . Ever since the poet Sadi sang " A lie for a good object is to be preferred to truth if it excites quarrels , " every untruth is considered as a necessary lie . The Persian certainly does not insist on being believed . It is a ...
33 페이지
... truth in it . The Jews speak a patois intermixed with old Persian . They are , moreover , the only race in Persia using hissing sounds , which the Persian is quite unable to produce . They gesticulate much with the hands and the facial ...
... truth in it . The Jews speak a patois intermixed with old Persian . They are , moreover , the only race in Persia using hissing sounds , which the Persian is quite unable to produce . They gesticulate much with the hands and the facial ...
39 페이지
... truth be- comes known , but which hitherto have given rise to difficulties and dissidence . The naturalists also have had to contend with difficulties of the same nature , and if , after many failures , they have succeeded in giving to ...
... truth be- comes known , but which hitherto have given rise to difficulties and dissidence . The naturalists also have had to contend with difficulties of the same nature , and if , after many failures , they have succeeded in giving to ...
55 페이지
... truth , attaching much greater importance than his col- league does to the quasi - accidental variations of the form of the skull that occur in every race , as well as to the influence of certain causes of distortion , developmental ...
... truth , attaching much greater importance than his col- league does to the quasi - accidental variations of the form of the skull that occur in every race , as well as to the influence of certain causes of distortion , developmental ...
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Africa American ancient Anglo-Saxon animals anthro Anthropological Review Anthropological Society antiquity appear archæology Aryan believe bones brachycephalic brain British Association Celt Celtic character civilisation climate colour condition considered Council crania craniology cranium Crawfurd Darwin discussion distinct dolichocephalic doubt Dundee England English epiglottis Ethnological Society Europe European existence fact faculties female German Greek Hunt idea implements important Indian influence inhabitants intellectual interesting Irish JAMES HUNT Knox labour language mankind matter meeting ment mental mind nations native nature Negro never object observed opinion organ organisation origin paper peculiar period phrenology physical possess present President Professor Huxley prognathism question race racter regard remarks resemblance respect Roderick Murchison savage Saxon scientific Sir John Lubbock skull Society of London species stone sutures temporal squama Teutonic theory thought tion tribes truth Turanian words
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xxii 페이지 - In her family, in her court, in her kingdom, she remained equally mistress: the force of the tender passions was great over her, but the force of her mind was still superior; and the combat which her victory visibly cost her, serves only to display the firmness of her resolution, and the loftiness of her ambitious sentiments.
410 페이지 - Of the cave men of Les Eyzies, who were undoubtedly contemporary with the reindeer in the South of France, Professor Paul Broca says...
273 페이지 - Europeans is necessary to instruct them, but the approach of Europeans corrupts and repels them into savage life ; they refuse to change their habits as long as their solitudes are their own, and it is too late to change them when they are constrained to submit.
138 페이지 - A naughty person, a wicked man, walketh with a froward mouth. He winketh with his eyes, he speaketh with his feet, he teacheth with his fingers; Frowardness is in his heart, he deviseth mischief continually; he soweth discord.
273 페이지 - States have accomplished this twofold purpose with singular felicity, tranquilly, legally, philanthropically, without shedding blood, and without violating a single great principle of morality in the eyes of the world.* It is impossible to destroy men with more respect for the laws of humanity.
186 페이지 - Look at Wales, look at Caledonia ; it is ever the same. The race must be forced from the soil ; by fair means, if possible ; still they must leave.
6 페이지 - Pottery is very indestructible ; when used at all, it is always abundant, and it possesses two qualities — those, namely, of being easy to break and yet difficult to destroy, which render it very valuable in an archaeological point of view. Moreover it is, in most cases, associated with burials. It is therefore a very significant fact, that no fragment of pottery has ever been found in Australia, New Zealand, or the Polynesian Islands. It seems to me extremely improbable that an art so easy and...
6 페이지 - Moreover it is, in most cases, associated with burials. It is therefore a very significant fact, that no fragment of pottery has ever been found in Australia, New Zealand, or the Polynesian Islands. It seems to me extremely improbable that an art so easy and so useful should ever have been lost by any race of men. Moreover, this argument applies to several other arts and instruments. I will mention only two, though several others might be brought forward. The art of spinning and the use of the bow...
370 페이지 - I was two years among the Ahts, with my mind constantly directed towards the subject of their religious beliefs, before I could discover that they possessed any ideas as to an overruling power or a future state of existence. The traders on the coast, and other persons well acquainted with the people, told me that they had no such ideas, and this opinion was confirmed by conversation with many of the less intelligent savages ; but at last I succeeded in getting a satisfactory clue.
195 페이지 - ... living state, then also ought this science to be able, by availing itself of the same comparative method, to collect the remains of human races long since passed away, and of the works which they...