Man's Behavior: An Introduction to Social ScienceMacmillan, 1967 - 617 стор. |
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Результати 1-3 із 55
Сторінка 173
... environment and heredity . Through heredity the individual is endowed with a large set of potentialities , but it is through environmental action upon these potentialities that his actual traits and characteristics are made manifest ...
... environment and heredity . Through heredity the individual is endowed with a large set of potentialities , but it is through environmental action upon these potentialities that his actual traits and characteristics are made manifest ...
Сторінка 505
... environment have revo- lutionized the environmental role in civilization . Today , any small town may find itself in touch with civilization and the physical environment of almost any other spot in the world , thus partially freeing ...
... environment have revo- lutionized the environmental role in civilization . Today , any small town may find itself in touch with civilization and the physical environment of almost any other spot in the world , thus partially freeing ...
Сторінка 561
... environment . When the challenge from the external environment is met , the civilization is started on its way . Suc- ceeding challenges are social and internal rather than physical and ex- ternal , and represent the problems of an ...
... environment . When the challenge from the external environment is met , the civilization is started on its way . Suc- ceeding challenges are social and internal rather than physical and ex- ternal , and represent the problems of an ...
Зміст
THE SEARCH FOR THE MEANING OF SOCIETY | 33 |
HOW HUMAN SOCIETIES OPERATE AND GROW | 59 |
MAN AND CULTURE HOW | 85 |
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activities Adam Smith Africa American appear areas assumed attitudes automation become behavior believed biological birth cent century child cial civilization concept culture democracy democratic dictatorship dominant Durkheim E. H. Carr economic elements environment example existence fact factors forces freedom functions growth ideal ideas important increase individual industrial Industrial Revolution institutions invention Karl Marx labor laissez-faire living man's marriage Marx mass mass society means ment Middletown million modern Montesquieu moral nature Negro nomic organization patterns person Physiocrats political population possible potlatch primitive problems production race racial regarded relations relationships religion result Revolution role Ruth Benedict Sedna social change social class social science social scientists status structure suicide tend theory tion totalitarian Toynbee traditional United urban values vidual workers York