Proceedings of the British Academy, Volume 7British Academy, 1976 - Humanities |
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Page 457
... human race — and that is the sense which I had in mind when I selected ' primitive man ' as the title of these remarks - it is necessary to protest against the common misuse of this expression , of which modern ethnologists in ...
... human race — and that is the sense which I had in mind when I selected ' primitive man ' as the title of these remarks - it is necessary to protest against the common misuse of this expression , of which modern ethnologists in ...
Page 494
... human trait . But it was acquired by every individual under the pressure of the conditions of life that necessarily obtained before other means of securing a liveli- hood and protection were devised by man . It illustrates the ...
... human trait . But it was acquired by every individual under the pressure of the conditions of life that necessarily obtained before other means of securing a liveli- hood and protection were devised by man . It illustrates the ...
Page 504
... human beings has adopted its social equipment . For every human being there has been provided a ready - made supply of opinions and ways of thinking and acting ; and in the vast majority of cases these have been accepted without ...
... human beings has adopted its social equipment . For every human being there has been provided a ready - made supply of opinions and ways of thinking and acting ; and in the vast majority of cases these have been accepted without ...
Contents
LIST OF FELLOWS | 12 |
OFFICERS AND COUNCIL 191617 | 17 |
AN ATTEMPT TO RECOVER THE ORIGINAL ORDER OF THE TEXT | 37 |
Copyright | |
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Abbasid Academy Ambrosiaster Anatolia appears Asia Minor Assyr Balliol beginning Bywater c'est called Cassiod Cassiodorus century Cervantes character Christian coins commentary copied Dante death doctrine Don Quixote doubt earth edition English Épinal epistles Europe evidence fact feeling France Greek Hebrew Himyarite hommes human inscriptions interpolation Islam Italian Jerome jeunes Jews Joseph Warton King later learned lectures literature Mahdi Marcionite modern Mohammed monogram mort Moslem nations nature never original Oxford Paris passages Pelagian Pelagius philosophy Phrygia Plato poem poet poetic poetry population present primitive probably Professor prologue Ps-Hier Pseudo-Jerome Pseudo-Jerome MSS race regarded Reichenau religious Roman scholars seems Semitic sense Shakespeare sheets Socrates soldat Solutrean soul spirit suggest Sumerian things thought triliteralized Turkey Turkish Turkmen Turks Vulgate Warton words writing written