| Education - 1869 - 544 pages
...of our civilization — resulting mainly from our neglect to train and develop more thoroughly the sympathetic feelings and moral faculties of our nature,...important superiority over the better class of savages. " Many of the purely scientific results of Mr. Wallace's travels had already been made public through... | |
| Education - 1869 - 614 pages
...of our civilization — resulting mainly from our neglect to train and develop more thoroughly the sympathetic feelings and moral faculties of our nature,...important superiority over the better class of savages. " Many of the purely scientific results of Mr. Wallace's travels had already been made public through... | |
| Education - 1869 - 860 pages
...failure of our civilization— resulting mainly from our neglect to train and develop more thoroughly the sympathetic feelings and moral faculties of our nature,...our legislation, our commerce, and our whole social organization—we shall never, as regards the whole community, attain to any real or important superiority... | |
| Science - 1869 - 542 pages
...our neglect to train and develope more thoroughly the sympathetic feelings and moral faculties of onr nature, and to allow them a larger share of influence in our legislation, our commerce, and onr whole social organization ;" and until we do so " we shall never, as regards the whole community,... | |
| Francis Fisher Broune - 1872 - 522 pages
...our civilization — resulting mainly from our neglect to train and develop thoroughly Unsympathetic feelings and moral faculties of our nature, and to...our legislation, our commerce, and our whole social organiza tion — we shall never, as regards the whole community, attain to any real or important superiority... | |
| Massachusetts. State Board of Agriculture - Agriculture - 1877 - 604 pages
...resulting mainly from our neglect to train and develop more thoroughly the sympathetic feelings and the moral faculties of our nature, and to allow them a...important superiority over the better class of savages." There is food for serious reflection in all this. Our moral theories have a very exalted character,... | |
| Albert Shaw - American literature - 1899 - 890 pages
...of our civilization — resulting mainly from our neglect to train and develop more thoroughly the sympathetic feelings and moral faculties of our nature...attain to any real or important superiority over the letter class of savages. This is the lesson that Wallace was taught by his observations of uncivilized... | |
| Albert Shaw - American literature - 1899 - 788 pages
...of onr civilization — resulting mainly from our neglect to train and develop more thoroughly the sympathetic feelings and moral faculties of our nature and to allow them jv larger share of influence in our legislation, our commerce, and our whole social organization —... | |
| William N. Armstrong - Voyages around the world - 1904 - 384 pages
...of this failure of our civilisation, we shall never, as regards the whole community, attain any real important superiority over the better class of savages...the lesson I have been taught by my observations of uncivilised man." "General" William Booth wrote: " More minute, patient, intelligent observation has... | |
| Edward Carpenter - Civilization - 1921 - 296 pages
...failure of our civilisation—resulting mainly from our neglect to train and develop more thoroughly the sympathetic feelings and moral faculties of our nature,...our legislation, our commerce, and our whole social organisation—we shall never, as regards the whole community, attain to any real or important superiority... | |
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