| Charles Darwin - 1871 - 432 pages
...life for the good of others, yet was roused to such actions by a sense of glory, would by his example excite the same wish for glory in other men, and would...with a tendency to inherit his own high character. With increased experience and reason, man perceives the more remote consequences of his actions, and... | |
| Charles Darwin - Evolution - 1871 - 468 pages
...life for the good of others, yet was roused to such actions by a sense of glory, would by his example excite the same wish for glory in other men, and would...with a tendency to inherit his own high character. With increased experience and reason, man perceives the more remote consequences of his actions, and... | |
| Charles Darwin - Evolution - 1874 - 840 pages
...would by his example excite the same wish for glory in other men, and would strengthen by exereise the noble feeling of admiration. He might thus do...with a tendency to inherit his own high character. With increased experience and reason, man pereeives the more remote consequences of his actions, and... | |
| St. George Jackson Mivart - Philosophy and religion - 1876 - 492 pages
...life for the good of others, yet was roused to such actions by a sense of glory, would by his example excite the same wish for glory in other men, and would...with a tendency to inherit his own high character." Also:*— " Great lawgivers, the founders of beneficent religions, great philosophers and discoverers... | |
| St. George Jackson Mivart - Matter - 1876 - 488 pages
...would by his example excite the same wish for glory in other men, and would strengthen by exorcise the noble feeling of admiration. " He might thus do...with a tendency to inherit his own high character." Also :*" Great lawgivers, the founders of beneficent religions, great philosophers and discoverers... | |
| St. George Jackson Mivart - Matter - 1876 - 486 pages
...and would strengthen by exercise the noble feeling of admiration. " He might thus do far more good io his tribe than by begetting offspring with a tendency to inherit his own high character." Also :*" Great lawgivers, the founders of beneficent religions, great philosophers and discoverers... | |
| David George Ritchie - Evolution - 1889 - 140 pages
...good of others, yet was \ I L . _ roused to such action by a sense of glory, would by his . example excite the same wish for glory in other men, and would...with a tendency to inherit his own high character." (Descent of Man, p. 132). "Great lawgivers, the founders of beneficent religions, great philosophers... | |
| Charles Darwin - Science - 1896 - 890 pages
...his example excite the same wish for glory in other men, and would strengthen by exercise the nobla feeling of admiration. He might thus do far more good...with a tendency to inherit his own high character. With increased experience and reason, man perceives the more remote consequences of his actions, and... | |
| Daniel Garrison Brinton - Ethnopsychology - 1902 - 268 pages
...peoples. With the latter, as is obvious from the literature, the erotic feeling is an enduring and overmastering passion, colouring the intelligence...the truth of science or to the welfare of the race ! Feminism. — The physical contrast of the sexes belongs to all mammals, to birds, and to most of... | |
| Daniel Garrison Brinton - Ethnopsychology - 1902 - 236 pages
...peoples. With the latter, as is obvious from the literature, the erotic feeling is an enduring and overmastering passion, colouring the intelligence...the truth of science or to the welfare of the race ! Feminism. — The physical contrast of the sexes belongs to all mammals, to birds, and to most of... | |
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