The Evolution of Man and SocietySimon and Schuster, 1971 - 753 من الصفحات |
من داخل الكتاب
النتائج 1-3 من 96
الصفحة 52
... nature of their differen- tiation in different races , in adaptation to different and changing modes of life.1 b . The Incest Taboo The rejection of inbreeding , the incest taboo , may well have been the one nearly stable component of ...
... nature of their differen- tiation in different races , in adaptation to different and changing modes of life.1 b . The Incest Taboo The rejection of inbreeding , the incest taboo , may well have been the one nearly stable component of ...
الصفحة 72
... nature ceased to have a value for the survival of his new crop plant . Quite the reverse . The shattering of the ear ... natural propagation disappeared until the farmer had the modern wheats whose grain falls out of the beardless husks ...
... nature ceased to have a value for the survival of his new crop plant . Quite the reverse . The shattering of the ear ... natural propagation disappeared until the farmer had the modern wheats whose grain falls out of the beardless husks ...
الصفحة 546
... natural selection . So he left his readers uncertain of where he stood ; or where nature stood . Naturally therefore Marx , when he wished in 1867 to dedicate Das Kapital to Darwin , did not need to be more exact or more explicit than ...
... natural selection . So he left his readers uncertain of where he stood ; or where nature stood . Naturally therefore Marx , when he wished in 1867 to dedicate Das Kapital to Darwin , did not need to be more exact or more explicit than ...
المحتوى
THE FOUNDATIONS page | 19 |
PROVIDENT SOCIETIES | 67 |
The Eighteenth Dynasty page | 119 |
حقوق النشر | |
25 من الأقسام الأخرى غير ظاهرة
طبعات أخرى - عرض جميع المقتطفات
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
able Africa agriculture Alexander Anatolia ancient appeared army authority became become began beginning breeding brought capital caste century changed character Christian Church cities civilization colonies connected consequences continued converted course created cultivation Dynasty east effects Egypt Egyptian Empire England established Europe evidence evolution expansion followed foreign genetic governing class Greek groups hand happened human hybridization ideas India individual invaders invention Italy Jewish Jews kind kings known land language largely later less living maintained marriage married means military moved movement Muslim natural needed never numbers origin perhaps Persian political population practice priests principle probably races racial religion religious Roman Rome rulers rules seems seen selection separate slaves social society spread success third thousand took trade tribes turn western whole writing