History of the Intellectual Development of Europe (Complete)Library of Alexandria, 1875 M01 1 - 631 páginas "At the meeting of the British Association for the Advancement of Science, held at Oxford in 1860, I read an abstract of the physiological argument contained in this work respecting the mental progress of Europe, reserving the historical evidence for subsequent publication. This volume contains that evidence. It is intended as the completion of my work on Human Physiology, in which man was treated of as an individual. In this he is considered in his social relation. But the reader will also find, I think, that it is a history of the progress of ideas and opinions from a point of view heretofore almost entirely neglected. There are two methods of dealing with philosophical questions--the literary and the scientific. Many things which in a purely literary treatment of the subject remain in the background, spontaneously assume a more striking position when their scientific relations are considered. It is the latter method that I have used. Social advancement is as completely under the control of natural law as is bodily growth. The life of an individual is a miniature of the life of a nation. These propositions it is the special object of this book to demonstrate. No one, I believe, has hitherto undertaken the labor of arranging the evidence offered by the intellectual history of Europe in accordance with physiological principles, so as to illustrate the orderly progress of civilization, or collected the facts furnished by other branches of science with a view of enabling us to recognize clearly the conditions under which that progress takes place. This philosophical deficiency I have endeavored in the following pages to supply. Seen thus through the medium of physiology, history presents a new aspect to us. We gain a more just and thorough appreciation of the thoughts and motives of men in successive ages of the world"--Preface. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved). |
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John William Draper. Of past organic history the same remark may be made. The condensation of carbon from the air, and its inclusion in the strata, constitute the chief epoch in the organic And also appearances and extinctions determined ...
John William Draper. Of past organic history the same remark may be made. The condensation of carbon from the air, and its inclusion in the strata, constitute the chief epoch in the organic And also appearances and extinctions determined ...
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... the racehorse and the Shetland pony, thebantam and the Shanghai fowl, the greyhound and the poodle dog, who altogether deny that impressions can be made on species, and see in the long succession of extinct forms, the ancient ...
... the racehorse and the Shetland pony, thebantam and the Shanghai fowl, the greyhound and the poodle dog, who altogether deny that impressions can be made on species, and see in the long succession of extinct forms, the ancient ...
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John William Draper. the interstitial constituents. Particles in the individual answer to persons in the state. To the death ofparticles intheindividual answers the death of persons in the nation, of which they are the integral ...
John William Draper. the interstitial constituents. Particles in the individual answer to persons in the state. To the death ofparticles intheindividual answers the death of persons in the nation, of which they are the integral ...
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John William Draper. determined by climate; from his social state, whether in repose or motion; from the secular variations of his opinions, andthe gradual dominion of reason over society: this lessonis,that the government of the worldis ...
John William Draper. determined by climate; from his social state, whether in repose or motion; from the secular variations of his opinions, andthe gradual dominion of reason over society: this lessonis,that the government of the worldis ...
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John William Draper. Such were some of the incidents of that celebrated voyage, the story of which enchanted all Greece before the Odyssey was written. I have not space to tell of the wonders that served to decorate the geography of those ...
John William Draper. Such were some of the incidents of that celebrated voyage, the story of which enchanted all Greece before the Odyssey was written. I have not space to tell of the wonders that served to decorate the geography of those ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
A History of the Intellectual Development of Europe, Volumen2 John William Draper Vista completa - 1914 |
History of the Intellectual Development of Europe John William Draper Sin vista previa disponible - 2016 |
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