In order that primeval men, or the ape-like progenitors of man, should have become social, they must have acquired the same instinctive feelings which impel other animals to live in a body; and they no doubt exhibited the same general disposition. They... The Really Hard Problem: Meaning in a Material World - Page 45by Owen Flanagan - 2009 - 304 pagesLimited preview - About this book
| Charles Darwin - Evolution - 1871 - 468 pages
...which impel other animals to live in a body; and they no doubt exhibited the same general disposition. They would have felt uneasy when separated from their...implies some degree of sympathy, fidelity, and courage. Such social qualities, the paramount importance of which to the lower animals is disputed by no one,... | |
| Charles Darwin - 1871 - 432 pages
...which impel other animals to lire in a body ; and they no doubt exhibited the same general disposition. They would have felt uneasy when separated from their comrades, for whom they would have * I hare given instances in my ' Variation of Animals under Domestication,' vol. U. p. 196. felt some... | |
| Richard Travers Smith - Apologetics - 1876 - 256 pages
...92. impel other animals to live in a body ; and no doubt, exhibiting the same general disposition, would have felt uneasy when separated from their comrades,...for whom they would have felt some degree of love; would have warned each other of danger, and given mutual aid in attack or defence. All this implies... | |
| Charles Staniland Wake - Ethics - 1878 - 536 pages
...which impel other animals to live in a body ; and they no doubt exhibited the same general disposition. They would have felt uneasy when separated from their...implies some degree of sympathy, fidelity, and courage." 1 In another place, when speaking of sexual selection, Mr Darwin says that in primeval times man would... | |
| Charles Darwin - Science - 1896 - 890 pages
...live in a body ; and they no doubt exhibited the same general disposition. They would have felt tmeasy when separated from their comrades, for whom they...implies some degree of sympathy, fidelity, and courage. Such social qualities, the paramount importance of which to the lower animals is disputed by no one,... | |
| THOMAS G GENTRY - 1900 - 566 pages
...body, and they doubtless exhibited the same general disposition. When separated from their companions, for whom they would have felt some degree of love, they would have experienced a feeling of uneasiness. They would have warned each other of danger, and have given mutual... | |
| Thomas George Gentry - Animal behavior - 1900 - 532 pages
...body, and they doubtless exhibited the same general disposition. When separated from their companions, for whom they would have felt some degree of love, they would have experienced a feeling of uneasiness. They would have warned each other of danger, and have given mutual... | |
| 1905 - 462 pages
...which impel other animals to live in a body; and they no doubt exhibited the same general disposition. They would have felt uneasy when separated from their...implies some degree of sympathy', fidelity, and courage. Such social qualities, the paramount importance of which to the lower animals is disputed by no one,... | |
| George William Nasmyth - Evolution - 1916 - 458 pages
...which impel other animals to live in a body; and they no doubt exhibited the same general disposition. They would have felt uneasy when separated from their...implies some degree of sympathy, fidelity, and courage. Such social qualities, the paramount importance of which 1 The Descent of Man, pp. 120-21. 10 to the... | |
| Thomas Nixon Carver, Henry Bass Hall - Sociology - 1923 - 326 pages
...which impel other animals to live in a body; and they no doubt exhibited the same general disposition. They would have felt uneasy when separated from their...of danger, and have given mutual aid in attack or defense. All this implies some degree of sympathy, fidelity, and courage. Such social qualities, the... | |
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