| Charles Horton Cooley - 1909 - 452 Seiten
...year, live in fellow* The History of Human Marriage. t A History of Matrimonial Institutions. 24 ships in which their sympathy, ambition and honor are engaged...civilizations of the continent of Europe form self-governing play-groups with almost equal readiness. Thus Miss Jane Addams, after pointing out that the "gang"... | |
| Charles Horton Cooley - 1909 - 464 Seiten
...boys of injustice and even cruelty, rather than appeal from their fellows to parents or teachers—as, for instance, in the hazing so prevalent at schools,...civilizations of the continent of Europe form self-governing play-groups with almost equal readiness. Thus Miss Jane Addams, after pointing out that the "gang"... | |
| Irving King - 1912 - 456 Seiten
...development, and are accordingly a chief basis of what is universal in human nature and human j'HpaAs- The best comparative Studies of the family, such as...association, as is sometimes supposed, a trait peculiar fo EngltSfi and American boys ; since experience among our immigrant population seems to show that... | |
| Clarence Marsh Case - 1924 - 1026 Seiten
...an earlier school had led us to suppose. Nor can any one doubt the general prevalence of play-groups among children or of informal assemblies of various...civilizations of the continent of Europe form self-governing play-groups with almost equal readiness. Thus Miss Jane Addams, after pointing out that the " gang... | |
| Jerome Davis, Harry Elmer Barnes - 1927 - 1094 Seiten
...human ideals. The best comparative studies of the family, such as those of Westermarck ' or Howard, 2 show it to us as not only a universal institution,...to show that the offspring of the more restrictive 1 The History of Human Marriage. 2 A History of Matrimonial Institutions. civilizations of the continent... | |
| Frederick Elmore Lumley - 1928 - 590 Seiten
...or teachers — as, for instance, in the hazing so prevalent at schools, and so difficult, for this reason, to repress. And how elaborate the discussion,...the public opinion, how hot the ambitions in these fellowships.1 l" Social Organization," p. 24. 8. We have already said something about religion, and... | |
| Charles Horton Cooley - 1998 - 284 Seiten
...an earlier school had led us to suppose. Nor can any one doubt the general prevalence of play-groups among children or of informal assemblies of various...civilizations of the continent of Europe form self-governing play-groups with almost equal readiness. Thus Miss Jane Addams, after pointing out that the "gang"... | |
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