The Plurality of the Human Race |
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Page 7
... regards anthropology . We mean those very honourable sentiments about equality and confraternity which an honest heart will feel towards all men , whatever may be their origin , whatever the colour of their skin , but of which the ...
... regards anthropology . We mean those very honourable sentiments about equality and confraternity which an honest heart will feel towards all men , whatever may be their origin , whatever the colour of their skin , but of which the ...
Page 15
... regards any ulterior phenomenon , resulting from the observation of beings who have not been of necessity created in this order , is true not only of the physical , but also of the intellectual world . Shall we desire to know what man ...
... regards any ulterior phenomenon , resulting from the observation of beings who have not been of necessity created in this order , is true not only of the physical , but also of the intellectual world . Shall we desire to know what man ...
Page 19
... regard to this , facts have often spoken for a long time , and the savant , whose testimony in * M. Ehrenberg , speaking one day of the unknown centre of Africa , said to us , " that it might not be impossible to find there men so ...
... regard to this , facts have often spoken for a long time , and the savant , whose testimony in * M. Ehrenberg , speaking one day of the unknown centre of Africa , said to us , " that it might not be impossible to find there men so ...
Page 23
... regard as general , is often restricted to one race alone amongst mankind , and limited in space by the boundaries of the con- tinent occupied by this race . And now we see how anthropo- logy in her turn , can , in all these points ...
... regard as general , is often restricted to one race alone amongst mankind , and limited in space by the boundaries of the con- tinent occupied by this race . And now we see how anthropo- logy in her turn , can , in all these points ...
Page 30
... regards a stranger , merely a succession of sounds , like the song of a nightingale ; a naval telegram is only an assemblage and a combination of colours like an arabesque , united the moment when the necessary arrangement forms these ...
... regards a stranger , merely a succession of sounds , like the song of a nightingale ; a naval telegram is only an assemblage and a combination of colours like an arabesque , united the moment when the necessary arrangement forms these ...
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Common terms and phrases
able admit Africa anatomical ancient animals Anthropological Society anthropology anthropomorphous apes Barthélemy Saint-Hilaire believe Bimana Buffon Carter Blake Celtic Nations characteristics civilisation classification climate colour Compare Craniology Cuvier Darwin Descartes descendants distinct doubtless earth endeavoured entirely Esquimaux Étienne Geoffroy exist fact Flourens genus homo give globe hair Histoire Naturelle Générale human kingdom human race hybridity ideas inferior influence inhabitants intellect Isidore Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire Jacob Grimm James Hunt l'Espèce Humaine Lamarck language less London mammalia manner means medium Mémoires merely mind monogenists moral nature observation opinion organic origin Origin of Species ourselves Paris phenomena philosopher polygenists Pouchet present day produce prove quadrumana Quatrefages question Races Humaines races of mankind regards religion remains remark seems Semitic skull Société d'Anthropologie species theory tion transl truth unity varieties vertebrata whilst yellow fever
Popular passages
Page 120 - I believe that animals have descended from at most only four or five progenitors, and plants from an equal or lesser number.
Page 144 - Vitruvius £lib. ii. cap. i.], that the first Men lived, for some time, in woods and caves, after the manner of beasts, uttering only confused and indistinct noises ; till associating for mutual assistance, they came, by degrees, to use articulate sounds, mutually agreed upon, for the arbitrary signs or marks of those ideas in the mind of the speaker, which he wanted to communicate to the hearer. Hence the diversity of languages ; for it is confessed on all hands, that speech is not innate.
Page 71 - I could not doubt, as numerous traits of their conduct show; but beyond this I could satisfy myself of nothing; nor did these efforts and many more enable me to conjecture aught...
Page 38 - Not being able to appreciate or conceive of the distinction between the psychical phenomena of a Chimpanzee and of a Boschisman or of an Aztec, with arrested brain growth, as being of a nature so essential as to preclude a comparison between them, or as being other than a difference of degree, I cannot shut my eyes to the significance of that all-pervading similitude of structure — every tooth, every bone, strictly...
Page 79 - The problem of the common origin of languages has no necessary connection with the problem of the common origin of mankind. . . . .The science of language and the science of Ethnology have both suffered most severely from being mixed up together. The classification of races and languages, should be quite independent of each other.
Page 43 - London. 13. We are told by Pyrard, that the Ouran-Outangs are found at Sierra Leona ; where they are strong and well formed, and so industrious, that, when properly trained and fed, they work like servants ; that, when ordered, they pound...