The first principle of the subject is, that man can only make progress in "co-operative groups"; I might say tribes and nations, but I use the less common word because few people would at once see that tribes and nations are co-operative groups, and that... The Popular Science Monthly - Page 751909Full view - About this book
| Walter Bagehot - Citizenship - 1881 - 286 pages
...(if he ever existed in any shape which could be called man), might very easily have ceased to exist. The first principle of the subject is that man can...few people would at once see that tribes and nations we co-operative groups, and that it is their being so which makes their value ; that unless you can... | |
| Walter Bagehot - English literature - 1891 - 608 pages
...(if he ever existed in any shape which could be called man) might very easily have ceased to exist. The first principle of the subject is, that man can...bond, your society will be conquered and killed out by some other society which has such a bond. And the second principle is, that the members of such a group... | |
| Timothy Dwight, Julian Hawthorne - Literature - 1899 - 480 pages
...(if he ever existed in any shape which could be called man), might very easily have ceased to exist. The first principle of the subject is that man can...bond, your society will be conquered and killed out by some other society which has such a bond; and the second principle is that the members of such a group... | |
| Charles de Secondat baron de Montesquieu - Evolution - 1899 - 476 pages
...(if he ever existed in any shape which could be called man), might very easily have ceased to exist. The first principle of the subject is that man can...bond, your society will be conquered and killed out by some other society which has such a bond; and the second principle is that the members of such a group... | |
| Walter Bagehot - Citizenship - 1904 - 252 pages
...(if he ever existed in any shape which could be called man), might very easily have ceased to exist. The first principle of the subject is that man can only make pro( grsss in 'co-operative groups;'^! might say tribes and nations, but I use the less common word... | |
| Raymond Garfield Gettell - Political science - 1911 - 586 pages
...easily have ceased to exist. The first principle of the subject is that man can only make progress in " cooperative groups " ; . . . and that it is their...bond, your society will be conquered and killed out by some other society which has such a bond ; and the second principle is that the members of such a group... | |
| Raymond Garfield Gettell - Political science - 1911 - 620 pages
...(if he ever existed in any shape which could be called man) might very easily have ceased to exist. The first principle of the subject is that man can only make progress in " cooperative groups " ; . . . and that it is their being so which makes their value ; that unless you can make a strong... | |
| Walter Bagehot - English literature - 1915 - 272 pages
...(if he ever existed in any shape which could be called man), might very easily have ceased to exist. The first principle of the subject is that man can...bond, your society will be conquered and killed out by some other society which has such a bond ; and the second principle is that the members of such a group... | |
| Robert Goldsmith - Arbitration (International law) - 1917 - 370 pages
...co-operative society, the lowest tribe and the feeblest government, is much stronger than isolated man. The first principle of the subject is that man can only make progress in 'co-operative groups.' . . . For unless you can make a strong co-operative bond, your society will be conquered and killed... | |
| Franklin Henry Giddings - Sociology - 1922 - 328 pages
...food-getting opportunities that occur among individuals or between groups of the same species, or variety. Conflict among men of the same cultural attainments...bond, your society will be conquered and killed out by some other society which has such a bond; and the second principle is that the members of such a group... | |
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