| Benjamin Kidd - 1894 - 410 sayfa
...proceeding in human society is not primarily intellectual but religious in character. Since man became a social creature the development of his intellectual...to the development of his religious character. It would appear that the process at work in society is evolving religious character as a first product,... | |
| Henry Jackson Van Dyke - 1896 - 514 sayfa
...action."8 Mr. Benjamin Kidd, from the side of English sociology, assures us that "since man became a social creature, the development of his intellectual...subordinate to the development of his religious character," and concludes that religion affords the only permanent sanction for progress.4 A famous biologist,... | |
| Henry Van Dyke - 1896 - 484 sayfa
...action."3 Mr. Benjamin Kidd, from the side of English sociology, assures us that "since man became a social creature, the development of his intellectual...subordinate to the development of his religious character," and concludes that religion affords the only permanent sanction for progress.4 A famous biologist,... | |
| Charles Dudley Warner - 1897 - 646 sayfa
...action." Mr. Benjamin Kidd, from the side of English sociology, assures us that " Since man became a social creature, the development of his intellectual...subordinate to the development of his religious character; " and concludes that religion affords the only permanent sanction for progress. A famous biologist,... | |
| 1898 - 698 sayfa
...irreparable decay." Mr. Benjamin Kidd, a noted sociologist of England, assures us that "since man became a social creature, the development of his intellectual...subordinate to the development of his religious character," and concludes "that religion affords the only permanent sanction for progress." Romanes, the famous... | |
| Henry Van Dyke - 1921 - 468 sayfa
...human action." Mr. Benjamin Kidd, from the side of English sociology, assures us that "since man became a social creature, the development of his intellectual...subordinate to the development of his religious character," and concludes that religion affords the only permanent sanction for progress. A famous biologist, Romanes,... | |
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