| John Ferguson McLennan - 1885 - 384 sayfa
...enlarged by the adoption of strangers within its circle, and we must try to regard the fiction of adoption as so closely simulating the reality of kinship, that neither law nor * The paging is the same in all the editions, as far as this subject is concerned. The writer has before... | |
| 1888 - 1020 sayfa
...by the absorption of strangers within its circle, and we must try to regard the fiction of adoption as so closely simulating the reality of kinship that...nor opinion makes the slightest difference between the real and adoptive connection." It flourished and was regulated by laws in both of the classical... | |
| Abraham Clark Freeman - 1890 - 1042 sayfa
...by the absorption of strangers within its circle, and we must try to regard the fiction of adoption as so closely simulating the reality of kinship that...nor opinion makes the slightest difference between the real and adoptive connection." It flourished and was regulated by laws in both of the classical... | |
| George Gunton - 1891 - 488 sayfa
...enlarged by the adoption of strangers within its circle, and we must try to regard the fiction of adoption as so closely simulating the reality of kinship that...slightest difference between a real and an adoptive connection."—Maine's "Ancient Law," p. 128. See also "Early History of Institutions," p. 310; " Village... | |
| GEORGE GUNTON - 1891 - 530 sayfa
...enlarged by the adoption of strangers within its circle, and we must try to regard the fiction of adoption as so closely simulating the reality of kinship that...slightest difference between a real and an adoptive connection." — Maine's "Ancient Law," p. 128. See also "Early History of Institutions," p. 310; "... | |
| Herbert Spencer - 1892 - 324 sayfa
...differentiated, there naturally arose the theory of paternal government. The members of the group were "held together by common obedience to their highest...ascendant, the father, grandfather, or greatgrandfather." Ignoring those still earlier social groups of which Sir Henry Maine takes no account, we may accept... | |
| Herbert Spencer - 1893 - 520 sayfa
...differentiated, there naturally arose the theory of paternal government. The members of the group were "held together by common obedience to their highest...ascendant, the father, grandfather, or greatgrandfather." Ignoring those still earlier social groups of which Sir Henry Maine takes no account, we may accept... | |
| Henry Clay Trumbull - 1894 - 474 sayfa
...by the absorption of strangers within its circle, and we must try to regard the fiction of adoption as so closely simulating the reality of kinship that...slightest difference between a real and an adoptive connection. On the other hand, the persons theoretically amalgamated into a family by their common... | |
| Herbert Spencer - 1895 - 316 sayfa
...differentiated, there naturally arose the theory of paternal government. The members of the group were "held together by common obedience to their highest living ascendant, the father, grandfather, or great' grandfather." Ignoring those still earlier social groups of which Sir Henry Maine takes no account,... | |
| Henry Sumner Maine - 1897 - 470 sayfa
...by the absorption of strangers within its circle, and we must try to regard the fiction of adoption as so closely simulating the reality of kinship that...persons theoretically amalgamated into a family by then* common descent are practically held together by common obedience to their highest living ascendant,... | |
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