Folkways: A Study of the Sociological Importance of Usages, Manners, Customs, Mores, and MoralsGinn, 1906 - 692 oldal |
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. oldal
... wanted to introduce my own treatment of the " mores . " I could not refer to it anywhere in print , and I could not do ustice to it in a chapter of another book . I therefore turned to write a treatise on the " Folkways , " which I now ...
... wanted to introduce my own treatment of the " mores . " I could not refer to it anywhere in print , and I could not do ustice to it in a chapter of another book . I therefore turned to write a treatise on the " Folkways , " which I now ...
22. oldal
... wanted to be nominated for an office went before the convention to make a speech . A great and difficult question agitated the party . He began by saying that he would state his position 2 Nivedita , Web of Indian Life , 212 . 1 ...
... wanted to be nominated for an office went before the convention to make a speech . A great and difficult question agitated the party . He began by saying that he would state his position 2 Nivedita , Web of Indian Life , 212 . 1 ...
23. oldal
... wanted to make the people believe that the templars were heretics . The people were not ready to believe this . The king caused the corpse of a templar to be dug up and burned , as the corpses of heretics were burned . This convinced ...
... wanted to make the people believe that the templars were heretics . The people were not ready to believe this . The king caused the corpse of a templar to be dug up and burned , as the corpses of heretics were burned . This convinced ...
26. oldal
... wanted here . The destruction of a man's goods at his death was a great waste of capital , and it must have had a disastrous effect on the interests of the living , and must have very seriously hin dered the development of civilization ...
... wanted here . The destruction of a man's goods at his death was a great waste of capital , and it must have had a disastrous effect on the interests of the living , and must have very seriously hin dered the development of civilization ...
47. oldal
... wanted no machine work , but machinery was not to be defeated . It can make lopsided things if those are the fashion , and it can make all the construction show if Eastlake has got the notion into the crowd that the pegs ought to be on ...
... wanted no machine work , but machinery was not to be defeated . It can make lopsided things if those are the fashion , and it can make all the construction show if Eastlake has got the notion into the crowd that the pegs ought to be on ...
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acts aleatory amongst ancient ascetic asceticism became become blood revenge cannibalism character child child sacrifice Christian church civilization classes commedia del arte coöperation crime custom death decency demons developed doctrine drama dress duty ecclesiastical effect element ethical Ethnog evil eye fact fashion father folkways force Globus Greeks heretics Hinduism human husband Ibid ideals ideas incest Indians infanticide Inquis institutions interests Kulturgesch labor language later live Manichæan married masses mediæval ment Middle Ages mimus modern moral mother family never notion obscene pair marriage persons philosophy Plutarch political polyandry polygamy popular primitive produced regard relation religion religious ritual Roman Roman law rule sacrifice says sects sentiment sixteenth century slavery slaves social society standards suggestion taboo taste things thought tion torture traditional tribes unclean usage wife woman women world philosophy Yakuts
Népszerű szakaszok
394. oldal - Yet, ere we part, one lesson I can leave you For every day. Be good, sweet maid, and let who will be clever ; Do noble things, not dream them, all day long : And so make life, death, and that vast for-ever One grand, sweet song.
29. oldal - Therefore rights can never be "natural" or "God-given," or absolute in any sense. The morality of a group at a time is the sum of the taboos and prescriptions in the folkways by which right conduct is defined. Therefore morals can never be intuitive. They are historical, institutional, and empirical. World philosophy, life policy, right, rights, and morality are all products of the folkways. They are reflections on, and generalizations from, the experience of pleasure and pain which is won in efforts...
54. oldal - Property, marriage, and religion are the most primary institutions. They began in folkways. They became customs. They developed into mores by the addition of some philosophy of welfare, however crude. Then they were made more definite and specific as regards the rules, the prescribed acts, and the apparatus to be employed. This produced a structure and the institution was complete.
431. oldal - For the man is not of the woman ; but the woman of the man : for neither was the man created for the woman ; but the woman for the man : for this cause ought the woman to have a sign of authority on her head, because of the angels.
14. oldal - The Jews divided all mankind into themselves and Gentiles. They were the "chosen people." The Greeks and Romans called all outsiders "barbarians." In Euripides' tragedy of Iphigenia in Aulis Iphigenia says that it is fitting that Greeks should rule over barbarians, but not contrariwise, because Greeks are free, and barbarians are slaves. The Arabs regarded themselves as the noblest nation and all others as more or less barbarous. In 1896, the Chinese minister of education and his...
12. oldal - The relation of comradeship and peace in the we-group and that of hostility and war towards others-groups are correlative to each other. The exigencies of war with outsiders are what make peace inside, lest internal discord should weaken the we-group for war.
628. oldal - Popular education and certain faiths about popular education are in the mores of our time. We regard illiteracy as an abomination. We ascribe to elementary book learning power to form character, make good citizens, keep family mores pure, elevate morals, establish individual character, civilize barbarians, and cure social vice and disease.
28. oldal - right" ways to satisfy all interests, because they are traditional, and exist in fact. They extend over the whole of life. There is a right way to catch game, to win a wife, to make one's self appear, to cure disease, to honor ghosts, to treat comrades or strangers, to behave when a child is born, on the warpath, in council, and so on in all cases which can arise. The ways are defined on the negative side, that is, by taboos. The "right" way is the way which the ancestors used and which has been...
28. oldal - right" way is the way which the ancestors used and which has been handed down. The tradition is its own warrant. It is not held subject to verification by experience. The notion of right is in the folkways. It is not outside of them, of independent origin, and brought to them to test them. In the folkways, whatever is, is right.