The behavior of man in the family, in business, in the state, in religion and in every other affair of life is rooted in his unlearned, original equipment of instincts and capacities. An Introduction to Education - Seite 66von George Willard Frasier, Winfield Dockery Armentrout - 1924 - 274 SeitenVollansicht - Über dieses Buch
| Percy Friars Valentine - 1927 - 422 Seiten
...these instincts are the prime movers in man's activities is conveyed by him in the following words: "The behavior of man in the family, in business, in...every other affair of life is rooted in his unlearned equipment of instincts and capacities." 9 In his view we may say that, given the stimulus for an original... | |
| Percy Friars Valentine - 1927 - 420 Seiten
...food. The question arises as to how the principles involved in a series of this sort can explain all the "behavior of man in the family, in business, in...state, in religion and in every other affair of life." IH answer to the problem, Thorndike would no doubt "It would no doubt be admitted that the neural conditions... | |
| Gordon S. Watkins - 1928 - 760 Seiten
...but its substantial pleasures and pains as well."1 Thorndike puts the matter more concretely thus: "The behavior of man in the family, in business, in...instincts and capacities. All schemes of improving human life must take account of man's original nature, most of all when their aim is to reverse or... | |
| Kimball Young - 1927 - 884 Seiten
...response to another situation in connection with which it works less or no harm, or even positive good. The behavior of man in the family, in business, in...unlearned, original equipment of instincts and capacities. AH schemes of improving human life must take account of man's original nature, most of all when their... | |
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