| American Association for the Advancement of Science - 1877 - 912 pages
...inadequate persistence of parental affection." Prof. Fiske, in a most reasonable way, shows that " the prolonged helplessness of the offspring must keep...seek new companionships involves some disturbance of ingrained habits, and meanwhile the older sons are more likely to continue their original association... | |
| American Association for the Advancement of Science - Science - 1877 - 444 pages
...inadequate persistence of parental affection." Prof. Fiske, in a most reasonable way, shows that " the prolonged helplessness of the offspring must keep...still need protection, the family relations begin to«become permanent. The parents have lived so long in company that to seek new companionships involves... | |
| Science - 1876 - 862 pages
...inadequate persistence of parental affection." Prof. Fiske, in a most reasonable way, shows that " the prolonged helplessness of the offspring must keep...seek new companionships involves some disturbance of ingrained habits, and meanwhile the older sons are more likely to continue their original association... | |
| Jared Sparks, Edward Everett, James Russell Lowell, Henry Cabot Lodge - American fiction - 1873 - 512 pages
...miracle in a single day, with all its attributes, physical and psychical, compounded and proportional just as they now are, the present inquiry is, of course,...The parents have lived so long in company, that to sect new companionships involves some disturbance of engrained habits ; and meanwhile the older sons... | |
| Sir Norman Lockyer - Electronic journals - 1875 - 870 pages
...supply " a very thorough and satisfactory explanation of the change from gregariousness to sociality." " The prolonged helplessness of the offspring must keep...parents together for longer and longer periods in succes sive epochs ; and when at last the association is so long kept up that the older children are... | |
| Science - 1877 - 804 pages
...inadequate persistence of parental affection." Prof. Fiske, in a most reasonable way, shows that " the prolonged helplessness of the offspring must keep...seek new companionships involves some disturbance of ingrained habits, and meanwhile the older sons are more likely to continue their original association... | |
| American Association for the Advancement of Science - Science - 1877 - 448 pages
...inadequate persistence of parental affection." Prof. Fiske, iu a most reasonable way, shows that " the prolonged helplessness of the offspring must keep...to become permanent. The parents have lived so long iu company that to seek new companionships involves some disturbance of ingrained habits, and meanwhile... | |
| American Association for the Advancement of Science - Science - 1877 - 444 pages
...inadequate persistence of parental affection." Prof. Fiske, in a most reasonable way, shows that " the prolonged helplessness of the offspring must keep...longer periods in successive epochs ; and when at lust the association is so long kept up that the older children are growing mature while the younger... | |
| Philosophy - 1882 - 646 pages
...Phil., II., p. 344), that I cannot do better than transcribe the ipsissima verba of his explanation. "The prolonged helplessness of the offspring must...older children are growing mature while the younger still need protection, the family relations begin to become permanent. The parents have lived so long... | |
| Joseph Krauskopf - Evolution and Judaism - 1887 - 580 pages
...oldest and strongest member of the family, being its author and supporter, is in every primitive state *The prolonged helplessness of the offspring must...successive epochs; and when at last the association is M. long kept up that the older children are growing mature while the younger ones still need protection,... | |
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