Human Potentialities |
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Page 24
... environment ; we are in the process of discovering new modes of interaction with our environment and therefore becoming one with our environment by virtue of this very process of self - discovery . The problem of whether we have cosmic ...
... environment ; we are in the process of discovering new modes of interaction with our environment and therefore becoming one with our environment by virtue of this very process of self - discovery . The problem of whether we have cosmic ...
Page 189
... environment " of every other organ . The rich reciprocities of the inner environment involve mutual tun- ing and adjustment . It has become evident from recent work that one group of cells modulates or controls the rhythms of another ...
... environment " of every other organ . The rich reciprocities of the inner environment involve mutual tun- ing and adjustment . It has become evident from recent work that one group of cells modulates or controls the rhythms of another ...
Page 290
... environment and also embattled against it . The empirical issue is to ascertain just when and how far Hen- derson's conception of the gentle gradient holds good , when and how far the sharp gradient of homeostatic isolation prevails ...
... environment and also embattled against it . The empirical issue is to ascertain just when and how far Hen- derson's conception of the gentle gradient holds good , when and how far the sharp gradient of homeostatic isolation prevails ...
Contents
Our Twentiethcentury Vantage Point | 3 |
The Invention of Culture | 47 |
How We Come to Want What We Want | 60 |
Copyright | |
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achieve activity already appear arts aspects basic become begin believe biological body called canalization capacity century changes complex conception course creative cultural curiosity depend direction discovered discovery drives emergence environment essentially example existence experience expression face fact factors feeling forces freedom function future genes give given hand human nature ideas impulse individual interest involved kind laws lead learning less limited living look man's material matter means mind move objects organization particular patterns perhaps period person physical planning possible potentialities present principle problem produce psychology question reality reason regarding relation relatively response result rhythms satisfactions scientific sense sensory simply social society sort specific standardized structure suggest things thinking thought tion trends types understanding universe values various whole