| Henry Sumner Maine - 1861 - 432 sider
...rudimentary condition. In other words, if we followed the course usual in such inquiries, we should penetrate as far up as we could in the history of primitive societies. The phenomena which early societies present us with are not easy at first to understand, but the difficulty... | |
| Henry Sumner Maine - 1861 - 432 sider
...rudimentary condition. In other words, if we followed the course usual in such inquiries, we should penetrate as far up as we could in the history of primitive societies. The phenomena which early societies present us with are not easy at first to understand, but the difficulty... | |
| Henry Sumner Maine - 1867 - 494 sider
...rudimentary condition.! In other words, if we followed the course usual in such inquiries, we should penetrate as far up as we could in the history of primitive societies. The phenomena which early societies present us with are not easy at first to understand, but the difficulty... | |
| Adolf Bastian - 1883 - 216 sider
...kommen aus Unverstand (nach Socrates). Die Casuistiker (des Catholicismus) intended to remove Unmoral actions, on as many cases as possible, out of the...gemessen! in den sieben Noachischen Geboten hinzu. Darin, 118 durchbokrung der Sanyasi Guru den Kindern (der Koiris) einflüstert, wird, wenn aufgewachsen, wiederholt... | |
| Adolf Bastian - 1883 - 214 sider
...social forms in a state äs near äs possible to their rudimentary condition (penetrate äs far up äs we could in the history of primitive societies)"....Gebot (nicht das Fleisch eines lebenden Thieres zu gemesseni in den sieben Noachischen Geboten hinzu. Darin, durchbohrang der Sanyasi Guru den Kindern... | |
| John Clark Murray - 1891 - 428 sider
...rudimentary condition. In other words, if we followed the course usual in such inquiries, we should penetrate as far up as we could in the history of primitive societies. The .phenomena which early societies present us with are not easy at first to understand, but the difficulty... | |
| Sally Humphreys - 1985 - 232 sider
...State of Nature was to be countered by the Historical Method, by scientific procedures designed to "penetrate as far up as we could in the history of primitive societies" (70-1). This is the aim of the most famous chapter in Anrient Law, chapter five, entitled "Primitive... | |
| Raymond Cocks - 1988 - 236 sider
...rudimentary condition. In other words, if we followed the course usual in such inquiries, we should penetrate as far up as we could in the history of primitive societies.33 There are other, similar statements in Ancient Law and they imply the following. Firstly,... | |
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