And as, in the infancy of a people, the power of such superstitions is supreme, it has happened that the various Aspects of Nature have caused corresponding varieties in the popular character, and have imparted to the national religion peculiarities which,... Educational Review - Página 3591902Vista completa - Acerca de este libro
| Henry Thomas Buckle - 1857 - 882 páginas
..."advancing" knowledge. ~"An<I as, In~IiEe~ infancy of a people, the power of such superstitions is supreme, it has happened that the various Aspects of Nature...peculiarities which, under certain circumstances, it is impossible to efface. The other three agents, namely, Climate, Food, and Soil, have, so far as we... | |
| Henry Thomas Buckle - 1858 - 894 páginas
...of such . superstitions is supreme, it has happened that the various Aspects of Nature have cansed corresponding varieties in the popular character,...peculiarities which, under certain circumstances, it is impossible to efface. The oilier three agents, namely, Climate, Food, and Soil, have, so far as... | |
| Henry Thomas Buckle - 1857 - 886 páginas
...advancing knowledge. And as, in the infancy of a people, the power of such superstitions is supreme, it has happened that the various Aspects of Nature...peculiarities which, under certain circumstances, it is impossible to efface. The other three agents, namely, Climate, Food, and Soil, have, so far as we... | |
| 1866 - 404 páginas
...its changes) have the office of exciting the imagination and producing superstition, and have tlrus " caused corresponding varieties in the popular character,...peculiarities which, under certain circumstances, it is impossible to efface." Outside of Europe, climate, food, and soil have caused wealth to be so distributed... | |
| John Clark Ridpath - 1898 - 544 páginas
...advancing knowledge. And as, in the infancy of a people, the power of such superstitions is supreme, it has happened that the various Aspects of Nature...peculiarities which, under certain circumstances, it is impossible to efface. The other three agents, namely, Climate, Food, and Soil, have, so far as we... | |
| Henry Thomas Buckle - 1904 - 976 páginas
...advancing knowledge. And as, in the infancy of a people, the power of such superstitions is supreme, it has happened that the various Aspects of Nature...peculiarities which, under certain circumstances, it is impossible to efface. The other three agents, namely, Climate, Food, and Soil, have, so far as we... | |
| Thomas Nixon Carver - 1905 - 826 páginas
...advancing knowledge. And as, in the infancy of a people, the power of such superstitions is supreme, it has happened that the various aspects of nature...peculiarities which, under certain circumstances, it is impossible to efface. The other three agents, namely, climate, food, and soil, have, so far as we... | |
| Sílvio Romero - 1908 - 332 páginas
...advancing knowledge. And as in the infancy ofa people the power of such superstitions is supreme ; it hás happened that the various Aspects of Nature have caused...corresponding varieties in the popular character, and have imported to the national religion particularities which, under certain circumstances, it is impossible... | |
| Ira Woods Howerth - 1926 - 436 páginas
...hence in different countries have given rise to different habits of national thought" — has produced inevitable and far-reaching results in stimulating...Undoubtedly outward physical circumstances have had much to do with national peculiarities, and the variations of primitive communities are unquestionably due,... | |
| Ira Woods Howerth - 1926 - 442 páginas
...stimulating the imagination and suggesting 4 See his Hittory of Cirittzation in England, Vol. I, Chapter II. the innumerable superstitions which have stood in...circumstances, it has been impossible to efface." ° To the character of the climate, soil, and food he ascribed in large measure the production and... | |
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