We see that the inferior animals, when the conditions of life are favorable, are subject to periodical fits of gladness, affecting them powerfully and standing out in vivid contrast to their ordinary temper. And we know what this feeling is — this periodic... Animal Behaviour - Página 311por Conwy Lloyd Morgan - 1908 - 344 páginasVista completa - Acerca de este libro
| George Everett Partridge - 1912 - 296 páginas
...voice exerted to its utmost pitch and expressive of extreme terror and despair. Wallace says: "We see that the inferior animals, when the conditions of life are favourable, are subject to periodic fits of gladness affecting them powerfully and standing out in vivid contrast to their ordinary... | |
| Smithsonian Institution. Board of Regents - 1920 - 720 páginas
...that the inferior animals, when the conditions of life are favorable, are subject to periodical tits of gladness, affecting them powerfully and standing...There are moments when he is mad with joy, when he can not keep still, when his impulse is to sing and shout aloud and laugh at nothing, to run and leap... | |
| Smithsonian Institution. Board of Regents - 1920 - 718 páginas
...that the inferior animals, when the conditions of life are favorable, are subject to periodical flts of gladness, affecting them powerfully and standing...contrast to their ordinary temper. And we know what tliis feeling is — this periodic intense elation which even civilized man occasionally exI>eriences... | |
| Julian Huxley - 1923 - 336 páginas
...ESSAY ON BIRD-MIND "O Nightingale, thou surely art A creature of a fiery heart." — W. WORDSWORTH. "The inferior animals, when the conditions of life...standing out in vivid contrast to their ordinary temper. . . . Birds are more subject to this universal joyous instinct than mammals, and ... as they are much... | |
| Smithsonian Institution. Board of Regents - 1920 - 712 páginas
...abounding energy of birds. We see that the inferior animals, when the conditions of life are favorable, are subject to periodical fits of gladness, affecting...perfect health, more especially when young. There are m» ments when he is mad with joy, when he can not keep still, when his impulse is to sing and shout... | |
| Smithsonian Institution. Board of Regents - 1920 - 716 páginas
...abounding energy of birds. We see that the inferior animals, when the conditions of life are favorable, are subject to periodical fits of gladness, affecting...There are moments when he is mad with joy, when he can not keep still, when his impulse is to sing and shout aloud and laugh at nothing, to run and leap... | |
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