| American Geographical Society of New York - 1909 - 902 str.
...wandering, outgrow the land that bred them and bear their legitimate fruit in wide imperial conquests. Man can no more be scientifically studied apart from...desert cactus can be understood apart from its habitat. Man's relations to his environment are infinitely more numerous and complex than those of the most... | |
| Ohio Valley Historical Association - 1909 - 142 str.
...wandering, outgrow the land that bred them and bear their legitimate fruit in wide imperial conquests. Man can no more be scientifically studied apart from...desert cactus can be understood apart from its habitat. Man's relations to his environment are infinitely more numerous and complex than those of the most... | |
| William Isaac Thomas - 1909 - 956 str.
...(Trans, of Völkerkunde.) The Macmillan Co., 1896. THE OPERATION OF GEOGRAPHIC FACTORS IN HISTORY .... Man can no more be scientifically studied apart from...desert cactus can be understood apart from its habitat. Man's relations to this environment are infinitely more numerous and complex than those of the most... | |
| John Wilson Townsend - 1911 - 420 str.
...wandering, outgrow the land that bred them and bear their legitimate fruit in wide imperial conquests. Man can no more be scientifically studied apart from...desert cactus can be understood apart from its habitat. Man's relation to his environment are infinitely more numerous and complex than those of the most highly... | |
| George Hubbard Blakeslee, Granville Stanley Hall, Harry Elmer Barnes - 1913 - 540 str.
...of the wooded hills do not always outnumber the troublesome Jinn of the treeless desert. Admit that "man can no more be scientifically studied apart from...desert cactus can be understood apart from its habitat" (p. 2); still we should scarcely expect to learn much about the animals or plants of an unknown region—except... | |
| 1913 - 552 str.
...of the wooded hills do not always outnumber the troublesome Jinn of the treeless desert. Admit that "man can no more be scientifically studied apart from...desert cactus can be understood apart from its habitat " (p. 2) ; still we should scarcely expect to learn much about the animals or plants of an unknown... | |
| Francis Stuart Chapin - 1913 - 348 str.
...effect of geographic environment upon the mode of life and the cultural development of social groups. "Man can no more be scientifically studied apart from...he travels, or the seas over which he trades, than the polar bear or the desert cactus can be understood apart from its habitat. Man's relations to this... | |
| William Josephus Robinson - 1918 - 494 str.
...characteristics is denied by some very careful sexologists.] The Geographic Factor in Human Development. Man can no more be scientifically studied apart from the ground which he tills, or the land over which he travels, or the seas over which he trades, than the polar bear or the desert cactus... | |
| Dixon Ryan Fox - 1920 - 192 str.
...Twentieth Century 179 HARPER'S ATLAS :* .. OF AMERICAN HISTORY M*,. ,*, , , , AMERICAN HISTORY AND THE MAP MAN can no more be scientifically studied apart from...tills, or the lands over which he travels, or the sea over which he trades, than polar bear or desert cactus can be understood apart from its habitat.... | |
| Dixon Ryan Fox - 1920 - 194 str.
...Enterprise of the Twentieth Century 167 HARPER'S ATLAS OF AMERICAN HISTORY AMERICAN HISTORY AND THE MAP AN can no more be scientifically studied apart from the...tills, or the lands over which he travels, or the sea over which he trades, than polar bear or desert cactus can be understood apart from its habitat.... | |
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