| Edward Mead Earle - 1921 - 184 str.
...anthropology, ethnology, sociology. It is no less a fundamental factor in the study of history, for "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 the polar bear or desert cactus can be understood apart from its habitat."... | |
| Arthur Meier Schlesinger - 1922 - 336 str.
...Schurz, Carnegie, St. Gaudens and Jacob A. Riis. CHAPTER II GEOGRAPHIC FACTORS IN AMERICAN DEVELOPMENT "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.... | |
| Arthur Meier Schlesinger - 1922 - 328 str.
...scientifically studied apart from the ground which he 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. . . . Man has been so noisy about the way he has 'conquered Nature,' and Nature has been so silent... | |
| James Morton Callahan - 1923 - 774 str.
...roads, and better schools and churches, and are prosperous farmers and stock raisers or fruit growers. Man can no more be scientifically studied apart from...bear or desert cactus can be understood apart from rts habitat. Man's relations to his environment are infinitely more numerous and complex than those... | |
| William Pickering Rutter - 1925 - 466 str.
...scientifically apart from the field of his activities, from the ground which he cultivates and mines, the lands over which he travels, or the seas over which he trades and exchanges ideas. Like all other forms of life he lies under the control of surroundings and climate.... | |
| Emory Stephen Bogardus - 1928 - 698 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... | |
| Emory Stephen Bogardus - 1928 - 680 str.
...them and bear their legitimate fruit in wide imperial conquests. Man can no more be scientif1cally studied apart from the ground which he tills, or the...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... | |
| Heidrun Kaupen-Haas, Christian Saller - 1999 - 456 str.
...whispered hints for their solution [...] Man can no more be scientifically studied apart from the ground he tills, or the lands over which he travels, or the...cactus can be understood apart from its habitat.« The field of academic geography was a turning point. It was shifting from exploration to explanation.... | |
| 1917 - 44 str.
...Building, Cleveland. HISTORY TEACHING AND GEOGRAPHY1 By ARTHUR MEIER SCHLESINGER Ohio State University "Man can no more be scientifically studied apart from...ground which he tills, or the lands over which he trades, than polar bear or desert cactus can be understood apart from its habitat. * * * Man has been... | |
| William Josephus Robinson - 1918 - 526 str.
...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 can be understood apart from its habitat. Man's relations to this... | |
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