| Smithsonian Institution. Board of Regents - 1902 - 1242 หน้า
...will be the conscious equivalent accompanying the action; so that customary actions which are of very frequent repetition become entirely unconscious. Hand...increase in the emotional value of the omission of such activities, and still more of the performance of actions contrary to custom. A greater will power... | |
| William Isaac Thomas - 1909 - 956 หน้า
...will be the conscious equivalent accompanying the action ; so that customary actions which are of very frequent repetition become entirely unconscious. Hand...increase in the emotional value of the omission of such activities, and still more of the performance of actions contrary to custom. A greater will power... | |
| Francis Stuart Chapin - 1911 - 118 หน้า
...will be the conscious equivalent accompanying the action ; so the customary actions which are of very frequent repetition become entirely unconscious. Hand...increase in the emotional value of the omission of such activities, and still more of the performance of actions contrary to custom. A greater will power... | |
| Franz Boas - 1911 - 642 หน้า
...will be the conscious equivalent accompanying the action; so that customary actions which are of very frequent repetition become entirely unconscious. Hand...increase in the emotional value of the omission of such activities, and still more of the performance of actions contrary to custom. A greater willpower... | |
| Iva Lowther Peters - 1920 - 124 หน้า
...deal with the Mana of the Pacific and with the Orenda of the Iroquois. It implies "wonder- working," and may be shown in sheer luck, in individual cunning...relationships until we agree with Mr. Crawley that taboo shows that "man seems to feel that he is treading in slippery places." Might it not be within... | |
| Smithsonian Institution. Board of Regents - 1902 - 1254 หน้า
...action; so that customary actions which are of very frequent repetition become entirely ummeonscious. Hand in hand with this decrease of consciousness goes...increase in the emotional value of the omission of such activities, and still more of the performance of actions contrary to custom. A greater will power... | |
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