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Inquiries into Human Faculty and Its Development
Francis Galton
Inquiries into Human Faculty and Its Development
Francis Galton
We must free our minds of a great deal of prejudice before we can rightly judge of the direction in which different races need to be improved. We must be on our guard against taking our own instincts of what is best and most seemly, as a criterion for the rest of mankind. The instincts and faculties of different men and races differ in a variety of ways almost as profoundly as those of animals in different cages of the Zoological Gardens; and however diverse and antagonistic they are, each may be good of its kind. It is obviously so in brutes; the monkey may have a horror at the sight of a snake, and a repugnance to its ways, but a snake is just as perfect an animal as a monkey. The living world does not consist of a repetition of similar elements, but of an endless variety of them, that have grown, body and soul, through selective influences into close adaptation to their contemporaries, and to the physical circumstances of the localities they inhabit. The moral and intellectual wealth of a nation largely consists in the multifarious variety of the gifts of the men who compose it, and it would be the very reverse of improvement to make all its members assimilate to a common type.
Médias | Livres Paperback Book (Livre avec couverture souple et dos collé) |
Validé | 1 mai 2013 |
ISBN13 | 9781484856536 |
Éditeurs | CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platf |
Pages | 370 |
Dimensions | 21 × 152 × 229 mm · 494 g |
Langue et grammaire | English |
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