Anthropology by Robert Ranulph Marett (top ten books to read txt) π
This does not mean that human history, once constructed according to truth-regarding principles, should and could not be used for the practical advantage of mankind. The anthropologist, however, is not, as such, concerned with the practical employment to which his discoveries are put. At most, he may, on the strength of a conviction that truth is mighty and will prevail for human good, invite practical men to study his facts and generalizations in the hope that, by knowing mankind better, they may come to appreciate and serve it better. For instance, the administrator, who rules over savages, is almost invariably quite well-meaning, but not seldom utterly ignorant of native customs and beliefs. So, in many cases, is the missionary, another type of person in authority, who
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Experimental psychology, 23, 88
Family, 159, 160, 164, 171, 178, 196
Family jurisdiction, 196
Flint-mining, 56, 57
Folk-lore, 186, 210
Frazer, J.G., 163, 172, 200
Freedom, 130, 154, 181, 185, 238, 241
Fuegians, 138-140, 145
Galley Hill skull, 46, 80
Gargas, 47-50
Genealogical method, 147
Gesture-language, 134, 149
Ghosts, 229, 230, 248
Gibraltar skull, 78
Greece, 127, 157, 172, 185, 241
Greenwell, W., 56
Grime's Graves, 56
Haddon, A.H., 88, 127
Haeckel, E., 118
Hand-prints, 49
Harrison, B., 41, 44
Head-form, 73-82, 107
Head-hunting, 185
Heidelberg mandible, 77
History, 11, 13-15, 30, 97, 156, 227, 242
Hittites, 107
Hobhouse, L.T., 160
Holophrase, 140-152, 239
Horse, 37, 50, 100, 108
Howitt, A.W., 163, 231, 246
Humility, 212
Ice-age, 21, 33, 36, 38, 46, 106, 112, 132
Icklingham, 38,
Imagination, 28, 213, 223, 234
Incest, 189, 200
India, 115
Individuality, 29, 241-250
Indo-European languages, 133
Indonesia, 116, 118, 121, 184
Initiation, 127, 174, 176, 211, 224-227, 246-250
Instinct, 23, 68, 71, 89-91
Intichiuma ceremonies, 51, 167, 220-223
Iron-age, 40, 119
Jacks, L.P., 246
James, W., 247
Jersey, 32, 36, 45, 243
Kellor, F.A., 91
Kent's cavern, 46
Kingship, 194, 195, 200, 202
Kinship, 163, 177
Knappers, 57, 58
Koryaks, 110
La Chapelle-aux-Saints, 79
Lamarck, J.B., 64, 65
La Naulette mandible, 78
Lang, A., 187, 226
Language, 24, 130-152
Lapps, 110
Law, 26, 181-203
Lecky, T., 102
Le Moustier, 38, 45-47, 79
Le Play, F., 98
LΓ©vy-Bruhl, L., 138
Lineage, 165, 168
Lloyd Morgan, C., 238
Local association, 177
Luck, 167, 200, 213, 215
McDougall, W., 90
Madagascar, 114, 158
Magic, 27, 51, 177, 202, 208-210, 224, 245, 247
Malaya, 114, 122, 126
Malthus, T., 69, 157
Mammoth, 37, 78, 111, 132
Man, E.H., 188, 198
Mas d'Azil, 54
Masks, 53
Matriarchate, 166
Matrilineal, matrilocal, matripotestal, 165, 196
Medicine-man, 246-250
Mediterranean race, 104, 109, 119
Melanesians, 116, 121, 128
Mendelism,
67
Mentone, 35
Military discipline, 192, 199
Miscegenation, 93
Mob-psychology, 92, 201, 239-241
Moieties, 175
Morality, 29, 235-241
Mother-right, 166, 169, 197
Myres, J.L., 102
Nation, 174
Natural selection, 68-71, 84
Nature, 15, 82, 155, 211, 230
Neanderthal race, 37, 39, 77-81, 87, 120, 206
Negative rites, 216-219, 234
Negritos, 81, 116-118, 120, 160, 188
Negro race, 80, 91, 116, 120
Neolithic age, 40, 53-59, 81, 104, 109
Niaux, 50-53
Nordic race, 109
Ordeal, 191, 195
Pacation, 192, 195
Painted pebbles, 54
Palæolithic age, 40, 43-54, 108, 124
Papuasians, 116
Patagonians, 114
Patrilineal, patrilocal, patripotestal, 165, 196
Payne, E.J., 138
Persecuting tendency, 187
Perthes, Boucher de, 43
Phantasm, 229
Philosophy, 15-17, 72, 154, 223
Phratry, 172
Pictographs, 51
Pithecanthropus erectus, 76, 115
Policy, 17-19
Polynesians, 121, 128, 183, 194
Positive rites, 219-224, 234
Pottery, 33, 55
Pre-Dravidians, 120
Pre-historic chronology, 34
Pre-history, 21, 31, 97, 111
Pre-natal environment, 94
Prestwich, Sir J., 42
Profane vessels, 217
Property, 179, 192, 195, 198
Proto-history, 31, 97
Quartz crystals, 248-250
Race, 22, 59-94, 96, 99
Ratzel, F., 98
Reincarnation, 167, 221, 224
Reindeer, 37, 55, 78, 106, 110
Religion, 27, 49, 127, 166-168, 204-235, 246-250
Ridgeway, W., 107
Rites, 212, 219-224, 234
River-phase of culture, 102
Rivers, W.H.R., 147, 216, 219
Rutot, A., 41, 46
Sacramental meal, 222
Sacredness, 28, 52, 127, 168, 203, 213, 217, 218, 224, 226
St. Acheul, 33, 45, 46
Sanction, 195, 203,
Savagery, 11, 158
Science, 12-15
Secret Societies, 177
Seligmann, C.G. and B.Z., 161, 243
Sex-totems, 176
Shaw, B., 66
Slander, 198
Slavery, 179
Smith, W. Robertson, 213
Snare, F., 57
Social organization, 24-26, 152-181
SolutrΓ©, 47, 108
Spear-thrower, 231
Spencer, B., and Gillen, F.J., 39, 163, 175, 220, 244
Spirit, 228, 229
Steinmetz, S.R., 197
Stratigraphical method, 31-36
Suggestion, 233-235, 237-240
Survivals, 186
Sutherland, A., 157
Sympathetic magic, 126, 233
Synnomic phase of society 236
Syntelic phase of society, 236
Taboo, 200-203, 215, 218
Tasmanians, 39-44
Thames gravels, 38-44, 46
Theft, 198
Todas, 210-219
Torres Straits, 88
Totemism, 160, 166-168, 175, 189, 220-223, 250
Tribe, 173
Tylor, E.B., 184, 228-230
Use-inheritance, 64, 93
Variation, 66-68
Veddas, 120, 160, 243
Wallace, A.R., 69, 118, 184
Wealden dome, 43
Weismann, A., 65, 66
Westermarck, E., 235
Witchcraft, 202, 210
Is made up of absolutely new books by leading authorities. The editors are Professors Gilbert Murray, H.A.L. Fisher, W.T. Brewster, and J. Arthur Thomson.
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47. The Colonial Period (1607-1766).
By CHARLES MCLEAN ANDREWS, Professor of American History, Yale. The fascinating history of the two hundred years of "colonial times."
82. The Wars Between England and America (1763-1815).
By THEODORE C. SMITH, Professor of American History, Williams College. A history of the period, with especial emphasis on The Revolution and The War of 1812.
67. From Jefferson to Lincoln (1815-1860).
By WILLIAM MACDONALD, Professor of History, Brown University. The author makes the history of this period circulate about constitutional ideas and slavery sentiment.
25. The Civil War (1854-1865).
By FREDERIC L. PAXSON, Professor of American History, University of Wisconsin.
39. Reconstruction and Union (1865-1912).
By PAUL LELAND HAWORTH, A History of the United States in our own times.
92. The Ancient East.
By D.G. HOGARTH, M.A., F.B.A., F.S.A. Connects with Prof. Myres's Dawn of History (No. 26) at about 1000 B.C. and reviews the history of Assyria, Babylon, Cilicia, Persia and Macedon.
94. The Navy and Sea Power.
By DAVID HANNAY, author of Short History of the Royal Navy, etc. A brief history of the navies, sea power, and ship growth of all nations, including the rise and decline of America on the sea, and explains the present British supremacy thereon.
78. Latin America.
By WILLIAM R. SHEPHERD, Professor of History, Columbia. With maps. The historical, artistic, and commercial development of the Central South American republics.
76. The Ocean. A General Account of the Science of the Sea.
By SIR JOHN MURRAY, K.C.B., Naturalist H.M.S. "Challenger," 1872-1876, joint author of The Depths of the Ocean, etc.
86. Exploration of the Alps.
By ARNOLD LUNN, M.A.
72. Germany of To-day.
By CHARLES TOWER.
57. Napoleon.
By
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