000 | 01546nam a22001697a 4500 | ||
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999 |
_c4444 _d4444 |
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008 | 180326b xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d | ||
020 | _a978-93-83181-01-8 | ||
082 |
_223 _a930 _bSAX |
||
100 | _aSaxena P.K. | ||
245 |
_aAnthropology of early civilization / _cP.K. Saxena. |
||
250 |
_a1st ed. _b2013. |
||
260 |
_aNew Delhi. _bGlobal Publications; _c2013. |
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300 |
_a296 p . ; _bhardbound _c14x22cm |
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505 | _a1. Human ethology 2. introduction : man and civilization 3. The Earth's life history and position of man 4. Early civilizations 5. The black race 6. The American race 7. The Tlingit and Haida of Northwest America 8. The yellow race 9. The Iroquois Matriarchate 10. Theories of early mentality 11. The ideas of early man 12. Early life and thought 13. The insular peoples 14. The European race 15. Uganda, An African state 16. Central Australia - A magic ridden community | ||
520 | _aThe changes in civilization are each and all due to the emergence of new things, inventions, ideas, which in the last analysis are always emanations of the minds of individuals. Whether the change is in a mechanical device, or a detail of social organization, in a new scientific idea or ethical value; in a method of simplifying or improving economic production or distribution; in a new play, or a novel form of stage art; in an article of use, comfort or luxury, a new word, a witticism, a proverb- all of these things originate in individual minds and there is no other place where they can originate. | ||
942 |
_2ddc _cBK |