id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt 29554 Brinton, Daniel G. (Daniel Garrison) An Ethnologist's View of History An Address Before the Annual Meeting of the New Jersey Historical Society, at Trenton, New Jersey, January 28, 1896 .txt text/plain 7279 415 66 should be like the man of science, and group his facts under inductive The error of this view was clearly pointed out some years ago by Dr. Tobler.[8-3] There has been no growth of humanity at large at all The _Ethnos_ must be defined, like a species of natural history, by a Religions, arts, laws, historic events, all have but one standard of that the chief impulses of nations and peoples are abstract ideas and in fact;" and the most recent lecture on the philosophy of history which religion and politics are truths, in history are living forces." degree, in the life and the history of man.[17-1] highest causality in human history._ to successive phases of _human thought_ constitute History."[18-2] natural world, of action in the individual life, and, therefore, of Such is the ethnologist's view of history. Such is the ethnologist's view of history. Such is the ethnologist's view of history. ./cache/29554.txt ./txt/29554.txt