For a lack of psychic development has made of these seemingly diverse elements a homogeneous whole. Both, of course, are aboriginal, instincts. Next to the fear of natural phenomena, in point of primitiveness, comes the fear of one's father ; as children... Ainu Economic Plants - 107 ページJohn Batchelor, Kingo Miyabe 著 - 1898全文表示 - この書籍について
| 1893 - 926 ページ
...it rises from amid such a mass of mountains that, so fur as most foreigners go, it remains invisihlc and uuvisited. Yet upon it every summer faith tells...passing phase of religion has been perpetuated. The Japauese have stayed boys. Filial respect continued, and, by very virtue of not becoming less, became... | |
| 1893 - 922 ページ
...instructive. For a lack of psychic development has made of these seemingly diverse elements a houiegeueous whole. Both, of course, are aboriginal instincts....about the Japanese people is that this passing phase ofreUgiou has been perpetuated. The Japanese have stayed boys. Ftti"l respect continued, and, by very... | |
| 1893 - 1090 ページ
...are aboriginal instincts. Next to the fear of natural phenomena, in point of primitiveness, conies the fear of one's father ; as children and savages...passing phase of religion has been perpetuated. The Japauese have stayed boys. Filial respect continued, and, by very virtue of not becoming less, became... | |
| Percival Lowell - 1894 - 418 ページ
...instructive. For a lack of psychic cvelopnitnt has enabled these seemingly diverse elements to fuse into a homogeneous whole. Both, of course, are aboriginal...savages show. But races, like individuals, tend to differentiate the two as they develop. Now, the suggestive thing about the Japanese is, that they did... | |
| |