Our Race Problems

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Shakespeare Press, 1911 - 374 sider

Henry Ferdinand Suksdorf presents a history of humankind framed in the context of various races to have emerged throughout history.

Writing in 1911, it was the author's belief that each race of humankind undergoes a period of ascendance, followed by a peak wherein intellectual and civilizational achievements are made, and finally a ruinous decline into decadence. In support of his hypothesis, Suksdorf discusses the various civilizations and empires of the past, noting how each has followed this pattern. For the author, each race of humankind has undergone the process of a societal zenith, followed by a fall.

After listing the various successes and demises of twenty-two different races, the author concludes with the Human Race - a prediction that eventually, all of the various races will largely unite. This unity will produce a final peak for human society; a global brotherhood of man. Suksdorf's prognosis is that national identity will diminish in importance, and that a golden age will emerge in which new heights of societal and moral standards will be met owing to a burgeoning of activity and cooperation. In particular, the author highlights the United States - a nation comprised of peoples with diverse heritages - as a forerunner to this future.

 

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Side 19 - A national type pursues its way physically and intellectually through changes and developments answering to those of the individual, and being represented by Infancy, Childhood, Youth, Manhood, Old Age, and Death respectively.
Side 19 - ... that had been assumed. When the change to be accomplished is very profound, involving extensive anatomical alterations not merely in the appearance of the skin, but even in the structure of the skull, long periods of time are undoubtedly required, and many generations of individuals are consumed. Or, by interior disturbance, particularly by blood admixture, with more rapidity may a national type be affected, the result Ana through plainly depending on the extent to which admixture has ture.
Side 217 - The last decade of the eighteenth and the first decade of the nineteenth century is a momentous period in the history of the roads in London and its environs.
Side 240 - ... from infancy to youth, from youth to manhood, and from manhood to old age.
Side 27 - In teaching we have to advance from few things to many, from the brief to the more lengthened, from the simple to the complex, from the general to the special, from the near to the remote, from the regular to the irregular. Comenius passes from General Didactic to Special Didactic, applying the general principles which he has laid down to the method of instruction in Science (which is knowledge generally), in Arts, and finally, in Language, and to the general improvement...
Side 204 - Postmaster-General (1855) it is stated that the words "haste, post haste," occur on the backs of private letters at the close of the fifteenth and at the beginning of the sixteenth century, and it is therefore inferred that the post was not at that time restricted to Government letters.
Side 188 - CAMPEADOR), of which only a single MS. exists. This MS. contains three other poems : The Book of Apollonius, Prince of Tyre; The. Life, of Our Lady, St Mary of Egypt...
Side 18 - ... the thesis which he had presented in his paper at Oxford in 1860 before the British Association for the Advancement of Science. The main thesis of the book is that the physiological development of man as an individual establishes the laws which control the growth of society, that, as Draper put it, "man is the archetype of society. Individual development is the model of social progress.
Side 19 - ... the adult, the life of a nation may be said to be no longer than the life of a person, considering the manner in which its affairs are moving. There is a variable velocity of existence, though the lapses of time may be equable. The origin, existence, and death of nations depend thus on physical influences, which are themselves the result of immutable laws. Nations aro Nations are only transitional forms of humanity.
Side 191 - Beginning with the period from the close of the fifteenth century to the middle of the...

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