Describing the South African ox in Damaraland, he says he displays no affection for his fellows, and hardly seems to notice their existence, so long as he is among them; but, if he becomes separated from the herd, he displays an extreme distress that... Science and Common Sense in Working with Men - Page 124by Walter Dill Scott, Mary Holmes Stevens Hayes - 1921 - 154 pagesFull view - About this book
| William McDougall - Social psychology - 1909 - 378 pages
...1 he says he displays no affection for his fellows, and hardly seems to notice their existence, so long as he is among them ; but, if he becomes separated...closest possible contact with the bodies of his fellows. There we see the working of the gregarious instinct in all its simplicity, a mere uneasiness in isolation... | |
| William McDougall - 1916 - 460 pages
...Damaraland,1 he says he displays no affection for his fellows, and hardly seems to notice their existence, so long as he is among them ; but, if he becomes separated...closest possible contact with the bodies of his fellows. There we see the working of the gregarious instinct in all its simplicity, a mere uneasiness in isolation... | |
| Irwin Edman - Social psychology - 1919 - 480 pages
...Damaraland, he says he displays no affection for his fellows and hardly seems to notice their existence so long as he is among them; but if he becomes separated...the closest possible contact with the bodies of his fellows.1 This original tendency exhibits itself among human beings in a variety of ways. The tendency... | |
| Irwin Edman - Social psychology - 1920 - 490 pages
...Damaraland, he says he displays no affection for his fellows, and hardly seems to notice thenexistence, so long as he is among them; but, if he becomes separated...possible contact with the bodies of his fellows." 1 This original tendency exhibits itself among human beings in a variety of ways. The tendency of human... | |
| William McDougall - Social psychology - 1921 - 440 pages
...Damaraland,1 he says he displays no affection for his fellows, and hardly seems to notice their existence, so long as he is among them; but, if he becomes separated...closest possible contact with the bodies of his fellows. There we see the working of the gregarious instinct in all its simplicity, a mere uneasiness in isolation... | |
| Electronic journals - 1921 - 1136 pages
...affection for his fellows, hardly seems to notice their existence, so long as he is among the herd; if he becomes separated from the herd, he displays...the closest possible contact with the bodies of his fellows."17 McDougall here seems to be dealing with an acquired trend of the ox rather than its innate... | |
| Coleman Roberts Griffith - Psychology - 1923 - 538 pages
...for example, "displays no affection for his fellows, and hardly seems to notice their existence, so long as he is among them ; but, if he becomes separated...possible contact with the bodies of his fellows." l In the human organism certain variations or interpretations of this instinct have resulted in the... | |
| Thomas Denison Wood, Clifford Lee Brownell - Health - 1925 - 614 pages
...Damaraland, he says he displays no affection for his fellows, and hardly seems to notice their existence, so long as he is among them ; but, if he becomes separated...closest possible contact with the bodies of his fellows. There we see the working of the gregarious instinct in all its simplicity, a mere uneasiness in isolation... | |
| William McDougall - Social psychology - 1926 - 536 pages
...1 he says he displays no affection for his fellows, and hardly seems to notice their existence, so long as he is among them; but, if he becomes separated...closest possible contact with the bodies of his fellows. There we see the working of the gregarious instinct in all its simplicity, a mere uneasiness in isolation... | |
| Bernhard Fehr - English literature - 1927 - 254 pages
...Damaraland, he says he displays no affection for his fellows, and hardly seems to notice their existence, so long as he is among them; but, if he becomes separated...closest possible contact with the bodies of his fellows. There we see the working of the gregarious instinct in all its simplicity, a mere uneasiness in isolation... | |
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