000 01621 #a2200349 #4500
001 MUSEF-BIB-MON-003863
003 BO-LP-MUSEF
005 20220503141705.0
008 080101s1965 US |r| 001|0|eng d
040 _aBO-LpMNE
041 _aspa
082 4 _a306
_221
092 _s E
_c306
_cB622m
100 1 _aBoas, Franz
245 0 4 _aThe mind of primitive man.
260 _aNew York - US
_bPress Paperback
_c1965
300 _a254 p.
520 3 _aContiene: This study of the relationship between race and culture holds an important place in twentieth-century scientific literature. For not until its publication were scientists who refused to accept theories of racial superiority and inferiority able to point to a single comprehensive work in which data were presented in terms of wider implications and known facts marshalled to answer disputed questions. The author insists that there is no fundamental difference in the ways of thinking of primitive and civilized man. A close connection between race and personality has never been established. The concept of racial type as commonly used even in scientific literature is misleading and requires a logical as well as a biological redefinition.
546 _aIngles.
650 4 _aANTROPOLOGIA CULTURAL Y SOCIAL
650 4 _aHOMBRE PRIMITIVO
650 4 _aPSICOLOGIA
650 4 _aCIVILIZACION
650 4 _aETNOLOGIA
650 4 _aORGANIZACIONES SOCIALES
653 _aANTROPOLOGIA
653 _aANTROPOLOGIA CULTURAL Y SOCIAL
850 _aBO-LpMNE
866 1 _a1
942 _cBK
_dCON
_j011
_2ddc
999 _c3902