| Henry Maudsley - 1871 - 180 pages
...certainty by the sense of smell. He will not kiss any one till he has sniffod at the person first. I am not aware of any other considerations than those...truly ruminates : bolting his food rapidly, he retires afterward to a corner, where at his leisure he quietly brings it up again into the mouth and masticates... | |
| Henry Maudsley - 1871 - 186 pages
...glimpse of an explanation of the origin of these animal traits in man. We need not, however, confine onr attention to idiots only. Whence come the savage snarl,...truly ruminates : bolting his food rapidly, he retires afterward to a corner, where at his leisure he quietly brings it up again into the mouth and masticates... | |
| Henry Maudsley - 1872 - 180 pages
...certainty by the sense of smell. He will not kiss any one lill ho has sniffed at the person first. I am not aware of any other considerations than those...truly ruminates : bolting his food rapidly, he retires afterward to a corner, where at his leisure he quietly brings it up again into the mouth and masticates... | |
| Charles Darwin - 1872 - 404 pages
...view may be extended to the brain in its degenerated condition in some insane patients ; and asks, whence come " the savage snarl, the destructive disposition,...do, unless he has the " brute nature within him?" I2 This question must, as it would appear, be answered in the affirmative. Anger, indignation. —... | |
| Henry Maudsley - 1873 - 388 pages
...characteristic development as human- — when it remains arrested at or below the level of an orang's brain, it may be presumed that it will manifest its...bolting his food rapidly, he retires afterwards to a comer, where at his leisure he quietly brings it up again into the mouth and masticates it as the cow... | |
| William Woods Smyth - 1873 - 412 pages
...their animal traits in man. We need not, however, confine our attention to idiots alone. Whence came the savage snarl, the destructive disposition, the...at his leisure, he quietly brings it up again into his mouth, and masticates as the cow does. It would take up a long time if I were to enumerate the... | |
| 1873 - 888 pages
...by him. The state of insanity in man is compared to the normal state of the animal. Again, he asks, "Why should a human being, deprived of his reason,...brutal in character as some do, unless he has the brutal nature within him ?" (p. 246). A more silly or childish mode of reasoning could scarcely be... | |
| 1881 - 720 pages
...explanation to call them so ; degenerations come by law, and are as natural as law can make them. . . . Why should a human being deprived of his reason ever...some do, unless he has the brute nature within him?' 'We may,' concludes this eminent authority, ' without much difficulty trace savagery in civilisation,... | |
| Andrew Wilson - 1887 - 382 pages
...explanation to call them so ; degenerations come by law, and are as natural as law can make them. . . . Why should a human being deprived of his reason ever...some do, unless he has the brute nature within him ? " " We may," concludes this eminent authority, " without much difficulty trace savagery in civilisation,... | |
| Henry Maudsley - 1890 - 298 pages
...obscene language, the wild howl, the offensive habits, displayed by some of the insane ? Why sttould a human being deprived of his reason ever become so...truly ruminates : bolting his food rapidly, he retires afterward to a corner, where at his leisure he quietly brings it up again into the mouth and masticates... | |
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