Youth:change & ChallengeErik Homburger Erikson Reveals the rich insights into archaeology and anthropology that chemistry can provide, discussing how modern methods such as radiocarbon dating and DNA analysis can determine the diet of prehistoric Europeans, the geographical origin of marble in an ancient statue, and human migratory patterns. Concurrently discusses the ways in which ancient peoples used chemistry to manipulate their environment. For general readers interested in the interplay of science, history, and archaeology. Annotation copyrighted by Book News, Inc., Portland, OR |
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Page 162
... social change , its effects have therefore vanished . It is of course true that the vast majority of Americans have made a kind of adaptation to social change . Most would feel lost without the technological in- novations with which ...
... social change , its effects have therefore vanished . It is of course true that the vast majority of Americans have made a kind of adaptation to social change . Most would feel lost without the technological in- novations with which ...
Page 167
... change is our unusual unwillingness to control , limit , or guide directions of industrial and social change - an unwillingness related to the ab- sence of institutions opposing innovation . Most rapid changes in the world today involve ...
... change is our unusual unwillingness to control , limit , or guide directions of industrial and social change - an unwillingness related to the ab- sence of institutions opposing innovation . Most rapid changes in the world today involve ...
Page 183
... social change . From a social point of view , the long - range limitations of these " adaptations " seem equally great . Indeed , it may be that , through withdrawal from concern with the general shape of society , we obtain short - run ...
... social change . From a social point of view , the long - range limitations of these " adaptations " seem equally great . Indeed , it may be that , through withdrawal from concern with the general shape of society , we obtain short - run ...
Contents
Fidelity and Diversity | 1 |
Archetypal Patterns of Youth | 24 |
Some Observations | 43 |
Copyright | |
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achieve activities adolescent adult adulthood American youth basic become BRUNO BETTELHEIM character structure child childhood commitment conflict course created Dædalus David Riesman delinquent economic emotional emphasis expected experience expression fact father feel French future girl graduate historical human ideal identity ideological important individual industrial involved Japa Japanese kokutai Komsomol labor less lives marriage maturity means Meiji Restoration ment MICHIGAN modern societies moral mother movements nature Negro normative older one's organization orgastic parents pattern Paul Goodman Peace Corps political problems psychoanalysis psychological relation relatively responsibility role S. N. Eisenstadt seems sense sexual situation Sochi social change Soviet stilyagi stress symbols Talcott Parsons teachers technological things tion traditional University values women young youth culture youth groups Zengakuren