Danh ngôn của Margaret Mead
Human nature is potentially aggressive and destructive and potentially orderly and constructive.
Human nature is potentially aggressive and destructive and potentially orderly and constructive.
Bản chất con người có khả năng hung hăng, phá hoại và có khả năng trật tự và mang tính xây dựng.
Tác giả: Margaret Mead | Chuyên mục: Nature | Sứ mệnh: [7]
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Các câu danh ngôn khác của cùng tác giả: Margaret Mead
- Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world; indeed, it's the only thing that ever has.
- Never believe that a few caring people can't change the world. For, indeed, that's all who ever have.
- Fathers are biological necessities, but social accidents.
- Anthropology demands the open-mindedness with which one must look and listen, record in astonishment and wonder that which one would not have been able to guess.
- As long as any adult thinks that he, like the parents and teachers of old, can become introspective, invoking his own youth to understand the youth before him, he is lost.
Các câu danh ngôn khác của cùng chuyên mục: Nature
- The mystic cords of memory, stretching from every battlefield and patriot grave to every living heart and hearthstone, all over this broad land, will yet swell the chorus of the Union, when again touched, as surely they will be, by the angels of our nature.
- Repeal the Missouri Compromise - repeal all compromises - repeal the Declaration of Independence - repeal all past history, you still cannot repeal human nature. It will be the abundance of man's heart that slavery extension is wrong; and out of the abundance of his heart, his mouth will continue to speak.
- Slavery is founded in the selfishness of man's nature - opposition to it is his love of justice. These principles are an eternal antagonism; and when brought into collision so fiercely, as slavery extension brings them, shocks and throes and convulsions must ceaselessly follow.
- Human nature is not nearly as bad as it has been thought to be.
- To feel much for others and little for ourselves; to restrain our selfishness and exercise our benevolent affections, constitute the perfection of human nature.