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" ... have already noted, if an individual be isolated in this fashion, along with the fact of primacy of instinct we find also the fact of death. The inchoate and scattered impulses of an infant do not coordinate into serviceable powers except through... "
A Study of the Bases of Public Opinion - Page 14
by Vicente Albano Pacis - 1925 - 220 pages
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Human Nature and Conduct: An Introduction to Social Psychology

John Dewey - 1922 - 358 pages
...coordinate into serviceable powers except through social dependencies and companionships. His impulses are merely starting points for assimilation of the...action. They are agencies for transfer of existing social power into personal ability; they are means of reconstructive growth. Abandon an impossible...
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Human Nature and Conduct: An Introduction to Social Psychology

John Dewey - 1922 - 362 pages
...coordinate into serviceable powers except through social dependencies and companionships. His impulses are merely starting points for assimilation of the...action. They are agencies for transfer of existing social power into personal ability; they are means of reconstructive growth. Abandon an impossible...
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The Religious Mind: A Psychological Study of Religious Experience

Carl K. Mahoney - 1927 - 250 pages
...coordinate into serviceable powers except through social dependencies and companionships. His impulses are merely starting points for assimilation of the...more matured beings upon whom he depends. They are agencies for the transfer of existing social power into personal ability; they are means of reconstructive...
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The Philosophy of John Dewey, Volume 10

John Dewey - 1928 - 602 pages
...coordinate into serviceable powers except through social dependencies and companionships. His impulses are merely starting points for assimilation of the...action. They are agencies for transfer of existing social power into personal ability; they are means of reconstructive growth. Abandon an impossible...
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Educational Reform: A Deweyan Perspective

Douglas J. Simpson, Michael John Brierley Jackson - 1997 - 400 pages
...abdication of intellectual leadership, for it is clear that Dewey saw instincts and interests merely as "starting points for assimilation of the knowledge and skill of the more matured beings upon whom he [the student] depends" (M l4, 68). Even so, It is essential that the new objects and events be related...
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