Classic Essays

by Robert Throckmorton ANYONE WHO HAS SEEN an anthill should conclude that there is such a thing as ant nature and that it is different from human nature. But however flexibly we can arrange human societies, we just cannot live like ants. It is easy to forget this. When the cultural anthropologists of…
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Classic EssaysRevilo P. Oliver

The mysterious homing instinct of animals, and the human sense of home and homeland by Revilo P. Oliver THE Manchester Guardian may have been a liberal publication when it was founded in 1821. When I first began to glance occasionally at copies of it, a hundred and thirty years later, it had already become…
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Classic Essays

ONE OF THE GREATEST scientific revolutionaries of our age, and a victim of the Jewish inquisition, is Edward O. Wilson (pictured), Curator of Entomology at the Harvard Museum of Comparative Zoology and the author of The Insect Society, which Science magazine has called a “magisterial survey…
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Classic EssaysRevilo P. Oliver

by Revilo P. Oliver SINCE THE PUBLICATION of the late Robert Ardrey’s African Genesis in 1971, the mountain gorilla has been a species of particular interest to us, if we take an intelligent interest in our own species and its problematical future. The gorillas, our cousins and a branch of the evolutionary…
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Classic Essays

by William Gayley Simpson Part 7 of 7 As the West is engulfed by the catastrophe of the Second World War, the author of Which Way Western Man? reaches profound conclusions about the race’s agenda for survival. (ILLUSTRATION: WILLIAM SIMPSON during World War II) Note – This is the seventh
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Classic Essays

Some words about an ingenious social scientist whose work was pigeonholed in his own lifetime ONE OF THE victims of the Open Conspiracy was an unrequited admirer of the species named W.H. Sheldon (pictured), the inventor of the somatotype and the man who divided all human kind into ectomorphs, endomorphs,…
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