Found 93 results for "Collective behavior in literature"
by D. H. Lawrence
Ursula and Gudrun Brangwen sat one morning in the window-bay of their father's house in Beldover, working and talking.
by Peter Kropotkin, P. Kropotkin
THE conception of struggle for existence as a factor of evolution, introduced into science by Darwin and Wallace, has pe...
by 孙武, Stephen F. Kaufman
ACCORDING TO AN OLD STORY, a lord of ancient China once asked his physician, a member of a family of healers, which of t...
by George Orwell
Nous sommes à la ferme, à la tombée de la nuit, alors que M.Jones vient de rentrer du pub. Il est ce soir bien trop émé...
by John Cleland
I sit down to give you an undeniable proof of my considering your desires as indispensible orders: ungracious then as th...
by H. G. Wells
ONE Wednesday afternoon in late September, Ann Veronica Stanley came down from London in a state of solemn excitement an...
by John W. Creswell, J. David Creswell
In the past two decades, research approaches have multiplied to a point at which investigators or inquires have many cho...
by Edith Nesbit
Children are like jam: all very well in the proper place, but you can't stand them all over the shop-eh, what?
by Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra
Gipsies seem to have been born into the world for the sole purpose of being thieves: they are born of thieving parents, ...
by John Gray
Una de las recompensas especiales que se reciben al aprender y aplicar tecnicas de alcoba avanzadas es que la relacion s...
by Erica Jong
There were 117 psychoanalysts on the Pan Am flight to Vienna and I'd been treated by at least six of them.
by Margaret Gatty, Alfred Gatty
"LET me hire you as a nurse for my poor children," said a Butterfly to a quiet Caterpillar, who was strolling along a ca...
by Edgar Allan Poe
The mental features discoursed of as the analytical, are, in themselves, but little susceptible of analysis.
by André Gide
In 1890, during the pontificate of Leo XIII, Anthime Armand-Dubios, unbeliever and freemason, visited Rome in order to c...