ToynbeeArnold. a study of history. Oxford University Press, 1954–1939 (See v. 3, p. 259. See also v. 1, pp. 441–464).
2.
MacIverR. M.the web of government. New York, Macmillan & Co., 1947. (See Chapter 1).
3.
MalinowskiB.freedom and civilization. New York, Roy, 1944, p. 160. (See also the extended accounts in the same author's myth in primitive psychology. Kegan Paul, 1926, and the foundations of faith and morals. Oxford University Press, 1936.
4.
MalinowskiB.freedom and civilization, pp. 139–160. (See also the same author's scientific theory of culture. University of North Carolina Press, 1944.)
5.
ArnoldThurman. the folklore of capitalism. Yale University Press, 1940.
6.
WoottonBarbaraSome Aspects of the social structure of England and Wales, in adult education, v. 13, pp. 97–116 (December, 1940).
7.
MalinowskiB.freedom and civilization, p. 160.
8.
KardinerA., and others. The psychological frontiers of society. Columbia University Press, 1945. See also KardinerA.The concept of basic personality structure as an operational tool in the social sciences, in LintonR. (Ed.) the science of man in the world crisis. Columbia University Press, 1945, pp. 107–122.
9.
LintonR., (Ed.) the science of man in the world crisis, p. 111.
10.
KardinerA., and others. the psychological frontiers of society, Chapter 6.
11.
Ibid., p. 28.
12.
VaihingerHans. the philosophy of as if. Kegal Paul, 1924.