| University Council for Educational Administration - 1962 - Broj stranica: 580
...while man may be referred to as a species, he exists in great variety. Kluckhohn and Murray have said that "every man is in certain respects (a) like all other men, (b) like some other men, and (c) like no other man. 34 5. If man has a nature, it is to be driven to create a more perfect relationship... | |
| United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on the Judiciary - 1964 - Broj stranica: 524
...unique qualities of a client provide only one kind of information which can aid us in making decisions. "Every man is in certain respects (a) like all other men, (b) like some other men, (c) like no other man."20 All three kinds of in" Isabel Belts, "Six Months Experience with a Parolee Classification System,"... | |
| Chris Argyris - 1972 - Broj stranica: 162
...explaining behavior at that level. This is the meaning of Kluckhohn's and Murray's famous statement that every man is in certain respects: (a) like all...other men; (b) like some other men; (c) like no other man (Kluckhohn and Murray 1949, p. 35). Thus, one can use the concept of need and not be required to... | |
| John Putnam Demos - 2004 - Broj stranica: 560
...influence. Accusers, Victims, Bystanders: Tke Innerlife Dimension Introduction: The Primary Victims "Every man is in certain respects: (a) like all other men, (b) like some other men, (c) like no other man."1 This simple yet profound observation, offered many years ago by two eminent social scientists,... | |
| Jaan Valsiner - 1986 - Broj stranica: 432
...lives, appears to be a matter of preference. Allport's truism, borrowed from Kluckhohn and Murray, was that every man is in certain respects (a) like all...other men, (b) like some other men, (c) like no other man. That distinction was known much earlier and it was made the very basis of a "differential psychology"... | |
| Alan Dundes - 1989 - Broj stranica: 196
...traits would be reflected in the folklore of the group in question. Clyde Kluckhohn once wrote (1962:26) that every man is, in certain respects, (a) like all other men, (b) like some other men, and (c) like no other men. One is tempted to apply this same paradigm to nations or national character.... | |
| John W. Berry - 1992 - Broj stranica: 480
...in Le Vine's primary concern for the second level of C. Kluckhohn and Murray's (1948) famous dictum: "Every man is in certain respects: (a) like all other men, (b) like some other men, (c) like no other man" (p. 35). For LeVine: Culture and personality studies are primarily concerned with those respects... | |
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