27
27
27
NO
TES
1. Rousseau's Letter to d'Alembert, his Discourse on the Origin of Inequality, his
Social Contract, and, most important, his Emile,
2. Karen Lehrman, literary editor of Wilson Quarterly, toured college campuses to
survey women's studies programs and concluded that "Most women's studies
professors seem to adhere to the following principles in formulating classes: women
were and are oppressed; oppression is endemic to our patriarchal social system;
men, capitalism and Western values are responsible for women's problems."
"Which Way Feminism?" Wilson Quarterly, Winter, 1994, p. 135.
3. Proposal for Endorsement of The Seville Statement On Violence, American
Sociological Society, Washington, D.C., 1991.
4. Robert G. Wesson, Beyond Natural Selection, MIT Press, Cambridge, Mass.,
1993, p. 121.
5. John Tyler Bonner, The Evolution of Culture in Animals, Princeton University
Press, Princeton, New Jersey, 1980, pp. 98-99.
6. The Private Lives of Dolphins, written, directed, and edited by Mark J. Davis,
Nova, WGBH, Boston, 1992.
7. Edward O. Wilson, Sociobiology, p. 29.
8. Others had ventured onto the land before the reptiles, but none of them could
quite bring themselves to leave the water totally behind. First came the
crossopterygians, fish that could gulp air; then the crossopterygians' descendants,
<< < GO > >>
27
27
27
NO
TES
1. Rousseau's Letter to d'Alembert, his Discourse on the Origin of Inequality, his
Social Contract, and, most important, his Emile,
2. Karen Lehrman, literary editor of Wilson Quarterly, toured college campuses to
survey women's studies programs and concluded that "Most women's studies
professors seem to adhere to the following principles in formulating classes: women
were and are oppressed; oppression is endemic to our patriarchal social system;
men, capitalism and Western values are responsible for women's problems."
"Which Way Feminism?" Wilson Quarterly, Winter, 1994, p. 135.
3. Proposal for Endorsement of The Seville Statement On Violence, American
Sociological Society, Washington, D.C., 1991.
4. Robert G. Wesson, Beyond Natural Selection, MIT Press, Cambridge, Mass.,
1993, p. 121.
5. John Tyler Bonner, The Evolution of Culture in Animals, Princeton University
Press, Princeton, New Jersey, 1980, pp. 98-99.
6. The Private Lives of Dolphins, written, directed, and edited by Mark J. Davis,
Nova, WGBH, Boston, 1992.
7. Edward O. Wilson, Sociobiology, p. 29.
8. Others had ventured onto the land before the reptiles, but none of them could
quite bring themselves to leave the water totally behind. First came the
crossopterygians, fish that could gulp air; then the crossopterygians' descendants,
<< < GO > >>