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Professional Ethos and Public Crisis: A Historian's Reflections
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 December 2020
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- Copyright © Modern Language Association of America, 1968
References
∗ An address delivered at the Plenary Meeting of the MLA Standing Committees in New York, 28 March 1968.
1 John Higham et al., History, in Humanistic Scholarship in America, ed. Richard Schlatter (Englewood Cliffs, N.J., 1965), pp. 6–25.
2 “Address of Welcome,” Transactions and Proceedings of the Modern Language Association of America, III (1887), 3–6.
3 Francis B. Gummere, “What Place Has Old English Philology in Our Elementary Schools ?” Transactions of the Modern Language Association of America, i (1884–85), 170–178. See also Vols, I–III, passim.
4 AAAS Committee on Science in the Promotion of Human Welfare, “Science and Human Welfare,” Science, cxxxii (8 July 1960), 4.
5 “Science and Human Welfare,” Science, cxxxii, 3–4.
6 “Science and Human Welfare,” Science, clv (17 Feb. 1967), 856.
7 “Science and Human Welfare,” Science, clix (23 Feb. 1968), 857–859.
8 Kathleen Gough, “World Revolution and the Science of Man,” in The Dissenting Academy, ed. Theodore Roszak (New York, 1967), pp. 136–137.
9 American Anthropological Association Newsletter, viii (Jan. 1967), 6.
10 “Statement on Problems of Anthropological Research and Ethics by the Fellows of the AAA.”
11 George W. Stocking, “The Parameters of a Paradigm: Franz Boas, the American Anthropological Association and the National Research Council.” (Unpublished MS.)
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