151
adopted the Chinese system of government and numerous other Chinese practices.
They ruled through the old Chinese bureaucratic structure. They secured the cooperation
of the Chinese elite. And in many ways, they became more Chinese than their new
subjects. This shouldn't have been surprising. Even in the days of their initial conquests,
the Manchus had tapped the wisdom of Chinese advisors. (Dennis and Ching Ping
Bloodworth, The Chinese Machiavelli, pp. 269-271. Wolfram Eberhard, A History of
China, pp. 278-281.)
127. Wolfram Eberhard, A History of China, p. 299-300. Philip D. Curtin, Cross-Cultural
Trade in World History, pp. 243-244.
128. William J. Duiker, Cultures In Collision: The Boxer Rebellion, Presidio Press, San
Rafael, California, pp. 19-25. Immanuel D.Y. Hsu, The Rise of Modern China, Oxford
University Press, New York, 1975, pp. 426-428. Edwin O. Reischauer, Japan, Past and
Present, p. 138.
129. William J. Duiker, Cultures In Collision: The Boxer Rebellion, p. 150. Immanuel D.Y.
Hsu, The Rise of Modern China, p. 490.
130. See James H. Humphrey, Ed. D. and Joy N. Humphrey, B.S., A.P.C., "Stress in
Childhood," in Hans Selye, ed., Selye's Guide To Stress Research, Volume 3, pp.
136-163, for a typical example of educators who fear competition and stress in the
classroom.
131. Kenneth R. Pelletier, "Stress: Etiology, Assessment, and Management in Holistic
Medicine," in Hans Selye, ed., Selye's Guide to Stress Research, Volume 3, p. 49.
132. Edward A. Kravitz, "Hormonal Control of Behavior: Amines and the Biasing of
Behavioral Output in Lobsters," Science, September 30, 1988, p. 1779.
133. Sharon Begley with Louise Lief, "The Way We Were," Newsweek, November 10,
1986, pp. 62-72.
134. Robert Ornstein, M.D., Dr. David Sobel, The Healing Brain, pp. 164-165.
135. Robert M. Sapolsky, "Lessons of the Serengeti: Why Some of Us Are More
Susceptible to Stress," pp. 38-42.
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