ASSOCIATION 



11 'J 



implanted by the social group in the minds of its mem- 

 bers of the i)ropriety of tlie manner of life imposed by 

 it upon them." When two or more simple groups unite 

 and sovereignty has been organized, the different moral 



Figure 48. Silver Aimilct asaiiist the Evil Eye. 



views begin to contend in the larger social circle. ''The 

 primitive moral codes are useless and a new one must be 

 formed if the union is to continue. The members of the 

 new union become habituated to the new institutions 

 which l)ecome necessary to sustain sovereignty and new 

 conceptions of what is right, proper, allowable and good, 

 grow up. ' ' •"" Thus, while morals are the product of the 

 relation of the simple social group to its individual mem- 

 bers, rights are the product of the union of different 

 social elements. 



30 Gumplowicz, L. — The Outlines of Sociology, translated l>v F. \V. ^loore. 

 p. 168. 



