| Charles Darwin - 1872 - 404 str.
...Recapitulation. BLUSHING is the most peculiar and the most human of all expressions. Monkeys redden from passion, but it would require an overwhelming amount...from a blush is due to the relaxation of the muscular ooats of the small arteries, by which the capillaries become filled with blood ; and this depends on... | |
| Charles Darwin - 1884 - 396 str.
...expressions. Monkeys redden Emotions, from passion, but it would require an over!',!,,< . ^yhehmng amount of evidence to make us believe that any animal...blood ; and this depends on the proper vaso-motor center being affected. No doubt, if there be at the same time much mental agitation, the general circulation... | |
| Daniel Hack Tuke - 1884 - 530 str.
...lawn we lay, Then white as lawn, the roses took away." So human is blushing that, as Darwin says, " It would require an overwhelming amount of evidence to make us believe that any animal could blush " (xcv. p. 311). He mentions three cases of very young children blushing. Two were under three; one... | |
| Daniel Hack Tuke - 1884 - 460 str.
...lawn we lay, Then white as lawn, the roses took away." So human is blushing that, as Darwin says, " It would require an overwhelming amount of evidence to make us believe that any animal could blush" (xcv. p. 311). He mentions three cases of very young children blushing. Two were under three; one was... | |
| Charles Darwin - 1886 - 412 str.
...Recapitulation. BLUSHING is the most peculiar and the most human of all expressions. Monkeys redden from passion, but it would require an overwhelming amount...filled with blood ; and this depends on the proper vase-motor centre being affected. No doubt if there be at the same time much mental agitation, the... | |
| Henry T. Finck - 1887 - 650 str.
...Blushing," he says, " is the most peculiar and the most huniau of all expres.-ions. Monkeys redden from passion, but it would require an overwhelming amount...evidence to make us believe that any animal could blush." Concerning children he says : " The young blush much more freely than the old, but not during infancy,... | |
| Charles Darwin - 1896 - 412 str.
...Recapitulation. BLUSHING is the most peculiar and the most human of all expressions. Monkeys redden from passion, but it would require an overwhelming amount...filled with blood ; and this depends on the proper vase-motor centre being affected. No doubt if there be at the same time much mental agitation, the... | |
| Henry L. C. Recordon - 1903 - 96 str.
...the order of a higher intelligence, and is only an emiently human attribute, and according to Darwin, it would require an overwhelming amount of evidence to make us believe that animals do blush. Darwin is right, there being no proof one way or the other. Idiots and insane people... | |
| Sir Arthur Mitchell - 1905 - 178 str.
...perhaps the most surprising, and it may be regarded as the exclusive property of man. Darwin says that ' it would require an overwhelming amount of evidence to make us believe that any (of the lower) animals could blush.' Many lovers of the lower animals believe that dogs feel and show... | |
| Sir Arthur Mitchell - 1905 - 178 str.
...perhaps the most surprising, and it may be regarded as the exclusive property of man. Darwin says that ' it would require an overwhelming amount of evidence to make us believe that any (of the lower) animals could blush.' Many lovers of the lower animals believe that dogs feel and show... | |
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