| 1876 - 846 str.
...definite laws ; or when in a solution of salt a crystal is formed, the phenomenon is neither more nor lees a mechanical manifestation of life than the growth...the perception or the formation of thought in man."* It is impossible to over-estimate the influence of these conclusions on physiology. Having a basis... | |
| Henry Mills Alden, Frederick Lewis Allen, Lee Foster Hartman, Thomas Bucklin Wells - 1876 - 974 str.
...laws, or whcB in a solution of salt a crystal is formed, the phenomenon is neither more nor less л mechanical manifestation of life than the growth and...the perception or the formation of thought in man." He declares of science, t. «., science as he holds it, that "nowhere in the whole domain of human... | |
| Constance E. Plumptre - 1879 - 364 str.
...fellow-countryman and fellow-worker was born. Such men, who live and die for a great idea, are usually stigmatised as " Materialists ; " but their opponents, whose arguments...general merit of the Theory of Descent, as reformed by Darwin.'1 Let us now proceed to another grand scientific generalisation of the nineteenth century,... | |
| Constance E. Plumptre - 1879 - 366 str.
...the first time enabled to conceive of the unity of nature in such a manner that a mcchanico-causal explanation of even the most intricate organic phenomena,...general merit of the Theory of Descent, as reformed by Darwin.'1 Let us now proceed to another grand scientific generalisation of the nineteenth century,... | |
| Ernst Haeckel - 1880 - 414 str.
...on the same day on which, 36 years before, Galileo, his great fellow-countryman and fellow-worker, was born. Such men, who live and die for a great idea,...Theory of Descent, as reformed by Darwin. CHAPTER II. SCIENTIFIC JUSTIFICATION OF THE THEORY OF DESCENT. HISTORY OF CREATION ACCORDING TO LINNAEUS. The... | |
| Rudolf Schmid - 1882 - 428 str.
...we quote from Hackel's ' 4 Natural History of Creation", Vol. I, page 23, the following passage: " By the theory of descent we are for the first time...the perception or the formation of thought in man." Here crystallization, organic life, sensation, and formation of thought, are expressly put in one line... | |
| Salem Wilder - 1886 - 368 str.
...phenomenon is neither more nor less a mechanical manifestation of life than the H^CKEL'S PHILOSOPHY. 195 growth and flowering of plants, than the propagation...the perception or the formation of thought in man." Though this extract does not, in so many words, state that the quality of life in minerals, plants... | |
| 1890 - 612 str.
...between animate and inanimate bodies does not exist. When a stone is thrown into the air and falls to the earth according to definite laws, or when in a solution...the perception or the formation of thought in man." Now in the light of our induction we also may heartily subscribe to this utterance of Haeckel, but... | |
| Ernst Haeckel - 1892 - 566 str.
...a solution of salt a crystal is formed, or when sulphur and quicksilver unite in forming cinnabar, the phenomenon is neither more nor less a mechanical...the perception or the formation of thought in man. The forces of nature present themselves here merely in different combinations and forms, sometimes... | |
| David Allyn Gorton - 1893 - 346 str.
...phenomenon is neither more nor less a mechanical manifestation of life than the growth of flowering plants; than the propagation of animals, or the activity...the perception or the formation of thought in man."* It is impossible to overestimate the influence of these conclusions on physiology. Having a basis on... | |
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