| American Association for the Advancement of Science - 1879 - 1100 str.
...creation of each separata species still held sway, almost as completely as when Linnaeus declared : " There are as many different species as there were...forms created in the beginning by the Infinite Being." But the dawn of a new era was already breaking, and the third period of palaeontology we may consider... | |
| 1879 - 546 str.
...creation of each separate species still held sway, almost as completely as when Linnaeus declared : " There are as many different species as there were...forms created in the beginning by the Infinite Being." But the dawn of a new era was already breaking, and the third period of palaeontology we may consider... | |
| 1879 - 730 str.
...each separate species still held sway, almost as completely as when Linnseus declared, " There arc as many different species as there were different...forms created in the beginning by the Infinite Being." But the dawn of a new era was already breaking, and the third period of paleontology we may consider... | |
| 1880 - 902 str.
...creation of each separate species still held sway, almost as completely as when Linna?us declared, " There are as many different species as there were...forms created in the beginning by the Infinite Being." But the dawn of a new era was already breaking, and the third period of paleontology we may consider... | |
| Ernst Haeckel - 1880 - 414 str.
...incomprehensible, " They were created." Linnaeus himself defined the idea of species in this manner by saying, " There are as many different species as there were...forms created in the beginning by the infinite Being." ( " Species tot sunt diversae, quot diversas formas ab initio creavit infmitum ens.") In this respect,... | |
| American Association for the Advancement of Science - 1880 - 660 str.
...creation of each separate species still held sway, almost as completely as when Linnaeus declared: "There are as many different species as there were different forms created in the beginning by the Infmite Being." But the dawn of a new era was already breaking, and the third period of palaeontology... | |
| American Association for the Advancement of Science - 1880 - 656 str.
...separate species still held sway, almost as completely as when Linnaeus declared : " There are as man}' different species as there were different forms created in the beginning by the Infinite Being." But the dawn of a new era was already breaking, and the third period of palaeontology we may consider... | |
| Robert Routledge - 1881 - 748 str.
...Tfa na ( A ,<'! ' with those of the present day. Linnieus defined Ins notion of species by saying, " There are as many different species as there were...forms created in the beginning by the Infinite Being." Cuvier, who thought a science of living things impossible unless based on the immutability of species,... | |
| Joseph Young Bergen, Fanny Dickerson Bergen - 1884 - 266 str.
...recent as that just preceding the dawn of written history. ish naturalist, Linnaeus, expressly stated, " There are as many different species as there were...forms created in the beginning by the Infinite Being." And, after quoting this statement, Professor Haeckel, of the University of Jena, Germany (himself one... | |
| Franz Heinrich Reusch - 1886 - 396 str.
...the sentence : " Species tot sunt diversse, quot diversas formas ab initio creavit infinitum ens." " There are as many different species as there were...forms created in the beginning by the Infinite Being." Linnaeus even thought, as I have mentioned before, that each species had been created in the shape... | |
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