It is quite certain that we cannot become sufficiently acquainted with organized creatures and their hidden potentialities by aid of purely mechanical natural principles, much less can we explain them; and this is so certain, that we may boldly assert... Lectures on Science, Philosophy and Art, 1907-1908 - Strana 9autor/autoři: Columbia University - 1908 - 671 str.Úplné zobrazení - Podrobnosti o knize
| Ernst Haeckel - 1880 - 414 str.
...organized creatures and their hidden potentialities by aid of purely mechanical natural principles, much less can we explain them ; and this is so certain,...may boldly assert that it is absurd for man even to conceive such an idea, or to hope that a Newton may one day arise able to make the production of a... | |
| Ernst Haeckel - 1883 - 416 str.
...organized creatures and their hidden potentialities by aid of purely mechanical natural principles, much less can we explain them ; and this is so certain,...may boldly assert that it is absurd for man even to conceive such an idea, or to hope that a Newton may one day arise able to make the production of a... | |
| Henry Fairfield Osborn - 1894 - 284 str.
...organized creatures and their hidden potentialities by aid of purely mechanical natural principles, much less can we explain them ; and this is so certain, that we may boldly assert that it i& absurd for man even to conceive such an idea, or to hope that a Newton may one day arise even to... | |
| 1913 - 914 str.
...organized creatures and their hidden potentialities by aid of purely mechanical natural principles, much less can we explain them ; and this is so certain...may boldly assert that it is absurd for man even to conceive such an idea, or to hope that a Newton may one day arise even to make the production of a... | |
| Christian Archibald Herter - 1911 - 376 str.
...Immanuel Kant was utterly hostile to the mechanistic conception. In an oftquoted passage he says : "It is quite certain that we cannot become adequately...design. Such an insight we must absolutely deny to men." But Kant elsewhere admits that comparative anatomy gives us a ray of hope that something may... | |
| Henry Fairfield Osborn - 1917 - 370 str.
...organized creatures and their hidden potentialities by aid of purely mechanical natural principles; much less can we explain them; and this is so certain,...may boldly assert that it is absurd for man even to conceive such an idea, or to hope that a Newton may one day arise able to make the production of a... | |
| Henry Fairfield Osborn - 1917 - 368 str.
...organized creatures and their hidden potentialities by aid of purely mechanical natural principles; much less can we explain them; and this is so certain,...may boldly assert that it is absurd for man even to conceive such an idea, or to hope that a Newton may one day arise able to make the production of a... | |
| John Arthur Thomson - 1920 - 372 str.
...organised creatures and their hidden potentialities by aid of purely mechanical natural principles; much less can we explain them; and this is so certain,...may boldly assert that it is absurd for man even to conceive such an idea, or to hope that a Newton may one day arise able to make the production of a... | |
| Edwin Grant Conklin - 1921 - 272 str.
...organized creatures and their hidden potentialities by aid of purely mechanical natural principles, much less can we explain them: and this is so certain...may boldly assert that it is absurd for man even to conceive such an idea, or to hope that a Newton may one day arise to make even the production of a... | |
| Woodbridge Riley - 1926 - 374 str.
...organized creatures and their hidden potentialities by aid of purely mechanical natural principles, much less can we explain them; and this is so certain,...may boldly assert that it is absurd for man even to conceive such an idea, or to hope that a Newton may one day arise even to make the production of a... | |
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