... there is none. If there is no organization, the cerebrum is a chaotic mass of fibres, incapable of performing any orderly action. If there is some organization, it must consist in that same " physiological division of labour " in which all organization... Works - Strana 572autor/autoři: Herbert Spencer - 1881Úplné zobrazení - Podrobnosti o knize
| Thomas Laycock - 1860 - 504 str.
...division of labour, physiological or other, of which we have any example, or can form any conception, but what involves the concentration of special kinds of activity in special places."* 591. The phrenological school have had to carry on an incessant war in defence of their doctrines,... | |
| Robert Dunn - 1863 - 100 str.
...division of labour, physiological or other, of which we have any example or can form any conception, but what involves the concentration of special kinds of activity in special places." (Spencer's Principles of Psychology, p. 007, 1855.) Now it is indisputable that the hemispherical ganglia,... | |
| John James Drysdale, Robert Ellis Dudgeon, Richard Hughes, John Rutherfurd Russell - 1863 - 716 str.
...division of labour, physiological or other, of which we have any example, or can form any conception, but what involves the concentration of special kinds of activity in special places." * Look on this picture and on that;—on the mechanical Carpenter introducing his locomotive steam-engine... | |
| Herbert Spencer - 1871 - 660 str.
...division of labour" in which all organizatiou consists ; and there is no division of labourphysiological or other, but what involves the concentration of special...to coincide with the doctrine of the phrenologists iu its most abstract shape, is by no means to coincide with their concrete embodiments of it. Indeed,... | |
| Herbert Spencer - 1876 - 660 str.
..."physiological division of labeur" in which all organization consists ; and there is no division of labeurs physiological or other, but what involves the concentration...shape, is by no means to coincide with their concrete embediments of it. Indeed, the crudity of their philosophy is such as may well make men who to some... | |
| 1878 - 696 str.
...physiological division of labor,' in which all organization consists ; and there is no division of labor, physiological or other, but what involves the concentration of special kinds of activity in special places." It may be objected by some, in behalf of Dr. Brown-Se'quard's doctrine, that the remarks of Mr. Spencer... | |
| 1911 - 678 str.
...division of labor in which all organization consists, and there is no division of labor, physiologic or other, but what involves the concentration of special kinds of activity in special places." But since then by the elaborate work of Fritsch and Hitzig in Germany; Ferrier, Horseley and Schafer in... | |
| Herbert Spencer - 1883 - 684 str.
...organization, it must consist in that same "physiological division of labour" in whiek all ;rganization consists ; and there is no division of labour) physiological...most abstract shape, is by no means to coincide with tht;: concrete embodiments of it. Indeed, tho crudity of their philosophy is such as may well make... | |
| Frederick Howard Collins - 1889 - 610 str.
...function is the law of all organization whatever; and it would be marvellous were there here an exception. But to coincide with the doctrine of the phrenologists...to coincide with their concrete embodiments of it. However defensible may be the hypothesis of a localization of faculties, when presented under an abstract... | |
| Herbert Spencer - 1890 - 682 str.
..."physiological division of labour" in which all organization consists ; and there is no division of labours physiological or other, but what involves the concentration...philosophy is such as may well make men who to some eitent agree with them, refrain from avowal of their agreement : more especially when they are met... | |
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