... of individual development had to be taken into account ; and, at present, the study of ancestral evolution introduces a new element of likeness and unlikeness which is not only eminently deserving of recognition, but must ultimately predominate over... The American Naturalist - Strana 1171908Úplné zobrazení - Podrobnosti o knize
| Thomas Humphry Ward - 1887 - 642 str.
...which is not only eminently deserving of recognition, but must ultimately predominate over all others. A classification which shall represent the process...ancestral evolution is, in fact, the end which the labours of the philosophical taxonomist must keep in view. But it is an end which cannot be attained... | |
| Thomas Henry Huxley - 1889 - 160 str.
...which is not only eminently deserving of recognition, but must ultimately predominate over all others. A classification which shall represent the process...end which cannot be attained until the progress of palseontology has given us far more insight than we yet possess, into the historical facts of the case.... | |
| Smithsonian Institution. Board of Regents - 1889 - 822 str.
...which is not only eminently deserving of recognition, but must ultimately predominate over all others. A classification which shall represent the process...taxonomist must keep in view. But it is an end which can not be attained until the progress of palaeontology has given us far more insight than we yet possess... | |
| Smithsonian Institution. Board of Regents - 1889 - 806 str.
...deserving of recognition, but must ultimately predominate over all others. A classification which shall the process of ancestral evolution is, in fact, the end which the labors of the philosophical taxononiist must keep in view. But it is an end which can not be attained until the progress of palaeontology... | |
| Thomas Henry Huxley - 1898 - 162 str.
...which is not only eminently deserving of recognition, but must ultimately predominate over all others. A classification which shall represent the process...attained until the progress of palaeontology has given us far more insight than we yet possess, into the historical facts of the case. Much of the speculative... | |
| 1908 - 848 str.
...would multiply the number of described species many times. But the difficulty with this proposal is to be found in the fact that an inspection of the...attained until the progress of palaeontology has given us far more insight than we yet possess into the historical facts of the case. • It is plain that... | |
| Smithsonian Institution. Board of Regents - 1889 - 772 str.
...which is not only eminently deserving of recognition, but must ultimately predominate over all others. A classification which shall represent the process...philosophical taxonomist must keep in view. But it is an eud which can not be attained until the progress of palaeontology haa given us far more insight than... | |
| Smithsonian Institution. Board of Regents - 1889 - 774 str.
...which is not only eminently deserving of recognition, but must ultimately predominate over all others. A classification which shall represent the process of ancestral evolution is, in tact, the cud which the labors of the philosophical taxonomist must keep in view. But it in an end... | |
| Elwood C. Zimmerman - 2001 - 256 str.
...many curious means of occasional transport." CHAPTER 3 ANALYSES AND SUMMARIES OF THE HAWAIIAN BIOTA A classification which shall represent the process...fact, the end which the labors of the philosophical taxonotnist mast keep in tuind. — Huxley The total number of insects recorded from the Hawaiian Islands... | |
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