A true classification includes in each class, those objects which have more characteristics in common with one another, than any of them have in common with any objects excluded from the class. A Memoir on the Indian Surveys - Side 416av Sir Clements Robert Markham, Great Britain. India Office - 1878 - 481 siderUten tilgangsbegrensning - Om denne boken
| Herbert Spencer - 1864 - 74 sider
...This question I propose now to consider. A true classification includes in each class, those objects which have more characteristics in common with one another, than any of them have in common with any objects excluded from the class. Further, the characteristics possessed in common by the colligated... | |
| Herbert Spencer - 1873 - 386 sider
...This question I propose now to consider. A true classification includes in each class, those objects which have more characteristics in common with one another, than any of them have in common with any objects excluded from the class. Further, the characteristics possessed in common by the colligated... | |
| Sir Clements Robert Markham - 1877 - 78 sider
...aid, supply checks, and detect errors in tabulation. The two methods are necessary to each other. 62. In designing the new series of Moral and Material...each subject was given for facility of reference. 63. The Report was completed in good time, and was presented to Parliament in April 1873. Its object,... | |
| William Angus Knight - 1890 - 376 sider
...Mr. Spencer's principle of classification is that each class must include within it " those objects which have more characteristics in common with one another than any of them have in common with any objects excluded from the class ; and that those characteristics possessed in common by these objects,... | |
| William Angus Knight - 1890 - 380 sider
...Mr. Spencer's principle of classification is that each class must include within it "those objects which have more characteristics in common with one another than any of them have in common with any objects excluded from the class ; and that those characteristics possessed in common by these objects,... | |
| Herbert Spencer - 1892 - 500 sider
...This question I propose now to consider. A true classification includes in each class, those objects which have more characteristics in common with one another, than any of them have in common with any objects excluded from the class. Further, the characteristics possessed in common by the colligated... | |
| William Hansell Fleming - 1895 - 324 sider
...of the Sciences," defines it as follows: "A true classification includes in each class those objects which have more characteristics in common with one another than any of them have in common with any object excluded from the class. Further, the characteristics possessed in common by the colligated... | |
| Frank Campbell - 1896 - 534 sider
...India, where he says that each section treats "of a special administrative subject or group of subjects, the aim being to include in each section those subjects which have more characteristics in cmnmon with one another [for the purpose in question] than any of them have in common with any other... | |
| John Grier Hibben - 1905 - 472 sider
...lies at its basis. " A true classification," says Mr. Spencer, " includes in each class those objects which have more characteristics in common with one another, than any of them have in common with any objects excluded from the class. Further, the characteristics possessed in common by the colligated... | |
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