Darwinism and Other EssaysMacmillan and Company, 1879 - 283 sider |
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Side 33
... experience , the most delicate analytic power , and a prodigious memory for details are absolutely essential . The general sagacity of his D conclusions shows that Mr. Darwin possesses these qualities in a 11. ] 33 MR . MIVART ON DARWINISM ...
... experience , the most delicate analytic power , and a prodigious memory for details are absolutely essential . The general sagacity of his D conclusions shows that Mr. Darwin possesses these qualities in a 11. ] 33 MR . MIVART ON DARWINISM ...
Side 35
... experience , those who are the most rash in forming their opinions are apt to be likewise the most indis- posed to reconsider them . If Mr. Mivart had any genuine sympathy with the scientific temper of mind , this particular kind of ...
... experience , those who are the most rash in forming their opinions are apt to be likewise the most indis- posed to reconsider them . If Mr. Mivart had any genuine sympathy with the scientific temper of mind , this particular kind of ...
Side 43
... experience of the offspring amid en- vironing circumstances is not likely to be precisely the same as that of the parent . The prolongation of infancy , therefore , increases the opportunities for the production of a mental type more ...
... experience of the offspring amid en- vironing circumstances is not likely to be precisely the same as that of the parent . The prolongation of infancy , therefore , increases the opportunities for the production of a mental type more ...
Side 67
... experience to the past , the element of sequence in time is introduced in such a way as to suggest the causation of conscious- ness by nerve - matter . Nevertheless the assertion of the evolutionist is purely historical in its import ...
... experience to the past , the element of sequence in time is introduced in such a way as to suggest the causation of conscious- ness by nerve - matter . Nevertheless the assertion of the evolutionist is purely historical in its import ...
Side 75
... experience , and it is helpless without the data which experience furnishes . Now , science may easily demolish materialism and show that mind cannot be regarded as a product of matter , but the belief in a future life requires some ...
... experience , and it is helpless without the data which experience furnishes . Now , science may easily demolish materialism and show that mind cannot be regarded as a product of matter , but the belief in a future life requires some ...
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Side 3 - SOUND : a Series of Simple, Entertaining, and Inexpensive Experiments in the Phenomena of Sound, for the use of Students of every age.
Side 6 - PHYSICS. LESSONS IN ELEMENTARY PHYSICS. By "BALFOUR STEWART, FRS, Professor of Natural Philosophy in Owens College, Manchester. With numerous Illustrations and Chromoliths of the Spectra of the Sun, Stars, and Nebulae.
Side 1 - MATHEMATICS. AIRY— Works by Sir GB AIRY, KCB, Astronomer Royal :— ELEMENTARY TREATISE ON PARTIAL DIFFERENTIAL EQUATIONS. Designed for the Use of Students in the Universities. With Diagrams. Second Edition. Crown 8vo.
Side 14 - LOGIC. ELEMENTARY LESSONS IN LOGIC; Deductive and Inductive, with copious Questions and Examples, and a Vocabulary of Logical Terms. By W. STANLEY JEVONS, MA, Professor of Political Economy in University College, London. New Edition. Fcap. 8vo. 3*. 6d. " Nothing can be better for a school-book. "-^-GUARDIAN. "A manual alike simple, interesting, and scientific."— ATHHN/UJH.
Side 2 - CLIFFORD— THE ELEMENTS OF DYNAMIC. An Introduction to the Study of Motion and Rest in Solid and Fluid Bodies.
Side 14 - PHYSIOLOGY. LESSONS IN ELEMENTARY PHYSIOLOGY. With numerous Illustrations. By TH HUXLEY, FRS, Professor of Natural History in the Royal School of Mines. New Edition. i8mo. cloth. 4^. 6d. " Pure gold throughout."— GUARDIAN. " Unquestionably the clearest and most complete elementary treatise on this subject that we possess in any language.
Side 157 - To do good to others ; to sacrifice for their benefit your own wishes ; to love your neighbour as yourself; to forgive your enemies; to restrain your passions; to honour your parents; to respect those who are set over you : these, and a few others, are the sole essentials of morals; but they have been known for thousands of years, and not one jot or tittle has been added to them by all the sermons, homilies, and text-books which moralists and theologians have been able to produce.
Side 4 - Morgan. — A COLLECTION OF PROBLEMS AND EXAMPLES IN MATHEMATICS. With Answers. By HA MORGAN, MA , Sadlerian and Mathematical Lecturer of Jesus College, Cambridge.
Side 3 - THE FIRST THREE SECTIONS OF NEWTON'S PRINCIPIA, With Notes and Illustrations. Also a collection of Problems, principally intended as Examples of Newton's Methods. By PERCIVAL FROST, MA Third Edition.
Side 5 - s plan of selected Types and by the use of Schedules. The earlier chapters, embracing the elements of Structural and Physiological Botany, introduce us to the methodical study of the Ordinal Types. The concluding chapters are entitled, " How to Dry Plants