| 1881 - Страниц: 334
...them in countless varied ways according to the varying needs of the organism. Whatever other causes have been at work, natural selection is supreme, to...which even Darwin himself hesitated to claim for it. The more we study it the more we are convinced of its overpowering importance, and the more confidently... | |
| Alfred Russel Wallace - 1889 - Страниц: 520
...them in countless varied ways according to the varying needs of the organism. Whatever other causes have been at work, Natural Selection is supreme, to...which even Darwin himself hesitated to claim for it. The more we study it the more we are convinced of its overpowering importance, and the more confidently... | |
| John Holmes Agnew, Walter Hilliard Bidwell - 1889 - Страниц: 928
...them in countless varied ways according to the varying needs of the organism. Whatever other causes have been at work, natural selection is supreme, to an extent which even Dar. win himself hesitated to claim for it. The more we study it the more we are convinced of its overpowering... | |
| Aubrey Lackington Moore - 1890 - Страниц: 428
...and, in any case, he is ready to maintain, as against the NeoLamarckians, that "whatever other causes have been at work, natural selection is supreme to...which even Darwin himself hesitated to claim for it." This supremacy of natural selection throughout the animal and vegetable world is, nevertheless, according... | |
| 1890 - Страниц: 1130
...аз a principle of overwhelming importance in the economy of nature ; " supreme," indeed, he says, " to an extent which even Darwin himself hesitated to claim for it." The other work I refer to is the English translation of the remarkable " Essays upon Heredity and Kindred... | |
| Francis Howe Johnson - 1891 - Страниц: 550
...the form producer. We cannot see things as Wallace see them, when he says : " Whatever other causes have been at work, Natural Selection is supreme, to...which even Darwin himself hesitated to claim for it. The more we study it, the more we are convinced of its overpowering importance, and the more confidently... | |
| Charles Mallory Williams, Cora May Williams - 1892 - Страниц: 608
...the same causes only."1 Yet, in assuming Weismann's theory, Wallace asserts: "Whatever other causes have been at work, Natural Selection is supreme, to...which even Darwin himself hesitated to claim for it." "While admitting, as Darwin always admitted, the cooperation of the fundamental laws of growth and... | |
| Charles Mallory Williams, Cora May Williams - 1892 - Страниц: 618
...the same causes only."1 Yet, in assuming Weismann's theory, Wallace asserts: "Whatever other causes have been at work, Natural Selection is supreme, to...which even Darwin himself hesitated to claim for it." "While admitting, as Darwin always admitted, the cooperation of the fundamental laws of growth and... | |
| William Henry Flower - 1898 - Страниц: 428
...as a principle of overwhelming importance in the economy of nature ; " supreme," indeed, he says, " to an extent which even Darwin himself hesitated to claim for it." The other work I refer to is the English translation of the remarkable Essays upon Heredity and Kindred... | |
| Alfred Russel Wallace - 1901 - Страниц: 542
...them in countless varied ways according to the varying needs of the organism. Whatever other causes have been at work, Natural Selection is supreme, to...which even Darwin himself hesitated to claim for it. The more we study it the more we are convinced of its overpowering importance, and the more confidently... | |
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