The Shrewsbury Edition of the Works of Samuel Butler: Evolution, old and newJ. Cape, 1924 |
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Стр. xiii
... circumstances . I have insisted in each of my three books on Evolu- tion upon the immensity of the service which Mr. Darwin rendered to that transcendently important theory . In Life and Habit I said : " To the end of time , if the ...
... circumstances . I have insisted in each of my three books on Evolu- tion upon the immensity of the service which Mr. Darwin rendered to that transcendently important theory . In Life and Habit I said : " To the end of time , if the ...
Стр. 17
... circumstance which I shall mention under this head of muscular arrangement , is so decidedly a mark of intention , that it always appeared to me to supersede in some measure the necessity of seeking for any other observation upon the ...
... circumstance which I shall mention under this head of muscular arrangement , is so decidedly a mark of intention , that it always appeared to me to supersede in some measure the necessity of seeking for any other observation upon the ...
Стр. 30
... Circumstances , however , prevented these writers from acknowledging this fact to the world , and perhaps even to themselves . Their crux was , as it still is to so many evolutionists , the presence of rudimentary organs , and the ...
... Circumstances , however , prevented these writers from acknowledging this fact to the world , and perhaps even to themselves . Their crux was , as it still is to so many evolutionists , the presence of rudimentary organs , and the ...
Стр. 35
... circumstances and desires - given such a jelly- speck with a power of assimilating other matter , and thus , of reproducing itself , given also that it should be possessed of a memory and a reproductive system , and we can show how the ...
... circumstances and desires - given such a jelly- speck with a power of assimilating other matter , and thus , of reproducing itself , given also that it should be possessed of a memory and a reproductive system , and we can show how the ...
Стр. 42
... circumstances little by little in the course of many generations learned to swim , either from having lived near a lake , and having learnt the art owing to its fishing habits , or from wading about in shallow pools by the sea - side at ...
... circumstances little by little in the course of many generations learned to swim , either from having lived near a lake , and having learnt the art owing to its fishing habits , or from wading about in shallow pools by the sea - side at ...
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¹ Hist ¹ Phil according action admit animals and plants appear become believe birds body brain breeds Buffon cause of variation changes chapter Charles Darwin Church circumstances climate common conditions of existence continues creature declares descent with modification disuse doctrine domestication effect Erasmus Darwin evolution expression eyes fact fittest forms G. H. Lewes Geoffroy St Grant Allen greater habits Hilaire horse Ibid idea important individual insects instinct Isidore Geoffroy kind Lamarck less Madeira beetles maintains manner matter means of modification memory mind Mivart mutability of species natural selection Natural Theology observe opinion Origin of Species Paley Pantheism passage Patrick Matthew perception Philosophie Zoologique principle produced Professor Haeckel purpose quadrupeds race reader resemblance Rome sensation sense structure suppose survival teleology things tion unconscious vary vegetable wings words writes Zool Zoonomia