| Robert Maxwell Young - 1971 - Страниц: 372
...constitution, structure, and habits of each creature, - favouring the good and rejecting the bad? I can see no limit to this power, in slowly and beautifully...life. The theory of natural selection, even if we looked no further than this, seems to me to be in itself probable. Once again he links his anthropomorphic... | |
| Ilse Nina Bulhof - 1992 - Страниц: 224
...to nature's capacity to produce a continual range of new varieties by natural selection? I can see no limit to this power, in slowly and beautifully...adapting each form to the most complex relations of life.(«4) Because imagination cannot in all fairness imagine limits, it is unlikely that such a limit... | |
| Marcello Pera - 1994 - Страниц: 272
...constitution, structure, and habits of each creature — favouring the good and rejecting the bad? I can see no limit to this power, in slowly and beautifully...life. The theory of natural selection, even if we looked no further than this, seems to me to be in itself probable. 38 If we now go back to the first... | |
| John Howland Campbell, J. William Schopf - 1994 - Страниц: 132
...will be eliminated. In one place, Darwin adds: "I can see no limit to this power [natural selection] in slowly and beautifully adapting each form to the most complex relations of life." Natural selection was proposed by Darwin primarily to account for the adaptive organization, or "design,"... | |
| Daniel C. Dennett - 1996 - Страниц: 596
...constitution, structure, and habits of each creature,— favouring the good and rejecting the bad? I can see no limit to this power, in slowly and beautifully...adapting each form to the most complex relations of life. — CHARLES DARWIN, Origin, p. 469 The second point to notice in Darwin's summary is that he presents... | |
| Laura Dassow Walls - 1995 - Страниц: 318
...and emotional heart is Darwin's awe before the world's beauty. He reiterates, typically, "I can see no limit to this power, in slowly and beautifully...adapting each form to the most complex relations of life" (469). The lesson Darwin himself carries away is a sublime confidence: As all the living forms of life... | |
| Charles Darwin - 1998 - Страниц: 486
...constitution, structure, and habits of each creature, — favouring the good and rejecting the bad? I can see no limit to this power, in slowly and beautifully adapting each form to die most complex relations of life. The dieory of natural selection, even if we looked no further than... | |
| Roger Lewin - 1999 - Страниц: 276
...possible." Nevertheless, he concluded, that because there is "no limit to this power [of natural selection], in slowly and beautifully adapting each form to the most complex relations of life," the eye also is explicable by the slow, incremental assembly process that is natural selection. So, while... | |
| Ernest Lawrence Rossi - 2002 - Страниц: 592
...constitution, structure and habits of each creature, — favoring the good and rejecting the bad? I can see no limit to this power, in slowly and beautifully...life. The theory of natural selection, even if we looked no further than this, seems to me to be in itself probable, (pp. 381-83) In his later volume... | |
| Seth Godin - 2009 - Страниц: 292
...manner which my theory requires, for they have changed slowly and in a graduated manner. I can see no limit to this power, in slowly and beautifully...adapting each form to the most complex relations of life. Companies that can evolve slowly and constantly will triumph. Natural selection can act only by taking... | |
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