| American Academy of Arts and Sciences - 1868 - 536 páginas
...could never have been developed from observation alone";* ie without recourse to ideal conceptions. An assertion, like that of Lord Brougham, that there...assertion in the case before us is certainly wrong. Much error would have been avoided, if those who have discussed the structure of the bee's cell had... | |
| American Academy of Arts and Sciences - 1868 - 556 páginas
...never have been developed from observation alone " ; * ie without recourse to ideal conceptions. An assertion, like that of Lord Brougham, that there...assertion in the case before us is certainly wrong' Much error would have been avoided, if those who have discussed the structure of the bee's cell had... | |
| 1875 - 1140 páginas
...elsewhere in nature, the typeform is an ideal one ; and with this real forms seldom or never coincide An assertion, like that of Lord Brougham, that there...observation, in view of the analogies of nature is more likely to be wrong than right ; and his assertion in the case before us is certainly wrong. Much... | |
| 1876 - 862 páginas
...transition cannot be made without some disturbance in the regularity of the structure." And Prof. Wyman states distinctly that the bees do not have any systematic...Wyman closes his essay by saying that " much error would have been avoided if those who have discussed the structure of the bee's cell had adopted the... | |
| Boston Society of Natural History - 1875 - 544 páginas
...elsewhere in nature, the typeform is an ideal one ; and with this real forms seldom or never coincide An assertion, like that of Lord Brougham, that there...observation, in view of the analogies of nature is more likely to be wrong than right ; and his assertion in the case before us is certainly wrong. Much... | |
| Boston Society of Natural History - 1875 - 656 páginas
...elsewhere in nature, the typeform is an ideal one ; and with this real forms seldom or never coincide An assertion, like that of Lord Brougham, that there...perfect agreement ' between theory and observation, hi view of the analogies of nature is more likely to be wrong than right ; and his assertion in the... | |
| 1877 - 804 páginas
...transition cannot be made without some disturbance in the regularity of the structure." And Prof. Wyman states distinctly that the bees do not have any systematic...Wyman closes his essay by saying that " much error would have been avoided if those who have discussed the structure of the bee's cell had adopted the... | |
| American Association for the Advancement of Science - 1877 - 444 páginas
...transition cannot be made without some disturbance in the regularity of the structure." And Prof. Wyman states distinctly that the bees do not have any systematic...Wyman closes his essay by saying that " much error would have been avoided if those who have discussed the structure of the bee's cell had adopted the... | |
| American Association for the Advancement of Science - 1877 - 442 páginas
...adding that "the cell of the bee has not that strict conformity to geometrical accuracy claimed lor it," and the assertion, like that of Lord Brougham,...Wyman closes his essay by saying that " much error would have been avoided if those who have discussed the structure of the bee's cell had adopted the... | |
| Asa Gray - 1889 - 552 páginas
...nature, the typeform is an ideal one; and with this, real forms seldom or never coincide. . . . An assertion, like that of Lord Brougham, that there...observation, in view of the analogies of nature, is more likely to be wrong than right; and his assertion in the case before us is certainly wrong. Much... | |
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