| 1866 - 688 páginas
...conclusions ; convinced thut it would be treason to the majesty at once of science and of religion, .if he sought to help either by swerving ever so little from the straight rule of truth.' " Ethnology, in fact, is passing at present through a phase from which other sciences... | |
| William Selwyn - 1864 - 1034 páginas
...conclusions, convinced that it would be treason to the majesty at once of science and of religion if he sought to help either by swerving ever so little from the straight rule of truth, yet he does all this under a reverent sense of responsibility, fostered and deepened... | |
| 1865 - 700 páginas
...Bishop of London, " that it would be treason to the majesty at once of science and of religion, if he sought to help either, by swerving ever so little from the straight rule of truth." But before more is said upon this part of the subject a few paragraphs must be devoted... | |
| Sir John Lubbock - 1865 - 560 páginas
...conclusions, convinced that it would be treason to the majesty at once of science and of religion .if he sought to help either by swerving ever so little from the straight rule of truth." * Ethnology, in fact, is passing at present through a phase from which other Sciences... | |
| David Page - 1867 - 238 páginas
...conclusions, convinced that it would be treason at once to the dignity of science and religion if he sought to help either by swerving ever so little from the straight rule of truth." And, once for all, let it be observed, that if there be any irreverence in dealing... | |
| Royal Physical Society of Edinburgh - 1867 - 560 páginas
...conclusions, convinced that it would be treason at once to the dignity of science and of religion, if he sought to help either by swerving ever so little from the straight rule of truth." In investigating the antiquity of man we are dealing with a question of natural history,... | |
| United States. Congress. House - 1869 - 516 páginas
...convinced that it would be treason to the majesty at once of science and of religion if lie sought to heln either by swerving ever so little from the straight...may arise from partial views of the connection of Museum, and care of specimens. — The exhibition rooms, to which the public generally have admission,... | |
| Smithsonian Institution. Board of Regents - 1869 - 488 páginas
...conclusions, convinced that it would be treason to the majesty at once of science and of religion if he sought to help either by swerving ever so little from...taken that the provisional hypotheses of science are uot mistaken for absolute truths, and premature attempts be made to explain discrepancies between the... | |
| Carl von Rikart - 1869 - 416 páginas
...Bishop of London, " that it would be treason to the majesty at once of science and of religion, if he sought to help either by swerving ever so little from the straight line of truth." '* Now, what do we find Sir John Lubbock saying, at p. 328 ? 'It has been calculated that the denudation... | |
| Alexander Hamilton Stephens - 1872 - 286 páginas
...conclusions, convinced that it would be treason to the majesty at once of science and of religion, if he sought to help either by swerving ever So little from the straight rule of truth.' "—Extract from Preface. HTrXLEY!--ANATOMY OF YERTEBRATED ANIMALS. By THOMAS HENRY... | |
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