| William Stanley Jevons - 1874 - 502 páginas
...history of logic that Hamilton, while vindicating, in 1847, his own claims to originality and priority against the scheme of De Morgan, should have overlooked...earlier and more closely related discoveries of Bentham. THE PRINCIPLES OF SCIENCE. OQ CO o % Igg ~ Ifi 3 MP* §sg *1 _ a ns r^ <J >, _ 05 O jsISi -111 o «... | |
| William Stanley Jevons - 1874 - 524 páginas
...history of logic that Hamilton, while vindicating, in 1847, his own claims to originality and priority against the scheme of De Morgan, should have overlooked...much earlier and more closely related discoveries of Beutham. Mr. Bentham also gives a bifurcate arrangement of animals after the method proposed by Dumeril... | |
| 1885 - 532 páginas
...Review, xxi), in reply to Herbert Spencer's reclamation of Bentham's discovery. To this Sianley-Jevons made reply in the same volume (pp. 821-824) ; and...fructified afterwards. After his uncle's death in 1822, Mr. Bentham gave his undivided attention to Botany. He became a Fellow of the Linnean society... | |
| Isaac Bayley Balfour, Roland Thaxter, Vernon Herbert Blackman - 1898 - 836 páginas
...be regarded as a remarkable fact in the history of logic, that Hamilton, while vindicating in 1^47 his own claims to originality and priority as against...did not at the time leave any conscious impression npon the reviewer's mind, yet may have fructified afterwards." ' Society, the meetings of which, the... | |
| Asa Gray - 1889 - 520 páginas
...Review," xxi.), in reply to Herbert Spencer's reclamation of Bentham's discovery. To this StanleyJevons made reply in the same volume (pp. 821-824) ; and...undivided attention to botany. He became a Fellow of the Linuaean Society in 1828. Robert Brown soon after presented his name to the Royal Society, but withdrew... | |
| Asa Gray - 1889 - 520 páginas
...same volume (pp. 821-824) ; and later, in his " Principles of Science " (ii. 387), this comjietent and impartial judge, in speaking of the connection...undivided attention to botany. He became a Fellow of the Linna-un Society in 1828. Robert Brown soon after presented his name to the Royal Society, but withdrew... | |
| American Academy of Arts and Sciences - 1885 - 594 páginas
...reclamation of Bentbam's discovery. To this Stanley-Jevons made reply in the same volume (pp. 821— 824) ; and later, in his Principles of Science (ii. 387),...afterwards. After his uncle's death, in 1832, Mr. Beutham gave his undivided attention to botany. He became a Fellow of the Liunean Society in 1828.... | |
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