| 1868 - 540 páginas
...more prominently into play. According to this theory, put forward as a " provisional hypothesis," " the child, strictly speaking, does not grow into the...as in the adult, each part generates the same part for the next generation. Inheritance must be looked at as merely a form of growth, like the self-division... | |
| 1868 - 608 páginas
...part of the child, as of the adult, generates the same part for the next generation, and consequently "the child, strictly speaking, does not grow into...and successively become developed and form the man." Inheritance, which " must be looked upon as merely a form of growth, like the self-division of a lowly-organized... | |
| 1868 - 1192 páginas
...part of the child, as of the adult, generates the same part for the next generation, and consequently "the child, strictly speaking, does not grow into...and successively become developed and form the man." Inheritance, which " must be looked upon as merely a form of growth, like the self-division of a lowly-... | |
| 1868 - 602 páginas
...inclndes genn' which slowly and successively become developed and form the man." Inheritanie, which " must be looked upon as merely a form of growth, like the self-'h' Y i slon ' a lowly-organized unicellular plant," is essentially dependent on a gem™u' 5... | |
| Charles Darwin - 1876 - 544 páginas
...duo order of development. Thus the act of ordinary impregnation and the development of each part in each being are closely analogous processes. The child,...developed and form the man. In the child, as well as iu the adult, each part generates the same part. Inheritance must be looked at as merely a form of... | |
| Charles Roberts - 1878 - 190 páginas
...is much change of structure, the process properly belongs to the order of development' (p. 389). ' The child, strictly speaking, does not grow into the...and successively become developed and form the man* (p. 404). The Variation of Animals and Plants under Domestication*. By C. Darwin, MA, FES (London,... | |
| Charles Roberts - 1878 - 258 páginas
...is much change of structure, the process properly belongs to the order of development' (p. 389). ' The child, strictly speaking, does not grow into the...and successively become developed and form the man*' (p. 404). Tlte Variation of Animals and Plants under Domestication^ By C. Darwin, MA, FES (London,... | |
| Charles Roberts - 1878 - 190 páginas
...there is much change of structure, the process properly belongs to the order of development' (p. 389). 'The child, strictly speaking, does not grow into...and successively become developed and form the man* (p. 404). The Variation of Animals and Plants under Domestication^. By C. Darwin, MA, FES (London,... | |
| James Thomas Whittaker - 1879 - 318 páginas
...part. It must resemble it just as a piece of coal detached from a mass must resemble the original mass. "The child, strictly speaking, does not grow into the man, but includes germs, derived from its parents, which slowly and successively become developed and form the man." Some of... | |
| Charles Darwin - 1884 - 396 páginas
...parents, and resemble its grandparents, or ancestors removed by many hundreds of generations. p 89g The child, strictly speaking, does not grow into the...generates the same part. Inheritance must be looked at as merely a form of growth, like the self -division of a lowly-organized unicellular organism. Reversion... | |
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