Finally, it is impossible not to be struck with the resemblance between the foregoing movements of plants and many of the actions performed unconsciously by the lower animals. With plants an astonishingly small stimulus suffices ; and even with allied... The Yale Literary Magazine - Página 2111881Vista completa - Acerca de este libro
| Charles Darwin, Sir Francis Darwin - 1880 - 644 páginas
...Cucurbitacete, and Bignoniaceaj, in which slight pressure causes a cellular outgrowth. Finally, it is impossible not to be struck with the resemblance between...of the actions performed unconsciously by the lower animals.t With plants an * For the evidence on this pp. 173, 174. head, see the ' Movements and t Suehs... | |
| 1881 - 610 páginas
...is perhaps the most pointedly affirmed, the author's own words are to the following effect : ' It is impossible not to be struck with ' the resemblance...actions performed unconsciously by the lower ' animals.' But our own comment upon this is that the amoeba, which we have taken as the typical illustration of... | |
| 1881 - 1100 páginas
...wonderful, as far as its functions are concerned, than the tip of the radicle. Also, that, " it is impossible not to be struck with the resemblance between...actions performed unconsciously by the lower animals. " But the most striking resemblance is the localization of their sensitiveness and the transmission... | |
| 1881 - 898 páginas
...bounds. It is impossible, Mr. Darwin remarks at the close of his record of these interesting experiments, not to be struck with the resemblance between the...actions performed unconsciously by the lower animals. This analogy has been made the subject of much interesting investigation by Sachs, Frank, and other... | |
| Royal Microscopical Society (Great Britain) - 1881 - 1116 páginas
...identical in character. In accordance with these views Mr. Darwin points out the resemblance between the movements of plants and many of the actions performed unconsciously by the lower animals, the most striking illustration being in the kind of imperfect reflex action which is. shown to occur when... | |
| 1882 - 880 páginas
...whose leaves do not "sleep," assume this vertical position at night. Mr. Darwin observes : " It is impossible not to be struck with the resemblance between the foregoing movements of plants and the actions performed unconsciously by the lower animals. With plants an astonishingly small stimulus... | |
| Manchester Literary and Philosophical Society - 1883 - 780 páginas
...Charles Darwin, LL.D., FRS, assisted by Francis Darwin), pp. 571-573, he says : — ' Finally, it is impossible not to be struck with the resemblance between...actions performed unconsciously by the lower animals. With plants an astonishingly small stimulus suffices ; and even with allied plants one may be highly... | |
| Robert Angus Smith - 1883 - 500 páginas
...Charles Darwin, LL.D., FRS, assisted by Francis Darwin), pp. 571-573, he says : — ' Finally, it is impossible not to be struck with the resemblance between...actions performed unconsciously by the lower animals. With plants an astonishingly small stimulus suffices ; and even with allied plants one may be highly... | |
| Manchester Literary and Philosophical Society - 1883 - 516 páginas
...Charles Darwin, LL.D., FRS, assisted by Francis Darwin), pp. 571-573, he says :— ' Finally, it is impossible not to be struck with the resemblance between...actions performed unconsciously by the lower animals. With plants an astonishingly small stimulus suffices ; and even with allied plants one may be highly... | |
| George Lincoln Goodale - 1885 - 574 páginas
...any physiologist.2 1 STO Hevkel'n Memoir, Complex Rendus, Ixxix., 1874, p. 702. * " Finally, it is impossible not to be struck with the resemblance between...foregoing movements of plants and many of the actions jterformvcl unconsciously by tile lower animals. With plants an astonishingly small stimulus suffices... | |
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