| Crosthwaite and co - 1860 - 622 páginas
...Mr. Darwin observes, " There is grandeur in this view of life, with its several powers, having Seen originally breathed by the Creator into a few forms or into one ; and that, whilst this planet has gone cycling on according to the fixed laws of gravity, from so... | |
| Richard Owen - 1868 - 1046 páginas
...fulfilled: — To doubt the fairness were to want an eye ; To doubt the goodness were to want a heart ! ' Derivation ' holds that every species changes, in...calling into life many forms, by conversion of physical aud chemical into vital modes of force, under as many diversified conditions of the requisite elements... | |
| Richard Owen - 1868 - 966 páginas
...fulfilled : — To doubt the fairness wore to want an eye ; To doubt the goodness were to want a heart ! ' Derivation ' holds that every species changes, in...power, the grandeur of which is manifested daily, 1 ccxm". Ed. 1860. p. 490. hourly, in calling into life many forms, by conversion of physical and chemical... | |
| 1870 - 388 páginas
...the view of life, with its several powers, having been originally breathed by the Creator into a lew forms, or into one. ' Derivation ' sees therein a...conversion of physical and chemical into vital modes ot force, under as many diversified conditions of the requisite elements to be so combined. " * Natural... | |
| St. George Jackson Mivart - 1871 - 412 páginas
...circumstances. i ' Derivation' sees, among the effects of the innate tendency to change irrespective of altered circumstances, a manifestation of creative power in...conditions of the requisite elements to be so combined." The theory propounded in this work allows, however, a greater and more important share to external... | |
| St. George Jackson Mivart - 1871 - 372 páginas
...itself, should be n purpose in creation, it would be absolutely fatal to it as a hypothesis." " ' Xatural Selection ' sees grandeur in the view of life, with...conditions of the requisite elements to be so combined." The theory propounded in this work allows, however, a greater and more important share to external... | |
| St. George Jackson Mivart - 1871 - 324 páginas
...as a hypothesis." " c Natural Selection ' sees grandeur in the view of life, 16 Vol. iii., p. 808. with its several powers, having been originally breathed...conditions of the requisite elements to be so combined." The view propounded in this work allows, however, a greater and more important part to the share of... | |
| Jared Sparks, Edward Everett, James Russell Lowell, Henry Cabot Lodge - 1871 - 496 páginas
...uses the figurative language of religious mystery, and speaks " of life with its several powers being originally breathed by the Creator into a few forms or into one." For this expression our author takes him to task, though really it could mean no more than if the gravitative... | |
| Daniel Worcester Faunce - 1877 - 264 páginas
...science says that there was originally a Creator. Even Darwin, often called an atheist, says, " Life was originally breathed by the Creator into a few forms or into one." Owen says that " law is only secondary cause," but he holds that law is guided by the intelligence... | |
| Asa Gray - 1880 - 136 páginas
...another. It is not natural selection which has led Mr. Darwin and many others to believe ihat life was " originally breathed by the Creator * into a few forms or into one," and " that the • production and extinction of the past and present inhabitants of the world has been... | |
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