| Benjamin Wills Newton - 1873 - 392 páginas
...that she has advanced with slow and stately steps, guided by the archetypal light, amidst the wreck of worlds from the first embodiment of the vertebrate...idea under its old Ichthyic vestment, until it became arrayed in the glorious garb of the human form." In other words, all that we read in Genesis concerning... | |
| Arthur Cayley Headlam - 1895 - 552 páginas
...operation of natural law, or secondary cause ; and that not only successively, but progressively ; from the first embodiment of the vertebrate idea under its old Ichthyic vestment until it became arrayed in the glorious garb of the human form.1 In this quotation he is in the main stating the views... | |
| Henry Boynton Smith - 1886 - 526 páginas
...he says, " by this archetypal light, nature has advanced with slow and steady steps amid the wreck of worlds, from the first embodiment of the vertebrate...idea, under its old ichthyic vestment, until it became arrayed in the glorious garb of the human form." The analogy holds, with surpassing cogency and completeness,... | |
| Henry Grattan Guinness - 1896 - 586 páginas
...that she has advanced with slow and stately steps, guided by the archetypal light, amidst the wreck of worlds, from the first embodiment of the vertebrate...idea under its old ichthyic vestment, until it became arrayed in the glorious garb of the human form." VII. Geology shows us that during all the long succession... | |
| John Theodore Merz - 1912 - 848 páginas
..." nature has advanced with slow and stately steps, guided by the archetypal light, amidst the wreck of worlds, from the first embodiment of the vertebrate...idea under its old ichthyic vestment until it became arrayed in the glorious garb of the human form." 2 1 Huxley in 'Life of R. Owen,' i perties of matter,... | |
| John Willis Clark - 1900 - 416 páginas
...operation of natural law, or secondary cause ; and that, not only successively, but progressively ; from the first embodiment of the Vertebrate idea under its old Ichthyic vestment until it became arrayed in the glorious garb of the human form1.' 1 Anatomy, iii. 796. In this quotation he is in the... | |
| Thomas Henry Huxley - 1902 - 772 páginas
...that she has advanced with slow and stately steps, guided by the archetypal light, amidst the wreck of worlds, from the first embodiment of the Vertebrate...idea under its old Ichthyic vestment, until it became arrayed in the glorious garb of the Human form.'1 Those who know Owen's mind only on the side reflected... | |
| Andrew Bruce Davidson - 1904 - 536 páginas
...that she has advanced with slow and steady steps, guided by the archetypal light, amidst the wreck of worlds, from the first embodiment of the vertebrate...idea under its old ichthyic vestment, until it became arrayed in the glorious garb of the human form." Now, it is certainly to be expected, when one considers... | |
| William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, Sir John Murray IV, Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle) - 1853 - 628 páginas
...that she has advanced with slow and stately steps, guided by the archetypal light amidst the wreck of worlds, from the first embodiment of the vertebrate...arranged in the glorious garb of the human form.' As in the case of the ' Nature of Limbs' so with regard to other more difficult problems of Homology,... | |
| James R. Moore - 1981 - 536 páginas
...less that these causes, 'guided by the archetypal light', had advanced with 'slow and stately steps. . .from the first embodiment of the Vertebrate idea under its old Ichthyic vestment, until it became arrayed in the glorious garb of the Human form'. In his notorious review of the Origin of Species in... | |
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