Thus, the production of new forms, as shewn in the pages of the geological record, has never been anything more than a new stage of progress in gestation, an event as simply natural, and attended as little by any circumstances of a wonderful or startling... Transactions ... - Sivu 308tekijä(t) Michigan State Medical Society - 1885Koko teos - Tietoja tästä kirjasta
| Robert Chambers - 1844 - 402 sivua
...and attended as little by any circumstances of a wonderful or startling kind, as the silent advance of an ordinary mother from one week to another of her pregnancy. Yet, be it remembered, the whole phenomena are, in another point of view, wonders of the highest kind,... | |
| Henry Allon - 1845 - 690 sivua
...and attended as little by any circumstances of a wonderful or startling kind, as the silent advance of an ordinary mother from one week to another of her pregnancy.' — p. 231. In endeavouring to work out this statement, the author commences with the subject of astronomy,... | |
| 1845 - 434 sivua
...and attended as little by any circumstances of a wonderful or startling kind, as the silent advance of an ordinary mother from one week to another of her pregnancy." P. 223. The author argues, that " to a reasonable mind the Divine attributes must appear, not diminished... | |
| Samuel Richard Bosanquet - 1845 - 140 sivua
...and attended as little by any circumstances of a wonderful or startling kind, as the silent advance of an ordinary mother from one week to another of her pregnancy."— (p. 223—4.) We arrive at the now anticipated conclusion, that man has had no actual or specific creation... | |
| 1845 - 404 sivua
...and attended as little by any circumstances of a wonderful or startling kind, as the silent advance of an ordinary mother from one week to another of her pregnancy." P. 223. The author argues, that " to a reasonable mind the Divine attributes must appear, not diminished... | |
| Robert Chambers - 1846 - 318 sivua
...and attended as little by any circumstances of a wonderful or startling kind, as the silent advance of an ordinary mother from one week to another of her pregnancy. Yet, be it remembered, the whole phenomena are, in another point of view, wonders of the highest kind,... | |
| j. stevenson bushnan, m.d. - 1851 - 206 sivua
...being, and attended as little by circumstances of a startling or miraculous kind, as the silent advance of an ordinary mother from one week to another of her pregnancy." The simple answer to this hypothesis is, that it is unsupported by a single fact. It is one long tissue... | |
| Robert Chambers - 1851 - 332 sivua
...being, and attended as little by circumstances of a startling or miraculous kind as the silent advance of an ordinary mother from one week to another of her pregnancy. We see but the chronicle of one or two great areas, within which the development has reached the highest... | |
| Robert Chambers - 1860 - 328 sivua
...and attended as little by any circumstances of a wonderful or startling kind, as the silent advance of an ordinary mother from one week to another of her pregnancy. Yet, be it remembered, the whole phenomena are, in another point of view, wonders of the highest kind,... | |
| Benjamin G. Ferris - 1883 - 474 sivua
...any action of surrounding external conditions, that the origin of new specific forms is due (8371.) The evolution of man through the ape is too well established...as well as savage lands, is so much on a par with the most of brutes, as to make such criticisms out of place. Those who are nervous on this point may... | |
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