| 1914 - Liczba stron: 504
...ultimately resulted in the formation of Dinosaurs and Birds." Broom, R., Proc. Roy. Soc. B., 87, p. 88. himself, but at the present time few are misled. The...know of the distribution of variability in nature the scope claimed for Natural Selection in determining the fixity of species must be greatly reduced. The... | |
| Frank Crane, Edward Jewitt Wheeler - 1915 - Liczba stron: 560
...standards of criticism. Naturalists may still be found expounding systems which would have delighted Doctor Pangloss himself, but at the present time few are...for the development of theory is not yet. He would prefer to stick to the seed pan and to the incubator. In short, considering what we know of the distribution... | |
| British Association for the Advancement of Science - 1915 - Liczba stron: 1050
...point of view and new standards of criticism. Naturalists may still be found expounding tcleological systems* which would have delighted Dr. Pangloss himself,...few are misled. The student of genetics knows that s I take the following from the Abstract of a recent Croonian Lecture ' On the Origin of Mammals '... | |
| 1917 - Liczba stron: 792
...outworn notions about adaptation. "Naturalists may still be found," he says,2 "expounding teleological systems which would have delighted Dr. Pangloss himself,...would rather stick to the seed-pan and the incubator." Two very distinct ideas seem to be implied in this passage and the context, first the rejection of... | |
| 1917 - Liczba stron: 832
...notions about adaptation. "Naturalists may still be found, ' ' he says,2 ' ' expounding teleological systems which would have delighted Dr. Pangloss himself,...would rather stick to the seed-pan and the incubator." Two very distinct ideas seem to be implied in this passage and the context, first the rejection of... | |
| George McCready Price - 1925 - Liczba stron: 140
...evolutionary problems. Bateson, in his Australian address before the British Association in 1914, said: "The student of genetics knows that the time for the...would rather stick to the seed-pan and the incubator. . . . Every theory of evolution must be such as to accord with the facts of physics and chemistry,... | |
| William Bateson, Beatrice Bateson - 1928 - Liczba stron: 506
...view and new standards of criticism. Naturalists may still be found expounding teleological systems1 which would have delighted Dr Pangloss himself, but...of theory is not yet. He would rather stick to the seed pan and the incubator. In face of what we now know of the distribution of variability in Nature... | |
| William King Gregory - 1904 - Liczba stron: 442
...outworn notions about adaptation. "Naturalists may still be found," he says,2 "expounding teleological systems which would have delighted Dr. Pangloss himself,...would rather stick to the seed-pan and the incubator." Two very distinct ideas seem to be implied in this passage and the context, first the rejection of... | |
| Jan Sapp - 1987 - Liczba stron: 283
...mocked the integrity of natural history, saying: Naturalists may still be found expounding Ideological systems which would have delighted Dr. Pangloss himself,...of theory is not yet. He would rather stick to the seed pan and the incubator. (Bateson, 1914, p. 293) Bateson's plea for institutional support for genetics... | |
| H.E. Le Grand - 1990 - Liczba stron: 306
...heredity. As Bateson (1914: 293) wrote: Naturalists may still be found expoundingteleologicalsystems which would have delighted Dr. Pangloss himself, but...of theory is not yet. He would rather stick to the seed pan and the incubator. Appropriating Mendel, Bateson immediately began to tell stories in his... | |
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