The metaphors suggest that the developing organism has somehow a feeling for history, or that the dead hand of the past is literally upon the present, while our aim must be to get beyond... Proceedings - Pagina 105di Royal Society of Edinburgh - 1890Visualizzazione completa - Informazioni su questo libro
| Royal Society of Edinburgh - 1890 - 1018 pagine
...how the protoplasm is at each stage the architect as well as the material of its own development. The metaphors suggest that the developing organism has...in the course of history, must still be present to rule the development. There can be no doubt that, in the modern theory of continuity, there is found... | |
| 1890 - 870 pagine
...shed great light on the individual's recapitulation of ancestral stages, but the metaphors are apt to suggest that the developing organism has somehow a feeling for history, or that the hand of the past is literally upon it as it grows. It is necessary to get beyond mere metaphors of... | |
| ROBERT CHAMBERS - 1892 - 882 pagine
...shed great light on the individual's recapitulation of ancestral stages, but the metaphors are apt to suggest that the developing organism has somehow a feeling for history, or that the hand of the past is literally upon it as it grows. It is necessary to get beyond mere metaphors of... | |
| 1896 - 844 pagine
...shed great light on the individual's recapitulation of ancestral stages, but the metaphors are apt to suggest that the developing organism has somehow a feeling for history, or that the hand of the past is literally upon it as it grows. It is necessary to get beyond mere metaphors of... | |
| John Arthur Thomson - 1899 - 434 pagine
...architect as well as the material of its own development. The metaphors of memory and recapitulation suggest that the developing organism has somehow a...upon the present, while our aim must be to get beyond mere phrases, and to understand the chemical and physical conditions which, more or less modified in... | |
| John Arthur Thomson - 1899 - 246 pagine
...architect as well as the material of its own development. The metaphors of memory and recapitulation suggest that the developing organism has somehow a...upon the present, while our aim must be to get beyond mere phrases, and to understand the chemical and physical conditions which, more or less modified in... | |
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