The Problem of Life: An Essay in the Origins of Biological ThoughtMacmillan, 1976 - 343 Seiten |
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Seite 8
... biology of the late seventeenth century and the biology of the nineteenth- century Naturphilosophie , and used them as triangulation points to determine the position and status of our present concepts . Or , perhaps , one might have ...
... biology of the late seventeenth century and the biology of the nineteenth- century Naturphilosophie , and used them as triangulation points to determine the position and status of our present concepts . Or , perhaps , one might have ...
Seite 8
... biology ? Has the biologist's perception of the nature of life changed in the same way as the astronomer's perception of the nature of the universe ? Biology ( 12 ) has never been so dramatic a subject as physics or astronomy . Its ...
... biology ? Has the biologist's perception of the nature of life changed in the same way as the astronomer's perception of the nature of the universe ? Biology ( 12 ) has never been so dramatic a subject as physics or astronomy . Its ...
Seite 8
... biology in the most coherent manner then possible . In short , they made sense . The Aristotelian biology had much the longest life span of the four mentioned above . It is still the biology of the non - biologist . It is fundamentally ...
... biology in the most coherent manner then possible . In short , they made sense . The Aristotelian biology had much the longest life span of the four mentioned above . It is still the biology of the non - biologist . It is fundamentally ...
Inhalt
Preface | 8 |
The act of imagination | 8 |
The palaeontology of some key words | 17 |
Urheberrecht | |
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