The Problem of Life: An Essay in the Origins of Biological ThoughtMacmillan, 1976 - 343 Seiten |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-3 von 46
Seite 274
... structure may have any degree of complexity , behaves just as Driesch demands from a machine ' ( 26 ) . Driesch , he observes , never divided the nucleus , and if he had he would have found his entelechy divided also . Finally Boveri ...
... structure may have any degree of complexity , behaves just as Driesch demands from a machine ' ( 26 ) . Driesch , he observes , never divided the nucleus , and if he had he would have found his entelechy divided also . Finally Boveri ...
Seite 275
... structure of atoms which included the notion of quantised orbits . In a qualitative sort of way it was possible to account for many of the combinatory proclivities of atoms in terms of Bohr's model . Bohr's atom , however , remained ...
... structure of atoms which included the notion of quantised orbits . In a qualitative sort of way it was possible to account for many of the combinatory proclivities of atoms in terms of Bohr's model . Bohr's atom , however , remained ...
Seite 293
... structure . Phrenology at the beginning of the nineteenth century , like the Cartesian beast- machine at the beginning of the seventeenth , was , however , vastly premature ; for at the beginning of the nineteenth century rather little ...
... structure . Phrenology at the beginning of the nineteenth century , like the Cartesian beast- machine at the beginning of the seventeenth , was , however , vastly premature ; for at the beginning of the nineteenth century rather little ...
Inhalt
Preface | 8 |
The act of imagination | 8 |
The palaeontology of some key words | 17 |
Urheberrecht | |
6 weitere Abschnitte werden nicht angezeigt.
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
activity analogy analysis anatomy Anaximenes ancient animal Animalium Aristotelian Aristotle Aristotle's arteries atomic theory behaviour believed biologists biology blood body body's brain Cartesian cause cells cerebral chapter chemistry classical concept contemporary Cuvier Darwin Democritean Democritus Descartes Diogenes Laertius dissection eighteenth century embryology Empedocles Epicurus Erasistratus evolution example exist experience fact force Galen Galileo Goethe Greek Harvey heart Herophilus human Ibid ideas Kant Lamarck Leonardo living London matter mechanism mechanistic metaphysics microcosm mind modern motion movement muscle nature Naturphilosophie nerves nervous system neurophysiology nineteenth century nowadays objects observed organism origin pangenesis paradigm Parmenides particles perception perhaps Peripatetic phenomena philosophy physical physiology Plato pneuma principle psychological recognise reflex says scientific seems seen sensation sense seventeenth century Socrates soul species spinal spirits Stagirite's Stoics substance T H Huxley teleological things thinkers thought Timaeus trans understanding University Press ventricle Vesalius writes