| Royal Society (Great Britain) - 1854 - 450 Seiten
...most happy it has found its reward in the Medal which I have the pleasure of presenting to you. MR. HUXLEY, The Royal Medal for Physiology has been awarded...deplore during the present year is that of Mr. WILLIAM TIKRNEY CLARK, also a Fellow of the Society of Civil Engineers. He was the constructor of many important... | |
| Sir Norman Lockyer - 1901 - 1076 Seiten
...classification." "In your second paper, 'On the Anatomy of Salpa and Pyrosoma' the phenomena, &c. , have received the most ingenious and elaborate elucidation,...of what may be called transcendental physiology." A very interesting result of his work on the Hydrozoa was the generalisation that the two layers in... | |
| Royal Society (Great Britain) - 1896 - 524 Seiten
...classification." " In your second paper, ' On the Anatomy of Salpa and Pyrosoma,' the phenomena, &c., have received the most ingenious and elaborate elucidation,...of what may be called transcendental physiology." Nor was it only in impersonal academic distinctions that Huxley found his worth recognised. In the... | |
| Royal Society (Great Britain) - 1896 - 538 Seiten
...classification." " In your second paper, ' On the Anatomy of Salpa and Pyrosoma,' the phenomena, &c., have received the most ingenious and elaborate elucidation,...of what may be called transcendental physiology." found his worth recognised. In the scientific world of London he soon formed warm friendships, both... | |
| Leonard Huxley - 1900 - 580 Seiten
...classification." " In your second paper ' On the Anatomy of Salpa and Pyrosoma,' the phenomena, etc., have received the most ingenious and elaborate elucidation,...of what may be called transcendental physiology." See Royal Society, Obituary Notices, vol. lix. p. 1. this), but that I was glad to be able to say that... | |
| Smithsonian Institution. Board of Regents - 1901 - 1060 Seiten
...adequately described the Mcdusro and laid down rational principles for classifying them, but had inaugurated "a process of reasoning, the results of which can...of what may be called transcendental physiology." In other words, the youthful Huxley had made a discovery that went to the bottom of things; and as... | |
| John Fiske - 1902 - 346 Seiten
...described the Medusae and laid down rational principles for classifying them, but had inaugurated " a process of reasoning, the results of which can scarcely...of what may be called transcendental physiology." In other words, the youthful Huxley had made a discovery that went to the bottom of things; and as... | |
| John Fiske - 1902 - 336 Seiten
...described the Medusae and laid down rational principles for classifying them, but had inaugurated " a process of reasoning, the results of which can scarcely...of what may be called transcendental physiology." In other words, the youthful Huxley had made a discovery that went to the bottom of things ; and as... | |
| Sir John Lubbock - 1903 - 314 Seiten
...classification." "In your second paper, ' On the Anatomy of Salpa and Pyrosoma,' the phenomena, etc., have received the most ingenious and elaborate elucidation,...of what may be called transcendental physiology." in the bodies of Hydrozoa (Polyps and Sea Anemones), the ectoderm and the entoderm, correspond with... | |
| 1901 - 972 Seiten
...rational principles for classifying them, but had inaugurated " a process of reasoning, the resulta of which can scarcely yet be anticipated, but must...of what may be called transcendental physiology." In other words, the youthful Huxley had made a discovery that went to the bottom of things ; and as... | |
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