| 1888 - 1132 páginas
...same sense in the two ; that the one is really the equivalent of the other. That is what I am not yet convinced of ; and so to me the argument comes only...the one to the other to the extent you do. But all *Gray has some important observations on the bearing of hybridization on variation, in a review of... | |
| James Dwight Dana, William Gilson Farlow - 1890 - 94 páginas
...same sense in the two ; that the one is really the equivalent of the other. That is what I am not yet convinced of; and so to me the argument comes only...makes me cautious and slow about building too much on analogies, and until I see further and clearer I must continue to think there is an essential difference... | |
| Smithsonian Institution. Board of Regents - 1890 - 894 páginas
...same sense in the two; that the one is really the equivalent of the other. That is what I am not yet convinced of; and so to me the argument comes only...makes me cautious and slow about building too much on analogies, and until I see further and clearer I must continue to think there is an essential difference... | |
| Smithsonian Institution. Board of Regents - 1890 - 894 páginas
...same sense in the two; that the one is really the equivalent of the other. That is what I am not yet convinced of; and so to me the argument comes only...the extent you do. But all my experience makes me cautions and slow about building too much on analogies, and until I see further and clearer I must... | |
| Smithsonian Institution. Board of Regents - 1890 - 1050 páginas
...same sense in the two ; that the one is really the equivalent of the other. That is what I am not yet convinced of; and so to me the argument comes only...makes me cautious and slow about building too much on analogies, and until I see further and clearer I must continue to think there is an essential difference... | |
| Smithsonian Institution. Board of Regents - 1890 - 894 páginas
...the equivalent of the other. That is what I am not yet convinced of; and so to me the argument conies only with the force of an analogy, whereas I suppose...convince me that there is no fallacy in reasoning from theoue to the other to the extent you do. But all my experience makes me cautious and slow about building... | |
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