Unconscious MemoryCape, 1920 - 186 pages |
From inside the book
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Page 2
... Professor Huxley's own word , as reported by one who heard it ) ; and on opening a small book entitled " Degeneration , " by Professor Ray Lankester , published a few days before these lines were written , I find the following passage ...
... Professor Huxley's own word , as reported by one who heard it ) ; and on opening a small book entitled " Degeneration , " by Professor Ray Lankester , published a few days before these lines were written , I find the following passage ...
Page 10
... Huxley , in his recent lecture on the coming of age of the " Origin of ... Professor Tyndall , 1 that evolution " is " Mr. Darwin's theory . " In his ... Professor Huxley evidently knows little of these writers beyond their names ; if he ...
... Huxley , in his recent lecture on the coming of age of the " Origin of ... Professor Tyndall , 1 that evolution " is " Mr. Darwin's theory . " In his ... Professor Huxley evidently knows little of these writers beyond their names ; if he ...
Page 17
... Professor Huxley maintains otherwise . He writes : ' It is not true , for example , . . . that a reptile was ever a fish , but it is true that the reptile em- bryo " ( and what is said here of the reptile holds good also for the human ...
... Professor Huxley maintains otherwise . He writes : ' It is not true , for example , . . . that a reptile was ever a fish , but it is true that the reptile em- bryo " ( and what is said here of the reptile holds good also for the human ...
Page 18
... Professor Huxley prefers it , " an organism which must be classified among fishes . " But if a man was a fish once , he may have been a fish a million times over , for aught he knows ; for he must admit that his conscious recollection ...
... Professor Huxley prefers it , " an organism which must be classified among fishes . " But if a man was a fish once , he may have been a fish a million times over , for aught he knows ; for he must admit that his conscious recollection ...
Page 27
... Professor Huxley say concerning this very eminent man that he could " hardly be said to have made any real advance upon his predecessors . " Still more was I surprised at remembering that , in the first edition of the " Origin of ...
... Professor Huxley say concerning this very eminent man that he could " hardly be said to have made any real advance upon his predecessors . " Still more was I surprised at remembering that , in the first edition of the " Origin of ...
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Common terms and phrases
acquired ancestors animals antecedents appeared become bees Bewusstsein birds body brain Buffon called cells chapter Charles Darwin chrysalis circumstances clairvoyance concerning conclusion connection conscious deliberation cycle edition eggs embryonic Erasmus Darwin Erewhon Ernst Krause Ewald Hering existence experience explanation fact follow Francis Darwin germ Habit Hartmann Hellsehen heredity hypothesis idea individual instinctive action kind knowledge Kosmos Krause Krause's article Lamarck larvæ less living manner means mechanism mind MNEME modification molecules natural selection nerve nest offspring once opinion organised matter organism Origin of Species parent passage perception personal identity phenomena Philosophy physiologist present processes Professor Hering Professor Hering's lecture Professor Huxley quoted Ray Lankester reader recollection referred regard remember repetition reproduction Review Samuel Butler scientific sensation stimulus substance suppose thing thought tion translation Unconscious Memory variations vibrations Wallace whole words writing