... bear any resemblance whatever to ours. An insect's capacity to distinguish red from blue or yellow may be (and probably is) due to perceptions of a totally distinct nature... Journal of Morphology - Page 3641887Full view - About this book
| 1878 - 1002 lehte
...distinguish what are to us diversities of colour, by no means proves that their trn*atlon# of colour bear any resemblance whatever to ours. An insect's capacity to distinguish red from blue or yellow may be (and probably is) due to perceptions of a totally distinct nature, and quite unaccompanied... | |
| 1877 - 528 lehte
...development this new and more complex sense first began to appear we have no means of determining. The fact that the higher vertebrates, and even some...insects, distinguish what are to us diversities of colour, by no means proves that their sensations of colour bear any resemblance whatever to ours. An... | |
| 1877 - 520 lehte
...distinguish what are to us diversities of colour, by no means proves that their sensations of colour bear any resemblance whatever to ours. An insect's capacity to distinguish red from blue or yellow may be (and probably is) due to perceptions of a totally distinct nature, and quite unaccompanied... | |
| 1878 - 616 lehte
...development this new and more complex sense first began to appear we have no means of determining. The fact that the higher vertebrates, and even some...diversities of color, by no means proves that their xrmations of color bear any resemblance to ours. An insect's capacity to distinguish red from blue... | |
| Alfred Russel Wallace - 1878 - 382 lehte
...development this new and more complex sense first began to appear we have no means of determining. The fact that the higher vertebrates, and even some...insects, distinguish what are to us diversities of colour, by no means proves that their sensations of colour bear any resemblance whatever to ours. An... | |
| James Samuelson, Sir William Crookes - 1878 - 606 lehte
...concomitant of variation in structure, development, and growth. On the colour-sense in animals he remarks " that the higher vertebrates, and even some insects, distinguish what are to us diversities of colour, but this by no means proves that their sensations of colour bear any resemblance to our own.... | |
| Grant Allen - 1879 - 316 lehte
...thus sums up his view with regard to the nature- of colour-perception in the lower animals : — " The fact that the higher vertebrates, and even some...insects, distinguish what are to us diversities of colour, by no means proves that their sensations of colour bear any resemblance whatever to ours. An... | |
| Grant Allen - 1879 - 304 lehte
...Wallace thus sums up his view with regard to the nature of colour-perception in the lower animals : — " The fact that the higher vertebrates, and even some...insects, distinguish what are to us diversities of colour, by no means proves that their sensations of colour bear any resemblance whatever to ours. An... | |
| Alfred Russel Wallace - 1891 - 518 lehte
...development this new and more complex sense first began to appear we have no means of determining. The fact that the higher vertebrates, and even some...insects, distinguish what are to us diversities of colour by no means proves that their sensations of colour bear any resemblance whatever to ours. An... | |
| Alfred Russel Wallace - 1891 - 516 lehte
...distinguish what are to us diversities of colour by no means proves that their sensations of colour bear any resemblance whatever to ours. An insect's capacity to distinguish red from blue or yellow may be (and probably is) due to perceptions of a totally distinct nature, and quite unaccompanied... | |
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