... he had not yet acquired that wonderfully developed brain, the organ of the mind, which now, even in his lowest examples, raises him far above the highest brutes ; — at a period when he had the form but hardly the nature of man, when he neither possessed... The American Naturalist - Page 4191871Full view - About this book
| 1864 - 668 lehte
...wonderfully developed brain, the organ of the mind, which now, even in his lowest examples, raises him far above the highest brutes ; — at a period when...developed in him would his physical features become fixed and permanent, because the latter would be of less importance to his well being; he would be... | |
| Alfred Russel Wallace - 1870 - 414 lehte
...wonderfully developed brain, the organ of the mind, which now, even in his lowest examples, raises him far above the highest brutes ; — at a period when...he had the form but hardly the nature of man, when Y he neither possessed human speech, nor those sympathetic and moral feelings which in a greater or... | |
| Alfred Russel Wallace - 1871 - 64 lehte
...wonderfully developed brain, the organ of the mind, which now, even in his lowest examples, raises him far above the highest brutes ; at a period when he...developed in him, would his physical features become fixed and permanent, because the latter would be of less importance to his well-being ; he would be... | |
| 1871 - 812 lehte
...wonderfully developed hraln, the organ of the mind, which now, even In Ills lowest examples, raises him far above the highest brutes; — at a period when...developed In him, would his physical features become tlxed and permanent, because, the latter would be of less Importance to his well being; he would be... | |
| 1871 - 806 lehte
...now, even In his lowest examples, raises him far above the highest brutes; — at a period when lie had the form but hardly the nature of man, when he...developed In him, would his physical features become fixed and permanent, because the latter would be of less Importance to his well being; he would be... | |
| 1871 - 462 lehte
...natural selection ceased to modify his physical structure. He concludes that man was a homogeneous race at a period when he had the form but hardly the nature of man, when he possessed neither speech nor sympathetic or moral feelings. If such a being be called man, then man... | |
| 1871 - 624 lehte
...raises him far above the highest of brutes." At this remote era Mr. Wallace's man had not acquired "human speech, nor those sympathetic and moral feelings which in a greater or less degree everywhere distinguish the race." Man's intelligence and capacity for combination, give him a power of using,... | |
| Alfred Russel Wallace - 1871 - 412 lehte
...of the mind, which now, even in his lowest examples, raises him far above the highest brutes;—at a period when he had the form but hardly the nature of man, when Y he neither possessed human speech, nor those sympathetic and moral feelings which in a greater or... | |
| Alfred Russel Wallace - 1871 - 434 lehte
...of the mind, which now, even in his lowest examples, raises him far above the highest brutes;—at a period when he had the form but hardly the nature of man, when T he neither possessed human speech, nor those sympathetic and moral feelings which in a greater or... | |
| William Fraser - 1873 - 406 lehte
...evidence against his having existed "ten thousand centuries;"1 and he assumes that there was a time "when he had the form, but hardly the nature, of man...less degree, everywhere now distinguish the race." 2 Similar views are held by Darwin, Sir Charles Lyell, and Professor Huxley. On this point their only... | |
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