| 1870 - 714 lehte
...organ that seems prepared in advance, only to be fully utilized as he progresses in civilization. " The brain of pre-historic and of savage man seems...development of the lower animals through their ever-varying forma of being." (P. 343.) Again, Mr. Wallace shows that man's naked akin could not have been produced... | |
| Alfred Russel Wallace - 1870 - 458 lehte
...increase in size or complexity, except in strict co-ordination to the pressing wants of the whole. The brain of prehistoric and of savage man seems to...the development of the lower animals through their ever-vary ing forms of being. The Use of the Hairy Covering of Mammalia. Let us now consider another... | |
| Alfred Russel Wallace - 1871 - 434 lehte
...increase in size or complexity, except in strict co-ordination to the pressing wants of the whole. The brain of prehistoric and of savage man seems to...Mammalia.. Let us now consider another point in man's organization, the bearing of which has been almost entirely overlooked by writers on both sides of... | |
| Alfred Russel Wallace - 1871 - 454 lehte
...increase in size or complexity, except in strict co-ordination to the pressing wants of the whole. The brain of prehistoric and of savage man seems to...Mammalia. Let us now consider another point in man's organization, the bearing of which has been almost entirely overlooked by writers on both sides of... | |
| Alfred Russel Wallace - 1871 - 490 lehte
...increase in size or complexity, except in strict co-ordination to the pressing wants of the whole. The brain of prehistoric and of savage man seems to...Mammalia. Let us now consider another point in man's organization, the bearing of which has been almost entirely overlooked by, writers on both sides of... | |
| 1871 - 372 lehte
...increase in size or complexity, except in strict co-ordination to the pressing wants of the whole. The brain of pre-historic and of savage man seems...animals through their ever-varying forms of being. — Amer. Jour, of Science and Arts. SOME ELEMENTARY PRINCIPLES IN ANIMAL MECHANICS. The following... | |
| 1871 - 372 lehte
...increase in size or complexity, except in strict co-ordination to the pressing wants of the whole. The brain of pre-historic and of savage man seems...animals through their ever-varying forms of being. — Amer. Jour. of Science and Arts. SOME ELEMENTARY PRINCIPLES IN ANIMAL MECHANICS. The following... | |
| 1871 - 398 lehte
...complexity, except in strict co-ordination to the pressing wants of the whole. The brain of pre-historie and of savage man seems to me to prove the existence...animals through their ever-varying forms of being. — Amer. Jour, of Science and Arts. SOME ELEMENTARY PRINCIPLES IN ANIMAL MECHANICS. The following... | |
| Alfred Russel Wallace - 1871 - 412 lehte
...increase in size or complexity, except in strict co-ordination to the pressing wants of the whole. The brain of prehistoric and of savage man seems to...the development of the lower animals through their ever-vary ing forms of being. The Use of the Hairy Covering of Mammalia. Let us now consider another... | |
| Alfred Russel Wallace - 1871 - 64 lehte
...increase in size or complexity, except in strict co-ordination to the pressing wants of the whole. The brain of prehistoric and of savage man seems to me to prove the /j existence of some power, distinct from that which has |J guided the development of the lower animals... | |
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