| Mordecai Cubitt Cooke, George Massee - 1893 - 294 lehte
...it would avoid the great mass of synonymy, which is being heaped like an incubus upon the science. 1 must express surprise that Dr. Britton has not considered...application of this law as at present practised by uiany botanists, which would make it the one great law of botanical nomenclature, before which every... | |
| 1895 - 422 lehte
...with the late Sereno Watsoii § that " there is nothing whatever of an ethical character inherent hi a name, through any priority of publication or position,...render it morally obligatory upon anyone to accept one * Phil., 219. t PM-> 212I As Alphoiise de Caudolle points out in a letter published in the Bull, de... | |
| 1892 - 538 lehte
...Botanical Gazette. [June, anists, for the reason that once established and pretty generally recognized, it would avoid the great mass of synonymy, which is...priority. The application of this law as at present practiced by many botanists, which would make it the one great law of botanical nomenclature, before... | |
| Berthold Seemann - 1896 - 572 lehte
...is customary to select tbe earliest published. I agree, however, with the late Serene Watson* that "there is nothing whatever of an ethical character...upon anyone to accept one name rather than another." And in point of fact Linnaeus and the early systematists attached little importance to priority. The... | |
| Smithsonian Institution. Board of Regents - 1896 - 1056 lehte
...Watson (Nature, XLVII, 54), that "there is nothing whatever of an ethical character inherent in a uame, through any priority of publication or position, which should render it morally obligatory щит anyone to accept one name rather than another.'' And, in point of fact, Liiiiiit'us and the... | |
| 1895 - 498 lehte
...customary to select the earliest published. I agree, however, with the late Sereno Watson81 that ' there is nothing whatever of an ethical character...position, which should render it morally obligatory upon any one to accept one name rather than another.' And in point of fact, Linnseus and the early systematists... | |
| 1892 - 504 lehte
...botVol. XVII.— No. 6. anists, for the reason that once established and pretty generally recognized, it would avoid the great mass of synonymy, which is...priority. The application of this law as at present practiced by many botanists, which would make it the one great law of botanical nomenclature, before... | |
| 1893 - 882 lehte
...which is being heaped like an incubus upon the science. I must express surprise that Dr. Britton had not considered it his duty to publish the last written...position which should render it morally obligatory upon any one to accept one name rather than another ; otherwise it would be applicable or true as well in... | |
| Sir Norman Lockyer - 1893 - 680 lehte
...which is being heaped like an incubus upon the science. I must express surprise that Dr. Britton had not considered it his duty to publish the last written...position which should render it morally obligatory upon any one to accept one name rather than another ; otherwise it would be applicable or true as well in... | |
| Sir Norman Lockyer - 1893 - 908 lehte
...which is being heaped like an incubus upon the science. I must express surprise that Dr. Britton had not considered it his duty to publish the last written...position which should render it morally obligatory upon any one to accept one name rather than another ; otherwise it would be applicable or true as well in... | |
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