| Charles Morris - 1921 - 496 lehte
...grand series of organic nature, but as, in some degree, a new and distinct order of being ; maintaining that a superior intelligence has guided the development...the development of many animal and vegetable forms. (3) Carl Vogt holds a plurality of the race ; adopts Darwin's idea of natural selection accounting... | |
| Edward Westermarck - 1921 - 622 lehte
...have been divested of hair through natural selection." Wallace, again, who believe;! (op. cit. p. 359) that " a superior intelligence has guided the development of man in a definite direction," considered (ibid. p. 348 sq.} that the hairless condition of the skin comes under this head. Belt's... | |
| Thomas Edward Finegan - 1922 - 500 lehte
...grand series of organic nature, but as, in some degree, a new and distinct order of being ; maintaining that a superior intelligence has guided the development of man in a definite direction nnd for a special purpose, just as man guides the development of many animal and vegetable forms. (3)... | |
| Henry Fairfield Osborn - 1924 - 290 lehte
...sensitive skin, his speech, his color sense, his mathematical, musical and moral attributes. He concluded: The inference I would draw from this class of phenomena...the development of many animal and vegetable forms. It is also prophetic of his later indictments of the so-called civilization of our times that we find... | |
| Henry Fairfield Osborn - 1928 - 358 lehte
...sensitive skin, his speech, his color sense, his mathematical, musical and moral attributes. He concludes : The inference I would draw from this class of phenomena...the development of many animal and vegetable forms. It is also prophetic of his later indictments of the so-called civilization of our times that at the... | |
| 1874 - 812 lehte
...calls influx from the spiritual world. My present views on that subject are given in a recent work: — 7 2(ؤ e vv ͛y ( H R &Û ޖ 3 2 ;," { o f , C ب7 @ U Q ая man guides the development of many animal and vegetable forms." lie does not regard the human... | |
| Bernard Grant Campbell - 392 lehte
...adhered to Darwinian concepts of general evolution but made a unique exception for man, concluding that "a superior intelligence has guided the development...a definite direction, and for a special purpose." That idea has not become a mere historical curiosity. Its essence has been retained in various external... | |
| James R. Moore - 1981 - 536 lehte
...law' had therefore determined the course of human evolution. 'A superior intelligence', he inferred, 'has guided the development of man in a definite direction,...purpose, just as man guides the development of many vegetable and animal forms'. The 'intervention of some distinct individual intelligence' has aided... | |
| Janet Oppenheim - 1985 - 536 lehte
...brain. On the contrary, the only inference which Wallace could draw from the evidence he produced was "that a superior intelligence has guided the development...of man in a definite direction, and for a special purpose."149 In the last section of the 1870 essay, Wallace attempted to explain the evolution of consciousness,... | |
| Michael Anthony Corey - 1994 - 452 lehte
...surrounding the evolution of intelligence and the human voice that he based his entire world view on it: The inference I would draw from this class of phenomena...of man in a definite direction, and for a special purpose.58 We mustn't forget that Wallace is also credited with discovering the theory of natural selection... | |
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