| Richard Wallaschek - 1905 - 344 lehte
...Anwendung finde »that a superior intelligence, acting nevertheless through natural and universal laws, has guided the development of man in a definite direction and for a special purpose«. 2 ) Dadurch hat die Naturwissenschaft der Übernatürlichkeit ein Tor geöffnet. Es ist interessant,... | |
| Richard Wallaschek - 1905 - 344 lehte
...Anwendung finde »that a superior intelligence, acting nevertheless through natural and universal laws, has guided the development of man in a definite direction and for a special purpose«.2) Dadurch hat die Naturwissenschaft der Übernatürlichkeit ein Tor geöffnet. Es ist interessant,... | |
| Augustus Hopkins Strong - 1907 - 426 lehte
...represented by the following figures : anthropoid apes, 10; savages, 26; civilized man, 32." Ibid., 360— " The inference I would draw from this class of phenomena is, that a superior intelligence has guided tht development of man in a definite direction and for a special purpose, Just as man guides the development... | |
| Augustus Hopkins Strong - 1907 - 1218 lehte
...inference I would draw from this class of phenomena is, that a superior intelligence has guided tbu development of man in a definite direction and for a special purpose, just as man guides t lie development of many animal and vegetable forms. . . . The controlling action of a higher intelligence... | |
| Percy Gardner - 1907 - 568 lehte
...authority in such a matter ought surely to be great, " a superior intelligence has guided the physical development of man in a definite direction and for a special purpose." And there are eminent biologists who have extended this view from the physical frame of man to that... | |
| Alfred Fairhurst - 1913 - 502 lehte
...evolved by natural selection, but that mind is the creation of a superior intelligence. He says: " The inference I would draw from this class of phenomena...the development of many animal and vegetable forms." t The following are some of the objections which he offers against the theory of the evolution of man... | |
| Solomon Herbert - 1913 - 436 lehte
...what may be called the essentially human faculties which distinguish man from his lower progenitors. " A superior intelligence has guided the development...and for a special purpose, just as man guides the developments of many animal and vegetable forms."* The argument on which Wallace bases his case is,... | |
| Alfred Russel Wallace, Sir James Marchant - 1916 - 564 lehte
...struggle for existence. After going into considerable detail of organic and physical development, he says: "The inference I would draw from this class of phenomena...the development of many animal and vegetable forms." Thus he foreshadows the conclusion, to be more fully developed in "The World of Life" (1910), of an... | |
| Alfred Russel Wallace, Sir James Marchant - 1916 - 320 lehte
...for existence. After going into considerable detail of organic and physical development, he says : " The inference I would draw from this class of phenomena...the development of many animal and vegetable forms." Thus he foreshadows the conclusion,, to be more fully developed in " The World of Life" (1910), of... | |
| Charles Morris - 1917 - 544 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... | |
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