the recognition of an ideal Exemplar for the Vertebrated Animals proves that the Knowledge of such a being as Man must have existed before Man appeared. For the Divine mind which planned the Archetype also foreknew all its modifications. The Archetypal... The Darwinian Theory of the Transmutation of Species - Page 232by Robert Mackenzie Beverley - 1867 - 386 lehteFull view - About this book
| 1882 - 828 lehte
...Palaeozoic fishes." The language of Owen is equally explicit : " The recognition of an ideal exemplar hi the vertebrated animals proves that the knowledge...existed before man appeared ; for the divine Mind which planned the archetype also foreknew all its modifications. The archetype idea was manifested... | |
| Samuel Kinns - 1883 - 556 lehte
...statement of Professor Owen, supreme in his own special walk as a comparative anatomist, who says : — " The recognition of an ideal Exemplar for the Vertebrated...have existed before Man appeared. For the Divine mind which planned the Archetype also foreknew all its modifications." * Could anything be more beautiful... | |
| Samuel Kinns - 1885 - 578 lehte
...statement of Professor Owen, supreme in his own special walk as a comparative anatomist, who says :— " The recognition of an ideal Exemplar for the Vertebrated...have existed before Man appeared. For the Divine mind which planned the Arehetype also foreknew all its modifications." * Could anything be more beautiful... | |
| Samuel Kinns - 1887 - 862 lehte
...statement of Professor Owen, supreme in his own special walk as a comparative anatomist, who says : — " The recognition of an ideal Exemplar for the Vertebrated...animals proves that the knowledge of such a being as Mail must have existed before Man appeared. For the Divine mind which planned the Archetype also foreknew... | |
| Henry Grattan Guinness - 1896 - 586 lehte
...minister to the wants of the individual and of his fellows. " The recognition of an ideal exemplar in the vertebrated animals proves that the knowledge...have existed before man appeared, for the Divine mind which planned the archetype also foreknew all its modifications. The archetype idea was manifested... | |
| John Theodore Merz - 1912 - 848 lehte
...principle which "moulds in subserviency to the exigencies of the resulting specific forms," argues that the knowledge of such a being as man must " have existed before man appeared, for the divine mind which planned the archetype also foreknew all its modifications," and concludes that we learn from... | |
| Thomas Henry Huxley - 1902 - 772 lehte
...ideal Exemplar for the 1 On the Archetype and Homologies of the Vertebrate Sheleton (1848), p. 172. Vertebrated animals proves that the knowledge of such...have existed before Man appeared. For the Divine mind which planned the Archetype also foreknew all its modifications. ' The Archetypal idea was manifested... | |
| Andrew Bruce Davidson - 1904 - 536 lehte
...in anticipation, so to speak, in the inferior animals; and the recognition of an ideal exemplar in the vertebrated animals proves that the knowledge...existed, before man appeared. For the divine mind which planned the archetype also foreknew all its modifications. The archetypal idea was manifested... | |
| William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, Sir John Murray IV, Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle) - 1853 - 628 lehte
...of the actual nature of the world which that genius contemplated. ' Now, however,' says Mr. Owen, ' the recognition of an ideal Exemplar for the Vertebrated...have existed before Man appeared. For the Divine mind which planned the Archetype also foreknew all its modifications. The Archetypal idea was manifested... | |
| M. J. S. Rudwick - 1985 - 303 lehte
...the knowledge of such a being as Man must have existed before Man appeared. For the Divine mind which planned the Archetype also foreknew all its modifications....manifested in the flesh, under divers modifications, long prior to the existence of those animal species that actually [that is, now] exemplify it. To what... | |
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