Individual and locomotive independence, it would seem, has been the major function and prime determining factor in the progress of life. . . . All progress in life, as reckoned in terms of man, has come through independence and through those lines of... New York State Museum Bulletin - Pagina 1021917Volledige weergave - Over dit boek
| National Academy of Sciences (U.S.) - 1912 - 834 pagina’s
...that lead to commensalism, sessility, and finally to parasitism. The degenerate modes of life involve the essential abandonment of normal direct upright...life which Nature has cast out and aside as hopeless. . . . Individual and locomotive independence then, it would seem, has been the major function and prime... | |
| Edward Jewitt Wheeler, Frank Crane - 1918 - 468 pagina’s
...so far in the history of life that they are now or seem to be unavoidable and unconquerable. . . . "Here and in analogous cases parasitic existence,...organisms once fallen into this dejected mode of life." HAVE ALL THE PLANETS THE SAME ATMOSPHERE? THE problem of the habitability of the planets is intimately... | |
| National Academy of Sciences (U.S.) - 1923 - 1268 pagina’s
...associations that led to commensalipm. sessility, and finally to parasitism. These modes of life involve — the essential abandonment of normal direct, upright...benefactors thereby are types of life which Nature has cast mil and aside as hopeless. * * * Individual and locomotive independence, it would seem, has been the... | |
| 1925 - 784 pagina’s
...associations that led to commensalism, sessility and finally to parasitism. These modes of life involve "the essential abandonment of normal direct, upright...life which Nature has cast out and aside as hopeless. . . . Individual and locomotive independence, it would seem, has been the major function and prime... | |
| Geological Society of America - 1926 - 746 pagina’s
...finally to parasitism, begun in 1908 and concluded in 1921. These degenerate modes of life involve "the essential abandonment of normal, direct, upright...life which Nature has cast out and aside as hopeless. . . . Individual and locomotive Independence, then, it would seem, has been the major function and... | |
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