Nature, Volume 65Sir Norman Lockyer Macmillan Journals Limited, 1902 |
Vanuit het boek
Resultaten 6-10 van 100
Pagina 48
... given in detail , with biblio- graphical references in the foot - notes . If educationists of the old school should at any time challenge ( as they have before now ) the value of modern science as a mental discipline , we may ...
... given in detail , with biblio- graphical references in the foot - notes . If educationists of the old school should at any time challenge ( as they have before now ) the value of modern science as a mental discipline , we may ...
Pagina 71
... given are such as will meet with very general approval . In the introduction he states that the preparation of the present volume was primarily undertaken to meet his personal needs . An investiga- tion along several lines of public ...
... given are such as will meet with very general approval . In the introduction he states that the preparation of the present volume was primarily undertaken to meet his personal needs . An investiga- tion along several lines of public ...
Pagina 73
... given more or less legislative are metered the per capita consumption is not one - half what and executive authority in matters which experience has it is in the unmetered cities . It appears to be the experi- shown they can best ...
... given more or less legislative are metered the per capita consumption is not one - half what and executive authority in matters which experience has it is in the unmetered cities . It appears to be the experi- shown they can best ...
Pagina 92
... given in a town , with the object of making the museum a worthy show of which the town can be proud , there need not be much difficulty in paying the salary of a curator . I must , however , tell you that he ought not to have other work ...
... given in a town , with the object of making the museum a worthy show of which the town can be proud , there need not be much difficulty in paying the salary of a curator . I must , however , tell you that he ought not to have other work ...
Pagina 108
... given to Prof. William Edward Ayrton , F.R.S. , for his contributions to electrical science . The services rendered by Prof. Ayrton to science during the last twenty - seven years may be roughly grouped under two heads . He has carried ...
... given to Prof. William Edward Ayrton , F.R.S. , for his contributions to electrical science . The services rendered by Prof. Ayrton to science during the last twenty - seven years may be roughly grouped under two heads . He has carried ...
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
Academy acid action animals antihelix apparatus appears Berthelot Birds blood Botany British cent chemical chemistry College contains curve described determined Didlington direction edition effect electric Elementary equations exhibited experiments function Geology given heat Henri Moissan Hydrogen Hydrogen Selenide illustrated influence interest investigation Island L. E. Dickson laboratory lectures London Magnetic Mathematics means measured ment Messrs Meteorological meteors method motion Murray Islanders Museum natural nerve Nova Persei November November 14 observations Observatory obtained original paper Paris pepsin period photographs Physical Physiology plants Pleistocene present pressure produced Prof published quaternion Ray Lankester recent relation remarkable Royal Society scientific solution South species specimens star Stonehenge Supp temperature theory tion tube Turin Tycho Tycho Brahe University variation volume W. H. Perkin W. H. R. Rivers
Populaire passages
Pagina 242 - In general, to do and perform all things necessary to promote the objects of the...
Pagina 47 - In primis hoc volunt persuadere, non interire animas, sed ab aliis post mortem transire ad alios, atque hoc maxime ad virtutem excitari putant, metu mortis neglecto. Multa praeterea de sideribus atque eorum motu, de mundi ac terrarum magnitudine, de rerum natura, de deorum immortalium vi ac potestate, disputant et juventuti tradunt.
Pagina 124 - The advancement of the highest interests of national science and learning and the custody of objects of art and of the valuable results of scientific expeditions conducted by the United States have been committed to the Smithsonian Institution. In furtherance of its declared purpose — for the "increase and diffusion of knowledge among men" — the Congress has from time to time given it other important functions.
Pagina 101 - February to the secretary of the Institute. " The object of this scheme of scholarships is not to facilitate ordinary collegiate studies, but to enable students who have passed through a college curriculum or have been trained in industrial establishments, to conduct researches in the metallurgy of iron and steel and allied subjects, with the view of aiding its advance or its application to industry.
Pagina 49 - For wisdom is better than rubies; and all the things that may be desired are not to be compared to it. I wisdom dwell with prudence, and find out knowledge of witty inventions.
Pagina 61 - Dealing with the means for physical and mental characters we are forced to the perfectly definite conclusion : That the mental characters in man are inherited in precisely the same manner as the physical.
Pagina 266 - It is proposed to found in the city of Washington, an institution which with the cooperation of institutions now or hereafter established, there or elsewhere, shall in the broadest and most liberal manner encourage investigation, research, and discovery — show the application of knowledge to the improvement of mankind, provide such buildings, laboratories, books, and apparatus, as may be needed; and afford instruction of an advanced character to students properly qualified to profit thereby.
Pagina 254 - Meetings shall be to order, take account, consider, and discourse of philosophical experiments and observations ; to read, hear, and discourse upon letters, reports, and other papers, containing philosophical matters ; as also to view, and discourse upon, rarities of nature and art...
Pagina 153 - His statement is that the oral cavity produces independently a harmonic or partial tone which has no definite relation to the fundamental tone emitted by the larynx. A vowel, according to him, is a special acoustic phenomenon, depending on the intermittent production of a special partial, or "formant/
Pagina 43 - And these birds, save in two instances, refused to touch cinnabar caterpillars [with black and orange bands], which were new to their experience. They did not, like other birds, have to learn by particular trials that these caterpillars are unpleasant. Their experience had already been gained through the banded glass slips ; or so it seemed. I have also found that young birds who had learnt to avoid cinnabar caterpillars left wasps untouched. Such observations must be repeated and extended. But they...