| James McCosh, George Dickie - Adaptation (Biology) - 1856 - 562 pages
...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 archetype idea was manifested in the flesh long prior to the existence of those animal species... | |
| Thomas Ragg - 1858 - 456 pages
...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 idea was manifested in the flesh under divers modifications on this planet, long prior... | |
| Augustus Clissold - 1861 - 714 pages
...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." ..." Nature, we learn from the part history of our globe, has advanced with slow and stately steps,... | |
| Hugh Miller - 1865 - 378 pages
...vertebrated animals, proves that the knowledge of such a being as man existed before man appeared ; for the Divine mind which planned the archetype also foreknew all its modifications. The archetypal idea was cold skull and the placoid vertebra, to which I have referred, appears to hinge... | |
| Herbert Spencer - Biology - 1867 - 658 pages
...they seem to be as constant as the haemal spine, which is one of the so-called autogenous elements : in the diagram of the Archetypus, the appendage is...the organizing principle ; then why should not the appendages be included among its various offshoots ? We do not ask this question because of its intrinsic... | |
| Herbert Spencer - Biology - 1867 - 586 pages
...is not. It cannot be from their comparative unimportance ; seeing that as potential limbs they arc essential parts of nearly all the Vertebrata — much...the organizing principle ; then why should not the appendages be included among its various offshoots ? We do not ask this question because of its intrinsic... | |
| Herbert Spencer - 1867 - 600 pages
...essential parts of nearly all .the Vertcbrata — much more obvion.sly so than the diapophyses arc. If, as Professor Owen argues, " the divine mind which...appendages was one intended to characterize all the higher Vertcbruta ; then, surely, these diverging appendages must have been parts of the " ideal typical vertebra."... | |
| George Warburton Weldon - Analogy (Religion) - 1871 - 188 pages
...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." It has been already stated that the animals of the vertebrate type which preceded Man, were so many... | |
| Herbert Spencer - Biology - 1875 - 584 pages
...appendage is represented as attached to every vertebrate segment of the head and trunk, which the hsemal spine is not. It cannot be from their comparative...then, surely, these diverging appendages must have bcen parts of the " ideal typical vertebra." Or, if the " ideal typical vertebra" is to be understood... | |
| Methodist Church - 1882 - 826 pages
...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 archetype idea was manifested in the flesh long prior to the existence of those animal species... | |
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