The Mind and the Eye: A Study of the Biologist's Standpoint |
Contents
The Mode of Discovery in Biology | 17 |
The Biologists Use of Analogy | 32 |
Introduction | 63 |
4 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
The Mind and the Eye: A Study of the Biologist's Standpoint Agnes Arber,P. R. Bell No preview available - 1985 |
Common terms and phrases
abstract actual analogy anatomy animal antithesis Arber Aristotle aspect biological biologist Bosanquet Bruno Cambridge carpel causes century chap Chapter Coleridge conception conscious Cornford Dante Dante Alighieri Descartes dialogue disciplines discovery doctrine element epigenesis Étienne Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire example expression fact Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire Giordano Bruno Haldane hand Hegel History of Biology human hypothesis idea individual induction instance intellectual interpretation intuitive Kant Kemp kind Leibniz living thing logic London meaning Meister Eckhart mental merely method microcosm mind morphology Muirhead multifariousness Newton Nordenskiöld observation organism Oxford peltate perception phase philosophy physico-chemical plant Plato Plotinus premiss present book principle problem question reality reason recognized regarded relation Russell scientific sense Singer Spinoza Stace standpoint STIRLING synthesis theory thinkers thinking thought tion Trans Translation truth Uniformity of Nature unity universe W. K. Clifford whole words writing wrote