In short, how much liberty has any phase of growth to evolve by itself without markedly disturbing other phases? The facts, as reported by the investigators, seem to favor the suggestion of Cumings. Thus in the language of Driesch, "... .the actual fate... Contributions to Education - Sida 47efter Columbia University. Teachers College - 1914Obegränsad förhandsgranskning - Om den här boken
| Hans Driesch - 1908 - 364 sidor
...instance, has a far wider range than is shown by what each of them actually performs in even this ontogeny. There are more morphogenetic possibilities contained in each embryonic part than are actually realised in a special morphogenetic case. As the most important special morphogenetic case is, of course,... | |
| 1908 - 356 sidor
...instance, has a far wider range than is shown by what each of them actually performs in even this ontogeny. There are more morphogenetic possibilities contained in each embryonic part than are actually realised in a special morphogenetic case. As the most important special morphogenetic case is, of course,... | |
| Hans Driesch - 1908 - 356 sidor
...instance, has a far wider range than is shown by what each of them actually performs in even this ontogeny. There are more morphogenetic possibilities contained in each embryonic part than are actually realised in a special morphogenetic case. As the most important special morphogenetic case is, of course,... | |
| Percy Erwin Davidson - 1914 - 126 sidor
...histological structure brings about a marked unlikeness of the embryo to the assumed ancestral type."" The main point of difference between Montgomery and...in these words of Morgan: " Laboratory Text Book in Embryolofry, 2d ed., 1910, p. 14. n The Science and Philosophy of the Organism, Vol. 1, 1909. p. 77.... | |
| Percy Erwin Davidson - 1914 - 120 sidor
...histological structure brings about a marked unlikeness of the embryo to the assumed ancestral type."77 The main point of difference between Montgomery and...than are actually realized in a special morphogenetic case."78 That is to say, the fate of a part is determined in some degree in the course of its subsequent... | |
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