| Royal Society (Great Britain) - 1894 - 556 pages
...offspring of living seeds ? The reply is unavoidable. We should undoubtedly consider the experiment in the flower-pot as clearing up our pre-existing ignorance....reveals in the air, and in the absence of which no bacterial life has been generated. There seems no flaw in this reasoning ; and it is so simple as to... | |
| 1875 - 884 pages
...What would be our conclusion ? Shonld we regard those living plants as the products of dead dust, of mineral particles ; or should we regard them as the...floating matter which the electric beam reveals in tht air, and in the absence of which no bacterial life has been generated. There seems no flaw in this... | |
| 1875 - 462 pages
...regard them as the offspring of living seeds ? The reply is unavoidable. We should undoubtedly oonsider the experiment with the flower-pot as clearing up...reveals in the air, and in the absence of which no bacterial life has been generated. There seems no flaw in this reasoning ; and it is so simple as to... | |
| Royal Society (Great Britain) - 1876 - 810 pages
...cresses and grasses appear above the soil. Suppose the experiment when repeated over and over again to yield the same unvarying result. What would be...reveals in the air, and in the absence of which no Bacterial life has been generated. There seems no flaw in this reasoning ; and it is so simple as to... | |
| John Tyndall - 1876 - 656 pages
...cresses and grasses appear above the soil. Suppose the experiment when repeated over and over again to yield the same unvarying result. What would be...reveals in the air, and in the absence of which no Bacterial life has been generated. There seems no flaw in this reasoning ; and it is so simple as to... | |
| 1876 - 510 pages
...cresses and grasses appear above the soil. Suppose the experiment when repeated over and over again to yield the same unvarying result. What would be...reveals in the air, and in the absence of which no Bacterial life has been generated. There carefully filled with air which had passed seems no flaw in... | |
| Sir Norman Lockyer - 1876 - 924 pages
...cresses and grasses appear above the soil. Suppose the experiment when repeated over and over again to yield the same unvarying result. What would be...reveals in the air, and in the absence of which no Bacterial life has been generated. There seems no flaw in this reasoning ; and it is so simple as to... | |
| Sir Norman Lockyer - 1876 - 558 pages
...cresses and grasses appear above the soil. Suppose the experiment when repeated over and overagain to yield the same unvarying result. What would be...reveals in the air, and in the absence of which no Bacterial life has been generated. There seems no flaw in this reasoning ; and it is so simple as to... | |
| John Tyndall - 1876 - 706 pages
...cresses and grasses appear above the soil. Suppose the experiment when repeated over and over again to yield the same unvarying result. What would be...reveals in the air, and in the absence of which no Bacterial life has been generated. There seems no flaw in this reasoning; and it is so simple as to... | |
| Royal Society (Great Britain) - 1876 - 818 pages
...flower-pot as clearing up our preexisting ignorance ; we should regard the fact of their producing crosses and grasses as proof positive that the particles sown...generated." This reasoning applies word for word to tho development of Bacteria from that floating matter which the electric beam reveals in the air, and... | |
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