Which of you by taking thought can add one cubit to his stature ? All that has been said, then, regarding the plant may be restated with regard to the animal. Every particle that enters into the composition of a muscle, a nerve, or a bone, has been placed... Nature - Page 175edited by - 1870Full view - About this book
| John Tyndall - 1903 - 146 pages
...to the animal. Every particle that enters into the composition of a nerve, a muscle, or a bone has been placed in its position by molecular force. And...its environment, its position in the body might be determined mathematically. Our difficulty is not with the quality of the problem, but with its complexity... | |
| Justin McCarthy, Maurice Francis Egan, Charles Welsh, Douglas Hyde, Lady Gregory, James Jeffrey Roche - 1904 - 496 pages
...to the animal. Every particle that enters into the composition of a muscle, a nerve, or a bone, has been placed in its position by molecular force. And...its environment, its position in the body might be determined mathematically. Our difficulty is not with the quality of the problem, but with its complexity;... | |
| 1867 - 438 pages
...to the animal. Every particle that enters into the composition of a muscle, a nerve, or a bone, has been placed in its position by molecular force. And...law in these matters be denied, and the element of might be inferred. But how inferred t It is at bottom not a case of logical inference at all, but of... | |
| James Cloyd Bowman - 1918 - 504 pages
...to the animal. Every particle that enters into the composition of a muscle, a nerve, or a bone has been placed in its position by molecular force. And, unless the existence of law in these matters is denied, and the element of caprice introduced, we must conclude that, given the relation of any... | |
| Robert Emmons Rogers - 1921 - 356 pages
...been placed in its position by molecular force. And, unless the existence of law in these matters is denied, and the element of caprice introduced, we...its environment, its position in the body might be determined mathematically. Our difficulty is not with the quality of the problem, but with its complexity;... | |
| Joshua Lawrence Eason, Maurice Harley Weseen - 1921 - 472 pages
...to the animal. Every particle that enters into the composition of a muscle, a nerve, or a bone, has been placed in its position by molecular force. And unless the existence of law in these matters is denied, and the element of caprice introduced, we must conclude that, given the relation of any... | |
| Robert Emmons Rogers - 1921 - 352 pages
...to the animal. Every particle that enters into the composition of a muscle, a nerve, or a bone has been placed in its position by molecular force. And, unless the existence of law in these matters is denied, and the element of caprice introduced, we must conclude that, given the relation of any... | |
| H. Charlton Bastian - 2001 - 554 pages
...nf sugar. . . Every particle that enters into the composition of a muscle, a nerx~e, or a bone, hn been placed in its position by molecular force. And unless the existence of law in these mailers be denied, and the element of caprice introduced, we must conclude that, given the relation... | |
| |