To change is always seeming fickleness. But not to change with the advance of science, is worse ; it is persistence in error ; and, therefore, notwithstanding the former adoption of what has been called the Natural History System, and the pledge to its... Bulletin of the Geological Society of America - Página 58por Geological Society of America - 1913Vista completa - Acerca de este libro
| Chemical Society (Great Britain) - 1918 - 480 páginas
...relation of compounds; and philosophy has thrown a new light upon the principles of classification. To change is always seeming fickleness. But not to...advance of Science is worse ; it is persistence in error ; and, therefore, notwithstanding the former adoption of what has been called the Natural History System,... | |
| James Dwight Dana - 1850 - 800 páginas
...and relations of compounds ; and philosophy has thrown new light on the principles of classification. To change is always seeming fickleness. But not to...of science, is worse ; it is persistence in error : and, therefore, notwithstanding the former adoption of what has been called the " Natural History... | |
| James Dwight Dana - 1868 - 884 páginas
...and relations of compounds ; and philosophy has thrown new light on the principles of classification. To change is always seeming fickleness. But not to...of science, is worse ; it is persistence in error ; and, therefore, notwithstanding the former adoption of what has been called the Natural History System,... | |
| James Dwight Dana - 1868 - 914 páginas
...and relations of compounds ; and philosophy has thrown new light on the principles of classification. To change is always seeming fickleness. But not to...of science, is worse ; it is persistence in error ; and, therefore, notwithstanding the former adoption of what has been called the Natural History System,... | |
| James Dwight Dana, George Jarvis Brush - 1877 - 994 páginas
...and relations of compounds; and philosophy has thrown new light on the principles of classification. To change is always seeming fickleness. But not to...of science, is worse ; it is persistence in error ; and, therefore, notwithstanding the former adoption of what has been called the Natural History System,... | |
| Newton Horace Winchell - 1896 - 474 páginas
...applies equally well here. In the preface to the third edition of his mineralogy, in 1850, he says that "To change is always seeming fickleness. But not to...of science is worse; it is persistence in error." The first edition of the tieulutin (1862) clearly teaches the doctrine of special creation for the... | |
| Daniel Coit Gilman - 1899 - 456 páginas
...here was so characteristic of the author's attitude of mind to scientific truth in general. " ' . . . To change is always seeming fickleness. But not to...advance of science is worse; it is persistence in error; and, therefore, notwithstanding the former adoption of what has been called the naturalhistory system,... | |
| David Starr Jordan - 1910 - 528 páginas
...the third edition of his System of Mineralogy, when he cast aside the classification and the Latin binomial nomenclature of the former editions, he wrote...preface: "To change is always seeming fickleness. ^JBijLnot fo rhangp with thp advance of science is worse; it is p^rsistfrn^f in prrftr," He said to... | |
| James Dwight Dana, Edward Salisbury Dana - 1920 - 1526 páginas
...author. relations of compounds; and philosophy has thrown new light on the principles of classification. To change is always seeming fickleness. But not to...advance of science is worse; it is persistence in error; und, therefore, notwithstanding the former adoption of what has been called the Natural History System,... | |
| J. Lima-de-Faria - 2001 - 162 páginas
...There is always a strong reaction against new ideas. Dana in 1850 wrote in the preface to his book: ,To change is always seeming fickleness. But not...advance of science is worse; it is persistence in error.一, One of the arguments against the chemical classification was the fact that it grouped... | |
| |