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| Results 151-196 of 196 for « +text:paley » |
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A162
Book:
Seward, A. C. ed. 1909. Darwin and modern science. Essays in commemoration of the centenary of the birth of Charles Darwin and of the fiftieth anniversary of the publication of The origin of species. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
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, first draft of the, 376, 386 —geological chapter in the, 376, 377 Orthogenesis, 101 Ortmann, A. E., 332 Osborn, H. F., 41, 4283 —From the Greeks to Darwin by, 4-6, 11, 12, 16 Osthoff and Brugmann, 5272 Ostwald, W., 259 Ovibos moschatus, 51 Owen, Sir Richard, 112, 171, 187 Oxford, Ashmolean Museum at, 272 Packard, A. S., 81, 122 Palaeontological Record, D. H. Scott on the, 200-222 —W. B. Scott on the, 185-199 Palaeopithecus, 127 Paley, 15, 272, 273, 275, 491, 492, 496 Palitzch, G., 5541 Palm, 886
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A331
Book:
Poulton, Edward Bagnall. 1909. Charles Darwin and the Origin of species: addresses, etc., in America and England in the year of the two anniversaries. London: Longmans, Green, and Co.
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Euripus, as mimics, 133. Eutresis imitatrix, a mimic, 153. Evans, Sir John, on Archaeopteryx, 30. Evening Primroses, de Vries and, xi, 276. Evidences of Christianity, Paley, Darwin and, 100. Evolution, rate of, 46-7, 50, 51; continuous or discontinuous, 43-4, 48-51, 138-9, 200, 208, 254-6 (see also 'Mutation'); mimicry and, 145-9, 200, 203, 208. Examinations, evils of, 88-9. Exotic Butterflies, Hewitson, 237. 'External causes', as interpretation of mimicry, 148; negatived by the facts, 173-4
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A331
Book:
Poulton, Edward Bagnall. 1909. Charles Darwin and the Origin of species: addresses, etc., in America and England in the year of the two anniversaries. London: Longmans, Green, and Co.
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n. 1. misippus, Hypolimnas, 161. Mississippi Valley, 170, 181, 186. Mitchel , P. C., at Oxford centenary, 78. Mivart, St. G., attacks of, 30-2; Darwin's replies to, 104, 255. monad, 47. monstrosities, see 'mutation'. Moore, Aubrey, on argument of Omphalos, 11. Moore, F., Danaine genera of, 154, 156, 158, 159. Moral Philosophy, Paley, 100. More Letters of Charles Darwin, F. Darwin and Seward, Edrs., 4, et passim. Morgan, Lloyd, on Organic Selection, 8, 48; on chameleon and snake, 97. Morse, E. S
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A331
Book:
Poulton, Edward Bagnall. 1909. Charles Darwin and the Origin of species: addresses, etc., in America and England in the year of the two anniversaries. London: Longmans, Green, and Co.
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. Natural Theology, Paley, 95. natural versus artificial selection, 278-9. Naturalist in Nicaragua, Belt, 111. Naturalist on the Amazons, Bates, 225. Nature, 252, 255, 256. nectarine and peach, 251. Neoclytus curvatus, as mimic, 115. Neo-Lamarckism, 3. Nevada, 192-3. New England, 211. New Mexico, 176. Newton, Darwin and, 55-6, 77, 90; nearly lost to science, 57, 85-6; Hooke and, 85; Halley and, 86; Leibnitz and, 129. Newton, A., 30, 89. nigricans, Phryniscus, 110, 111, niphe, Argynnis, 161
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A34
Book:
Judd, J. W. 1910. The coming of evolution: The story of a great revolution in science. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
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Paley. The rooms of the latter he seems to have actually occupied at Christ's College and the works of the great divine were so diligently studied that their deep influence remained with him in after life109. I think it must have been the remembrance of the arguments of Paley on the 'proofs of design' in Nature, that seem in after life to have haunted Darwin, so that for long he failed to recognise fully [page] 10
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A34
Book:
Judd, J. W. 1910. The coming of evolution: The story of a great revolution in science. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
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; defined, 22; origin of term, 22; connexion with orthodoxy, 21; championed by Buckland, Sedgwick c., 27; by Cuvier, 31, 50, 102; opposition by Lyell and Darwin to, 105 Centres of Creation, Lyell's views on, 65 CHAMBERS, ROBERT, publishes Vestiges of Creation, 92; his reasons for anonymity, 93 Chemists, part played in early days of Geological Society by, 26 Christ's College, Cambridge, the home of Milton and Darwin, 13; of Paley, 108 CLODD, E., his Pioneers of Evolution, 16 Continuity, term for
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A34
Book:
Judd, J. W. 1910. The coming of evolution: The story of a great revolution in science. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
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Principles, 123; first sketch of 1842, enlarged draft of 1844, commencement of great treatise on Evolution in 1856, interruption by arrival of Wallace's papers, 128, 129; the 'Abstract' or Origin of Species commenced, 130; finished, 131; reception of, 132-139; influence of, 1, 159 OSBORN, H. F., his From the Greeks to Darwin, 16; on Lamarck, 87 PALEY, his influence on Darwin, 108 PHILLIPS, JOHN, his attitude towards Lyell's views, 30, 71 Philosophers, on Evolution, 16, 82 PLAYFAIR, JOHN, his
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A239
Book:
Peile, John ed. 1913. Biographical register of Christ's College 1505-1905 and of the earlier foundation, God's House 1448-1505. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. vol. 2.
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Erasmus Darwin: brother of Erasmus Alvey (1822). Educated at Shrewsbury: at Edinburgh University from October 1825 until 1827. Came into residence at Cambridge Jan. 1828: had rooms, first in Sidney Street, then in College (those occupied, according to tradition, by Paley) in the middle staircase of the first court, right hand side: there is a medallion of him in the room. Intended to take Holy Orders: and of the books which he studied at Cambridge, he considered Paley's Evidences and Moral
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, and when, in his last year, he enjoyed the close logical argument of Paley and Euclid. Finally, at Henslow's advice, he revived his geology during the two extra terms which, his examinations over, he had to keep before taking his degree, since he had originally come into residence at the bye term. It was through Henslow, too, that he was invited to accompany Sedgwick, the geologist, on a geological excursion in North Wales. Above all, he was fired by reading Herschel's Introduction to the Study of
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A555
Book:
Shipley, A. E. [1924]. Charles Darwin (1809-1882). In Cambridge Cameos. London: Jonathan Cape, pp. 118-147.
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On coming into residence Darwin kept for a couple of terms over the shop of Bacon the tobacconist— Calverley's Bacon—at that time in Sidney Street. For the rest of his time in Cambridge he had a pleasant panelled set of rooms—my most snug and comfortable rooms, as he calls them— on the south side of the first court of Christ's, formerly occupied, according to tradition, by Paley, and since Darwin's time by the present Dean of Wells and successive College deans. Darwin, as has been said, came
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A555
Book:
Shipley, A. E. [1924]. Charles Darwin (1809-1882). In Cambridge Cameos. London: Jonathan Cape, pp. 118-147.
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Tierra del Fuego and to visit some of the South Sea Islands, returning by the Indian Archipelago. We have seen how Darwin had been influenced by the works of Paley; and it is interesting to record that when, owing to the cramped space in a brig of ten guns, Darwin was restricted to a single volume of general reading he selected the writings of another great Christ's man, John Milton. Captain Fitzroy, like Mrs. R. Wilfer, was a disciple of Lavater, and took exception to the shape of Darwin's
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A260
Book:
Fenton, Carroll Lane. [1924]. Darwin and the theory of evolution. Girard, Kansas: Haldeman-Julius.
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did not think much about the existence of a personal God until a considerably later period of my life, I will here give the vague conclusions to which I have been driven. The old argument from design in Nature, as given by Paley, which formerly seemed to me so conclusive, fails now that the law of natural selection has been discovered. We can no longer argue that, for instance, the beautiful hinge of a bivalve shell must have been made by an intelligent being, like the hinge of a door by man
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A179
Book:
Ward, Henshaw. 1927. Charles Darwin: The man and his warfare. London: John Murray.
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arguments of the theological Paley. In all the dignity and lucidity and preciseness of Lyell's pages there was nothing to offend a religious sense. In Volume I there were twenty-six chapters. The chapter that most excited Darwin must have been IX: Theory of the progressive development of organic life considered. This has a different subject-matter and a different tone from any other; its twenty-three pages stand out in high relief amidst all the rest of the book. Its argument is a most delicate
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A258
Book:
Osborn, Henry Fairfield. 1928. Charles Darwin. In ibid., Impressions of great naturalists. New York, London: Charles Scribner.
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Inquisition, with the words, It still moves. As time advanced the prison gave way to the milder but effective weapons of ostracism and loss of official rank. In biology Linn us, Buffon, Lamarck, St. Hilaire, in turn discovered the evidences of evolution, but felt the penalty and either recanted or suffered loss of position. The cause of supernaturalism had never seemed stronger than in 1857; the masterly works of Paley and Whewell had appeared; the great series of Bridgewater Treatises to demonstrate
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A258
Book:
Osborn, Henry Fairfield. 1928. Charles Darwin. In ibid., Impressions of great naturalists. New York, London: Charles Scribner.
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reverence, by his reading of the poetry of Shakespeare, Wordsworth, Coleridge and Milton, and of the scientific prose of Paley, Herschel and Humboldt, by the subtle scholarly influ [page] 3
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F2442
Book:
Darwin, C. R. 1945. Autobiografía de Darwin; seguida de los recuerdos de la vida diaria de mi padre y la religión de Darwin por Sir Francis Darwin. Buenos Ayres: Nova.
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claro estilo de Paley. La lógica de este libro y, puedo añadir, la de su Natural Theology,8 me procuró tanto deleite como Euclides. El estudio cuidadoso de estas obras, sin tratar de aprender nada de memoria, fue la única parte del curso académico que, como pensaba entonces y sigo creyendo ahora, sirvió algo para la educación de mi mente. En aquel tiempo no me preocupé por las premisas de Paley y, aceptándolas de buena fe, quedé encantado y convencido por la prolongada argumentación. Como respondí
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F1497
Book:
Darwin, C. R. 1958. The autobiography of Charles Darwin 1809-1882. With the original omissions restored. Edited and with appendix and notes by his grand-daughter Nora Barlow. London: Collins.
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clear language of Paley. The logic of this book and as I may add of his Natural Theology gave me as much delight as did Euclid. The careful study of these works, without attempting to learn any part by rote, was the only part of the Academical Course which, as I then felt and as I still believe, was of the least use to me in the education of my mind. I did not at that time trouble myself about Paley's premises; and taking these on trust I was charmed and convinced by the long line of argumentation
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F1497
Book:
Darwin, C. R. 1958. The autobiography of Charles Darwin 1809-1882. With the original omissions restored. Edited and with appendix and notes by his grand-daughter Nora Barlow. London: Collins.
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, 103, 132-135, 219 Botanic Garden, 42 Brown, Robert, 84, 103, 127 Buckland, William, 102 Buckle, Henry Thomas, 109 Buffon, 151, 158 Bulwer, E. Lytton, 117 Butler, Dr., 25, 46 Butler, Samuel, 6, 134, 135, 167-219 Cambridge, 56-71; shooting, 44, 45; entered University, 58; mathematics and classics, 58; Paley, 59; B.A. degree, 59; sporting set, 60; aesthetic tastes, 61, 62; beetle-collecting, 62-64; Prof. Henslow, 64-66, 68, 69, 72, 83 Cambridge University Library, 5, 6, 167, 171 Cape Verde Islands
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F1497
Book:
Darwin, C. R. 1958. The autobiography of Charles Darwin 1809-1882. With the original omissions restored. Edited and with appendix and notes by his grand-daughter Nora Barlow. London: Collins.
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Newton, Alfred, 156-157 Origin of Species, 11, 13, 14, 76, 83, 93, 104, 118, 121, 122-126, 130, 140, 151, 152, 154, 167 Owen, Richard, 104 Owen, Mr., of Woodhouse, 54 Paley, Rev. William, 59, 87, 150 Pangenesis, 130 Patagonia, 80 Peacock, Mr., 226 Philosohpical Magazine, 70, 99 Philosophical Transactions, 84 Plymouth, 79 Pontobdella Muricata, 50 Power of Movement in Plants, 135, 151 Publications, 83, 84, 98, 99, 116-136 Ray Club, 64 Ray Society, 117 Religious Beliefs, 12, 85-96, 162 Reviews, 123
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F1497
Book:
Darwin, C. R. 1958. The autobiography of Charles Darwin 1809-1882. With the original omissions restored. Edited and with appendix and notes by his grand-daughter Nora Barlow. London: Collins.
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being preached by Paley and others, who not only took into account the increasing knowledge of adaptation in biology, but made a pivot of this very knowledge. Dr. Darwin looked at the facts of adaptation in the human body without the bias so general in 18th century science, a bias which saw a purpose in all the Creator's works for the immediate benefit of mankind; he produced his original theory of Generation or Descent with modification in his Zoönomia in 1794-6, partially anticipating
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F1497
Book:
Darwin, C. R. 1958. The autobiography of Charles Darwin 1809-1882. With the original omissions restored. Edited and with appendix and notes by his grand-daughter Nora Barlow. London: Collins.
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friends, will be everlastingly punished. And this is a damnable doctrine.1 Although I did not think much about the existence of a personal God until a considerably later period of my life, I will here give the vague conclusions to which I have been driven. The old argument of design in nature, as given by Paley, which formerly seemed to me so conclusive, fails, now that the law of natural selection has been discovered. We can no longer argue that, for instance, the beautiful hinge of a bivalve
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A94
Pamphlet:
Anon. 1960. Handlist of Darwin papers at the University Library Cambridge. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
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Paley, W. A View of the Evidences of Christianity, notes on 91 Pampas woodpecker, see Woodpeckers Pangenesis Material for pangenesis theory, 1868 51 Notes on Ranyard 51 Draft of ch. 27 of Variation of Animals and Plants under Domestication, on pangenesis 51 Papilionaceae. 'On the Agency of Bees in the Fertilization of Papilionaceous Flowers ' 27 (i) Poloria. Notes 51 Pennsylvania. H. D. Rogers: Second Annual Report on the Geological Exploration of the State of Pennsylvania* 136(2) Phyilotaxy. Notes
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A1036a
Book:
[Gautry, P. J.] 1961. Darwin library: list of books received in the University Library Cambridge March-May 1961. [Cambridge: unpublished typescript]. [Annotated copy in the Manuscripts Reading Room in Cambridge University Library]
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Additional material found in UL book classes which contain marginalia and other notations, removed from their locations and to be kept in MSS stack with Dar Lib. (WB3, Case 34, By 4:iv-v) MF.35.95 J.B. Jukes Newfoundland L., 1843 10.77.5 Works of W. Paley Vol. 5 L., 1825 7180.d.18- J.Locke. An Essay... 2 vols L., 1726 7700.d.142
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F1598
Book:
Barlow, Nora ed. 1967. Darwin and Henslow. The growth of an idea. London: Bentham-Moxon Trust, John Murray.
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could make nothing of any attempt to squeeze a Whig in for the University so gave it up. We have got 2 Whigs for the town and 2 Whigs one Tory for the County. But the papers will tell you all this. At this moment I am examiner in Paley in one hour have to attend in the Senate house. Now for a revision of your letters I would not bother myself about whether I were right or wrong in noting such such facts about Geology 1 See Letter 33, p. 89. [page] 6
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A668
Book:
Atkins, Hedley. 1976. Down: the home of the Darwins; the story of a house and the people who lived there. London: Royal College of Surgeons [Phillimore].
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, although he was for some time afterwards quite orthodox. He studied the Creeds, but had to repeat very often I believe in the Bible . He was a zealous student of Paley's Evidences, which he regarded as the epitome of logical reasoning and he would observe, Now Paley proves the creeds to be true from the Bible, therefore they must be true .1 [page] 4
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CD's funeral. WWH. Paine, or Payne Sir Thomas Farrer's gardener, trained at Kew. P helped CD on Mimosa. ?1873 CD to Farrer, 'As he is so acute a man, I should very much like to hear his opinion' on water damage to leaves LLiii 340. Paley, William 1743 1805. Theologian. DD. 1763 Senior Wrangler, Cambridge. Traditionally CD P had the same set at Christ's College. Archdeacon of Carlisle 1782. Author of Natural theology, London 1802, which is largely a crib from John Ray's Wisdom of God, London 1691
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. Set in front court, G staircase, traditionally the same as those of William Paley. The set now has commemorative Wedgwood plaque. Cirripedia, British Fossil 1850 On British fossil Lepadidae, Quart J.Geol.Soc.(Proc.), 6:439 440, abstract only; CD withdrew the paper (F1679). 1851, 1854, 1858 A monograph of the fossil Lepadidae, or pedunculated cirripedes of Great Britain . . . A monograph of the fossil Balanidae and Verrucidae of Great Britain . . . [Index to Vol.II 1858], Palaeontographical
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A338
Book:
Glick, Thomas F. 1982. Darwin en España. Barcelona: Col. Libros de Bolsillo 574, Ediciones Peninsula.
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Moral Character of Jesús Christ, Londres, F. Farrah, 1864, 260. 25. Oswald, Félix L.: The Secret of the East, or, the Origin of the Christian Religión, and the Signi-ficance of its Rise and Decline, Nueva York, Truth Seeker Co., 1883. 26. Paley, W.: The Evidences of Christianity, Londres, sin fecha, passim. 27. Ponnat, Barón de: Histoire des variations et contradictions de Véglise romaine, 2 tomos, París, Charpentier, 1882. 28. Religious Systems of the World (antología), Londres, Swan Sonnenschein
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F1817
Book:
Barrett, Paul H., Gautrey, Peter J., Herbert, Sandra, Kohn, David, Smith, Sydney eds. 1987. Charles Darwin's notebooks, 1836-1844: Geology, transmutation of species, metaphysical enquiries. British Museum (Natural History); Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
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1837:21, '[Paley] reduces moral obligation to two elements— external restraint, and the command of a superior. This attempt at an analysis of morality is singularly futile . . . external constraint annihilates the morality of the act, and the reference to a superior presupposes moral obligation . . . If Paley had stated his question . . . Why ought I to keep my word? he would have had before him a problem more to the purpose of moral philosophy, and one to which his answer would have been
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F1817
Book:
Barrett, Paul H., Gautrey, Peter J., Herbert, Sandra, Kohn, David, Smith, Sydney eds. 1987. Charles Darwin's notebooks, 1836-1844: Geology, transmutation of species, metaphysical enquiries. British Museum (Natural History); Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
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than 131 131] pen. Mem Chiloe . . . cause friction] pencil. Athenaeum . . . particular muscle] pen. Athenaeum . . . N. America] crossed pen. page crossed blue crayon. 132 Sept. 8th.] lines above and below. emu, ] after ' ' partial stroke. Descent of Man Moral Sense] added blue crayon. ‹Paleys . . . given.—] scored left margin blue pencil. Mitchell . . . emu, ] crossed blue crayon. 131−1 No mention of pig's nest in JR or Diary. 131−2 Yarrell: William Yarrell. 131−3 Daubeny 1838:652. 132−1 Paley
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F1817
Book:
Barrett, Paul H., Gautrey, Peter J., Herbert, Sandra, Kohn, David, Smith, Sydney eds. 1987. Charles Darwin's notebooks, 1836-1844: Geology, transmutation of species, metaphysical enquiries. British Museum (Natural History); Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
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1833 Narrative of voyages to explore the shores of Africa, Arabia, and Madagascar; performed in H.M. Ships 'Leven' and 'Barracouta'. 2 vols. London. RN64,65 B190 Paley, William 1839 The principles of moral and political philosophy. 2 vols in 1. New York. M132 Pallas, Peter Simon 1802−3 Travels through the southern Provinces of the Russian Empire, in the years 1793 and 1794. 2 vols. London. RN127 A6 Palmer, Henry R. 1834 Observations on the motions of shingle beaches. Phil. Trans. R. Soc. 124
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F3275
Book:
Gregorio, Mario A. -Di, ed. 1990. Charles Darwin's marginalia, vol. 1. Edited by Mario A. Di Gregorio, with the assistance of N.W. Gill. New York; London: Garland.
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1855 652 Owen, R. Limbs 1849 655 Owen, R. Palaeontology 1860 656 Owen, R. Palaeontology 2nd edn 1861 Owen, R. Parthenogenesis 1849 two copies Packard Insects 1868 658 Packard Insects injurious to trees 1881 Page Man 1867 Paget Surgical pathology 1853 Paget Surgical pathology 3rd edn 1870 661 Paley Christianity 1822 Palm Winden der Pflanzen 1827 662 Paolucd Uccelli 1878 two copies 663 Paris Medical chemistry 1825 Paris Pharmacologia 1825 Parker Shoulder and sternum in vertebrates 1868 Parkes
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F3275
Book:
Gregorio, Mario A. -Di, ed. 1990. Charles Darwin's marginalia, vol. 1. Edited by Mario A. Di Gregorio, with the assistance of N.W. Gill. New York; London: Garland.
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.; 1870 [Down, I] PALEY, William A view of the evidences of Christianity London, 1822, 7 vols [CUL.1900] vol. 1, 130 tll-8m 307 9-22m 315 6c fortuis 342 22-23m vol. 2 NB 159 33 22-25m 34 tl5-10m 39 wt Peter John 41 wt Stephen 18w persecut 43 22«; James 44 tl6-5w Barnabas 45 3u one /w Paul ÏÏ5zv Luke 46 wf 57 ÏÏ20-5m 80 ÏÏ2w Matthew 81 l-10w Mark Luke John 140 2-7m, 9-27m, 9-27m, 20m, 20m/u our Digesta , ÏÏ20-9m/u Old \ Testament , U-5m 190 16u Nothing /w the letting of a house some times depends upon
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A588
Book:
Armstrong, Patrick. 1991. Under the blue vault of heaven: A study of Charles Darwin's sojourn in the Cocos (Keeling) Islands. Nedlands: Indian Ocean Centre for Peace Studies.
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natural world and through reason. Writers such as Paley (whom Darwin had read while at Cambridge) argued that the perfect way in which each creature fitted into its position in the scheme of things was evidence for the existence of a divine Creator. Darwin actually quoted Paley in Chapter 6 of On the Origin: No organ will be formed, as Paley has remarked, for the purpose of causing pain or for doing an injury to its possessor . And indeed there is a body of opinion that Darwin's best-known
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just why the notion of teleology has led to so much delusion. That Darwin intended his work on orchids as an attack upon the argument from design can scarcely be contested. In his autobiography he praises the logic of Paley's Evidences of Christianity and of other works by the same author which he read as a student. * Life and Letters, I, 47. Paley often speaks of the contrivances to be seen in nature, and argues that the very existence of these necessarily implies a Contriver. * W. Paley
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purpose well enough to make some important distinctions, we are now in a position to take a cold, hard look at the argument from design as it was formulated by Paley and supported by Asa Gray. Paley contends that if one were to come upon a watch, this would necessarily imply that someone, a watchmaker, had constructed it. He argues: There cannot be design without a designer; contrivance, without a contriver; order without choice; arrangement, without anything capable of arranging; subserviency and
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to refute a number of marginal thinkers (including Paley), he did so only after The Origin of Species had been published. It appears that Darwin's original intent with respect to the barnacles was only to describe a single species, as a small, personal contribution to the body of taxonomic literature based on collections from the Beagle voyage, much as he had done for a few flatworms that had interested him. * C. Darwin, Brief Descriptions of Several Terrestrial Planariae, and of some
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F763b
Book:
Darwin, C. R. 1991. The origin of species [in Russian]. Translation of the 6th ed. by K. A. Timiryazev, M. A. Menzbir, A. P. Pavlov and P. A. Petrovskii. Corrected and revised by A. D. Nekrasov, S. L. Sobol', A. L. Zelikman, Ya. M. Gall, A. L.Takhtadzhyan, Ya. I. Starobogatov and F. I. Krichevskaya. Edited by A. L. Takhtadzhyan. Prepared for publication by Ya. M. Gall. Saint Petersburg: Nauka.
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[ ] , ? , ; , , ] ? , - , . , , . , , . : , , , , . : , , , , , , , , , , . ; , , , . , ; , , , ( . . ), . , , , , , ; , . . , , . . , . , ; , - , , , , , . , , . . , , , . ' , , . , - , ; , . , - , , . , , , . , - - , , . , , . , , , , . , , , , . , , , , . , , . . , , ; , , . , , , . , (Paley), - . , , . - , , , , . , , . , , . , , , ,' . , , . , . (Helmholtz
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by J. Gould. See also Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London, 5 (1837): 35-6; Zoology of the Voyage of the Beagle, Part 3; and Red Notebook, pp. 127, 130, 153. The use of the plumes may be part of a display. 25. Diary, 27-29 December 1832, p. 126. 16. An alternative name for the steamer. 27. Origin of Species, Chapter 6, 'Difficulties of the Theory'. 28. W. Paley, Natural Theology: Evidences of the Existence and Attributes of the Deity collected from the Appearances of Nature (London
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A27b
Book:
Freeman, R. B. 2007. Charles Darwin: A companion. 2d online edition, compiled by Sue Asscher.
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surveying off; CD ashore. Christ's College Cambridge 1827 Oct. 15 CD admitted, Admissus est pensionarius minor sub Magistro Shaw , but did not go up until Lent term. Set in front court, G staircase, traditionally the same as those of William Paley. The set now has commemorative Wedgwood plaque. Cirripedia, British Fossil 1850 On British fossil Lepadidae , Quart J. Geol. Soc. (Proc.), 6:439-440, abstract only. CD withdrew the paper (F1679). 1851, 1854, 1858 A monograph of the fossil Lepadidae, or
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A27b
Book:
Freeman, R. B. 2007. Charles Darwin: A companion. 2d online edition, compiled by Sue Asscher.
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invited list for CD's funeral. Paihia, Bay of Islands, N.Z. 1835 CD spent Christmas Day there at house of W. Colenso. Paine, or Payne Sir Thomas Farrer's gardener, trained at Kew. P helped CD on Mimosa. ?1873 CD to Farrer, As he is so acute a man, I should very much like to hear his opinion on water damage to leaves—LLiii 340. Paley, William, 1743-1805. Theologian. DD. Traditionally CD and P had the same set at Christ's College. The logic of this book [Evidences of christianity] and as I may add
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A194
Periodical contribution:
Darwin in Argentina. Revista de la Asociación Geológica Argentina 64, no. 1 (February 2009): 1-180.
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- uncle now dead (Darwin, 1837-1838 in Barret 1960). Woodward (1987) stated that by that time Darwin was also familiar with adaptation (The red notebook of Charles Darwin in Herbert 1980, p. 67), another important biological issue related to evolution, but an idea then associated with Natural Theology (Paley 1802), which argued that every organism was intentionally perfectly designed to its particular life conditions by God. But it was not only the idea, means and processes of evolution that
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A622
Periodical contribution:
Ghiselin, Michael T. 2009. Darwin: A reader's guide. Occasional Papers of the California Academy of Sciences (155 [12 February]), 185 pp, 3 figs.
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published a book about Lamarck. References: Tort in DD, Norland in DSB. Paget, James (Sir)January 11, 1814 December 30, 1899 Yarmouth, England London, England English surgeon and pathologist. He was an important informant for Darwin's work on emotional expression. References: EB13. Paley, WilliamJuly, 1743 May 25, 1805 Peterborough, England Lincoln, England English clergyman, a tutor at Christ's College from 1771 to 1774. As a student Darwin (who occupied the same rooms that Paley had) greatly
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Ghiselin, Michael T. 2009. Darwin: A reader's guide. Occasional Papers of the California Academy of Sciences (155 [12 February]), 185 pp, 3 figs.
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was much impressed by William Paley's exposition of it in his book on natural theology, in which it was argued that if one finds a watch, it implies the existence of a watchmaker. By analogy, one has to draw the same conclusion for animals and plants. As Paley put it, there cannot be contrivance without a contriver. The title of Darwin's book is, in fact, ironic, for he shows how natural selection can produce a marvelous range of adaptations so that no contriver is necessary. Indeed, the
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Periodical contribution:
Ghiselin, Michael T. 2009. Darwin: A reader's guide. Occasional Papers of the California Academy of Sciences (155 [12 February]), 185 pp, 3 figs.
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, p. 9-34. Gould, Stephen Jay, 1985. Not necessarily a wing. Natural History, v. 94, no. 10, p. 12-25. Gould, Stephen Jay, 1990. Darwin and Paley meet the invisible hand. Natural History, v. 1990, no. 11, p. 8-16. Gould, Stephen Jay, 1990. Full of hot air. Natural History, v. 98, no. 10, p. 151-160. Gould, Stephen Jay, 1991. The moral state of Tahiti and of Darwin how do we judge the racial attitudes of an eminent Victorian? Natural History, v. 10, p. 12, 14, 16, 18-19. Gould, Stephen Jay, 1993
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Ghiselin, Michael T. 2009. Darwin: A reader's guide. Occasional Papers of the California Academy of Sciences (155 [12 February]), 185 pp, 3 figs.
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. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, xiii + 280 p. Yokoyama, Toshiaki, 1971. The influence of theological thought on Charles Darwin. Consideration of the relation between William Paley and Charles Darwin. Kagakusi Kenkyu, v. 10, p. 49-59; in Japanese. Yonge, C. M., 1958. Darwin and coral reefs, ch. 11 in Barnett, S. A., ed., A Century of Darwin. London: William Hinemann, p. 245-266. Young, David, 1992. The Discovery of Evolution. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 256 p. Young, D. A. B
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