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Nature28.12.1871
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 28. Dezember 1871
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] advantage, they have, in some instances, increased the evil. Now, it must henceforth be recognised that house drainage is not a question of hydraulics merely, it is in a higher sense a question of pneumatics; but even in this extended sense it is far from being a difficult art, as [...]
[...] air can, under any circumstances, enter the house. Now all these things can be assured. It is a mere truism to say that there are plenty of non conductors of heat with which water-pipes can be effi ciently surrounded. Why should water-pipes be left un [...]
[...] otherwise the argument would have had no meaning. But as this is the reverse of the truth, I cannot help saying that Sir W. Thom son appears to consider himself entitled, not merely to invent principles, but also to invent facts. I know no conclusions of [...]
[...] have made experiments all proving the same fact. To the east of Scandinavia we have Finland, exhibiting all the characteristics of a recently-emerged land. It is a mere congeries of lakes and swamps, separated by moss and sand. The level of the lakes is constantly falling. In 1818. Lake Sovando was sud [...]
[...] land; the coast of the Swatoi Ness, which they describe as very indented and ruinous, is now straight. The Bear Islands are mere heaps of ice and stones, evidently but recently covered with water; and shoals and banks now occupy what was toler ably deep water in 1787 when Captain Sarypchew was there. [...]
[...] jectures as to the exact nature of the electric disturbance, and I do not adopt any one theory of cometary constitution more than another. I merely point out that if the approach of a comet to the sun causes the development of electricity arising from the comet's motion, a certain resistance is at once accounted for. [...]
[...] Norfolk and Norwich Naturalists' Society, October 31. —Mr. J. E. Taylor read a paper on “The Origin of the Norfolk Broads and Meres.” With regard to the former, Mr. Taylor propounded the theory that the depressions, so-called, were owing to the influence of ice in remote ages, and that the basins [...]
[...] great similarity in the physical aspect of the Dutch coast as com pared with the Broad district of our eastern counties. Broads, he remarked, were distinguished from meres by being always in connection with rivers, and having a chalky bottom, more or less filled in with deposits of mud. Meres, on the contrary, in their [...]
[...] rivers and streams, “and the fact that they usually lie in the upper boulder clay, and therefore at a considerably higher level than the broads. The water supply of meres was simply the storage of wet seasons.” The number of broads on the Bure and its tributaries, amounting in all to twenty-two, as compared with [...]
[...] but four on the Yare, he attributed to the former stream having an average breadth of 150 feet, and the latter of only 100 feet. The formation of Diss Mere he considered due to glacial action, “as the neighbourhood abounded in evidences of such pheno mena.”—Mr. J. H. Gurney, jun., exhibited a male specimen of [...]
Nature04.08.1870
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 04. August 1870
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] Ridings of Yorkshire, with their 150 mechanics' and kin dred institutions, only possess two societies, and these mere village institutes, in which instruction—Manston in Physical Science, and Shipley in Natural Philosophy—is afforded, and this to an infinitesimal amount. With two [...]
[...] at all. Hence it is well understood that the diet of a man sentenced to imprisonment with hard labour must be more generous than that of one who is merely im prisoned, and that the allowance of food to a soldier in time of war must be greater than in time of peace. [...]
[...] last longer than the lamp of an hour, but it is nevertheless a lamp. The principle of degradation would appear to hold throughout, and if we regard not mere matter but useful energy, we are driven to contemplate the death of the universe. Who would live for ever even if he had the [...]
[...] its scientific aspect as a means of training the mind, and taking his stand on the ground simply of the importance of it as mere information, the author works out his plea with unflagging zeal and energy. Indeed, all the pages bear tokens of almost the enthusiasm of a crusade. Into [...]
[...] feel obliged to break away altogether from Dr. Lankester. We quite agree with him, as we have said, in the immense value of physiology as viewed as mere information and compared with other kinds of information. But we hold very strongly to the opinion that it is training that is [...]
[...] come in an elementary treatise of the kind is well stated by Professor Müller in the preface. “The facts of physical science ought never to be presented to the pupil in a mere dogmatic fashion, as acquired results. It is essential that he should comprehend the mode in which they have bec n [...]
[...] stand what are the conditions of production of colour with the polariscope, and not be content with the mere sight of a pretty display. This little book of Mr. Suffolk's will not do much, we fear, to convert what we may call microscopical play into microscopical [...]
[...] what we may call microscopical play into microscopical science. Its receipts and directions are such as will be useful to the man who cares merely to make a series of pretty slides for exhibition to his friends, but do not help the student wishing to add to the storehouse of science. [...]
[...] for wings, and the outside estimate for the building was 350,000/., not an unreasonable price, considering its extent. For the present, however, the Government merely asked for a small vote to enable them to clear the ground, and in order to take the opinion of the House. Railway communication had now made [...]
[...] are mere local phenomena, each one springing from its own comparatively small reservoir of molten matter, supposed to have originated from the softening or fusion of rocks pre-existing on [...]
Nature27.07.1871
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 27. Juli 1871
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] I do not think that any holder of the Evolution hypothesis would say that I overstate it or overstrain it in any way. I merely strip it of all vagueness, and bring before you, unclothed and unvarnished, the notions by which it must stand or fall.” [...]
[...] We are now entering on quite a new phase of research, and commencing a survey of the hitherto unknown world beneath the waters. Regarded not merely in a biological, geological, or physical aspect, but also as a basis of sound education, these investigations ought not [...]
[...] majority of cases, we have another factor in Mr. Darwin's theory which is not satisfactory, and the cases quoted to support it become mere exceptions, which, by being exceptions, disprove the particular law he is maintaining. This letter has already exceeded reasonable limits, and I must postpone a further con [...]
[...] triumph both in Dr. Carpenter's lectures and writings” about ocean currents, he has had better cause for triumph than the mere success of a lecture-room experiment could have afforded him. RICHARD A. PROCTOR Brighton, July 21 [...]
[...] Pogson had observed associated with the hydrogen spectrum and the spectrum of the yellow substance. Here obviously we have, I think, merely an indication of another substance thinning out, in spite of the extraordinary suggestion which was put forward that the corona was nothing but a permanent solar aurora. [...]
[...] of cool hydrogen above the hot hydrogen, a fact which seemed to be negatived by the eclipse of 1869. I think if we had merely determined that there was this cool hydrogen, all our labour would not have been in vain, as it shows the rapid reduction of temperature. But there is more behind. [...]
[...] to try to find its way through the narrow and shallow Behring's Strait into the North Pacific. Now it seems to me that if we had these observations alone, which are merely de tailed and careful corroborations of many previous ones, and could depend upon them, without even having any clue to their [...]
[...] considering everything, I am thoroughly willing, with , Sir John Herschel, to cede that “there is no refusing to admit that an oceanic circulation of some sort must arise from mere heat, cold, and evaporation as were causa: ; ” and that “hence: forward the question of ocean currents will have to be studied [...]
[...] Quarterly journal of the Geological Society. From a personal examination of the specimen, Prof. Dana was led to declare that the objects described by Mr. Billings as legs were merely calcified portions of the ventral integument destined to support branchial appendages. Mr. Woodward shows, and we think [...]
[...] logy and minute anatomy of insects, especially the Pediculina, in which he treated chiefly of the Malpighian vessels and tracheae. i`he former in many cases consist merely of prolongations of the peritoneal membrane.--Prof. V. von Lang presented a memoir containing researches upon the influx of gases, under [...]
Nature05.02.1874
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 05. Februar 1874
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] He proposes that, not merely one-half, but the entire name of every species once given, should be invio lable, until by general consent some permanent classifica [...]
[...] species should never be changed. We should then avoid the absurdity of having hundreds of familiar names abolished, because a mere compiler of an early catalogue, who had perhaps never seen the objects themselves, divided them up almost at random into a number of [...]
[...] of the name may be altered any number of times in accor dance with altered views as to classification, the principle of priority in the mere name is so totally given up, that it seems absurd to use it for the purpose of resuscitating the obsolete appellations of early writers. When an [...]
[...] and inconvenient to reject his name because some former writer has given another name to a group, not the same, but which merely happened to contain some one or more of the same species. Again, we think Mr. Sharp's argu ments suggest the advisability of opposing the splitting up [...]
[...] It is one of those assumptions, essentially based on ignorance, on which so little dependence can rightly be placed. We have no right to call any fauna the earliest, merely because, as it hap pens, we know of none earlier. A point is made of the fact that the earlier known Trilobites [...]
[...] the exploration of the still untried fields of chemical re. search, and make Photography a real branch of Science, and not deal with it merely as an amusement or a trade. [...]
[...] The question naturally occurs on beholding this prodi gality of muscles—What special purpose is served by the Frog's foot? Surely mere jumping and swimming cannot require so elaborate an apparatus. In fact, however, the Frog does make use of his feet [...]
[...] direction at one time, we are as far as ever from explaining how the channel of those currents could experience that great secular variation which we know it does. Thus we have merely a mystery. It would be rash to suggest even an explanation. I may say that one explanation has been suggested. It was sug [...]
[...] of rotation of the outer crust, and exhibiting a gradual precessional motion independent of the precessional motion of the outer rigid crust. I merely say that has been suggested. I do not ask you to judge of the probability: I would not ask myself to judge of the probability of it. No other explanation has been suggested. [...]
[...] propositions; in fact, what we know by direct observation is, that the surface of the earth is negatively electrified, and positive electrification of the air is merely inferential. Suppose, for a moment, that there were no electricity whatever in the air—that the air were absolutely devoid of all electric [...]
Nature03.08.1876
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 03. August 1876
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] the os uteri; but in the Red-footed Lemur there are two other bare spaces at the poles of the ovum, so that the placenta en cloche is a mere generic, or accidental, variety of the diffuse form. Moreover, the villi came [...]
[...] tically left untouched. No motion, in fact, is considered, except the motion of a point in a plane. The treatment by the method of instantaneous centres is merely men tioned, although the development of this method certainly furnishes excellent means for the elementary treatment of [...]
[...] of apologetic observation that his “object in applying the treatment to the dead malefactor was not to produce re animation, but merely to obtain a practical knowledge how far galvanism might be employed as an auxiliary to other means in attempts to revive persons under similar [...]
[...] vocable rest. Then I could point out and correct the error. In the absence of the experiment, the correc tion had been impossible. No man on a mere specu lation would have dared to withhold from a dying patient the application of galvanic stimulation, until [...]
[...] shrubs, under-shrubs, and herbs held its ground, though nothing is now better understood than that size, which is a mere matter of habit and mode of growth, is [...]
[...] however, met with, and according to the nature of the fluid, one or other seems to get the upper hand and pre dominate. They vary in shape from a mere rounded speck (swºrn in. in diameter) to elongated rod-like bodies sometimes rolled into a short spiral. The rod-like forms [...]
[...] other series of forms which are colourless or tinged with other pigments. In one condition the Bacterium is in a kind of resting condition (Fig. 1), and is a mere microscopic spherule of protoplasm. This gradually granulates (Fig. 2), [...]
[...] gating the question is to construct radiometers in different gases, carbonic acid and hydrogen, which I intend to do. If the rotation is produced merely by dilatation of the residual gas the motion must be quicker in hydrogen and slower in carbonic acid, owing to the difference of con [...]
[...] of either rotation can be enlarged. These remarks explain facts that, according to the dilatation theory, are a mere impossibility, the rotation in the same direction when a ray of light falls on the black or on the white side. These experiments can be [...]
[...] a lady who had been maid of honour to Maria Theresa, and lived to the extraordinary age of 119 years. The case ought to be noted as being well authenticated and not grounded merely on idle rumour. - [...]
Nature21.10.1875
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 21. Oktober 1875
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] volumes will be out in a few months. Every reader must be glad that the author departs more and more from his original plan of making his book a mere museum of com piled information, and now makes some attempt towards interpreting the mythical and religious puzzles of Mexico [...]
[...] would be worth while to collect and reprint everything that is known about it. For one thing thanks are due to Mr. Bancroft, that he insists on the merely accidental character of such resemblances as exist between Otomi and Chinese. Naxera's baseless theory of a connection [...]
[...] results to science when the creation-myths of all tribes and nations of the world shall be put together and carefully analysed. Many of them are of course mere products of childish fancy. In Central California the story is that in the beginning the world was dark, so that men and beasts [...]
[...] necessitates the introduction of a substitute ; of a means by which a training in the method of work shall be the mental exercise, whilst mere facts shall not have the prominence generally given them in the scientific lecture-room. As a training, practical biology offers all the requirements, at the [...]
[...] as affording a far more satisfactory idea of an important feature of the physical geography of New Zealand than any mere description can convey. [...]
[...] communication with the atmosphere, the equilibrium would be quickly restored by a simultaneous afflux of the strata at all heights, and not merely by the afflux of the lower stratum alone. . This, however, is not how things take place. The diminution of the barometer does not [...]
[...] geology, zoology, and botany. He shows that hitherto immense sums have been spent and much hardship suf fered for the mere purpose of extending geographical and topographical knowledge, while strictly scientific observa tions were regarded as holding only a secondary place. [...]
[...] the value of Lieut. Weyprecht’s propositions. There has, without doubt, been hitherto too much weight attached to merely reaching a high latitude, and too little provision made for strictly scientific observation. Lieut. Wey precht's suggestions deserve the serious consideration of [...]
[...] parents would bring forth the healthier offspring. As my voice ceases to dwell on this theme of a yet unknown city of health, do not, I pray you, wake as from a mere dream. The details of the city exist. They have been worked out by those pioneers of sanitary science, so many of whom surround [...]
[...] the author's observations support the view of the splenic circu lation adopted by W. Müller, Frey, and others, that the venous radicles represent merely a labyrinth of spaces in the splenic parenchyma. He agrees with those who find that there is a gradual passage from the matrix of the pulp to that of the [...]
Nature04.07.1872
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 04. Juli 1872
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] HERE lies before us, as we write, a work of excep tionally high merit as a mere literary composition, entitled, Ueber die Matur der Cometen, Beiträge zur Geschichte und. Theorie der Erkenntniss. Von J. C. F. [...]
[...] sources of amusement which the work affords. We will, therefore, confine our detailed remarks to a few of the parts which have most interested us, merely pre mising that we cannot pretend to give anything re sembling a complete analysis of the contents of this [...]
[...] is contradiction here. I take it that science is knowledge, and that consequently judgments not accompanied by a conviction of certainty, but merely possessing a higher or lower degree of probability, are altogether outside the sphere of science. As Mr. Brooke accepts the doctrine of the Conservation of Energy [...]
[...] necessary synthetical judgment of which every sane mind is conscious. No less a thinker than the late Sir John Herschel held that the doctrine of the Conservation of Energy is a mere truism. It is so as the result of the introduction of what he terms the unfortunate phrase “potential energy.” [...]
[...] ments are nevertheless unsatisfactory, if not contradictory. He accepts the definition of force given by Faraday. But this so called definition by Faraday is not definition at all. It merely tells us what force does, not what force is. Mr. Brooke adds that the definition “may perhaps with advantage be thus ampli [...]
[...] Not merely in the lower, but also in the higher forms of animal life the microscopist is constantly encountering anomalous appearances, structures, “bcdies,” &c.; some [...]
[...] nient refuge for the destitute. More astute observers, however, refuse to adopt such subterfuges, and have ac cordingly been satisfied either merely to note their charac ters without forming any definite conclusions, or they have gone only a step further by placing them within [...]
[...] their interesting “Beiträge zur Anatomie der Plattwurmer” I shall again have occasion to allude for other pur poses, but for the present I merely quote the following short passage. Speaking of structures observed in the segments or prc.glottides of Bothrioceſ/a/us /a/us, they [...]
[...] resent, showing how variable was the distribution of mamma #. remains even in a limited area, and how unsafe it was to base theories upon merely negative evidence. It was to be hoped that other investigators would extend similar discoveries to other parts of the valley of the Thames. Mr. Godwin-Austen [...]
[...] Blephas primigenius, nor as to the artificial character of some of the presumed implements. He did not attach any great im portance to the merely ſragmentary bones. Mr. Evans main tained that the implements exhibited were of necessity artificial, and commented on the nature of the evidence as to the co [...]
Nature02.04.1874
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 02. April 1874
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] “Introduction ” we are told that the student “must never forget that the experiment is the means, not the end. . . . . Merely to make a coloured precipitate or a flash of bright flame is not the end of experimenting.” These remarks are much to the purpose, and we [...]
[...] asked whether this is one; by way of showing, unmistakeably, that in the absence of experimental warrant he must admit it to be, if not a mere hypothesis, then an intuition. Whence results the incongruity I have pointed out. Prof. Tait says this argument of mine reminds him of a student [...]
[...] whilst freely admitting that Polar water finds its way along the floor of the great ocean-basins into the equa torial area, he affirms that this is merely the reflux of the current which has been driven into the Polar basins by the agency of winds. - [...]
[...] north-east; the extreme improbability (may I not say im possibility?) that so vast a mass of water can be put in motion by what is by comparison such a mere rivulet—the north-east motion of which, as a distinct current, has not been traced eastward of 30° W. long.—seems still more [...]
[...] By Rathke, to whom are due the first accurate obser vations on the development of the skull, the trabecular arches were looked upon as mere forward processes of the investing mass, and were called trabeculae cranii, or “rafters of the skull.” This misconception of their true [...]
[...] itself, or in the subcutaneous tissue surrounding it. The latter are called “investing-bones,” or paros/oses; the former may be of two kinds; when occurring as mere calcifications of the substance of the cartilage, they are known as endostoses, when having the structure of true [...]
[...] you see, also, that the question of simplicity and complica tion is not the only question, that is a question merely of de gree; but there is a difference in kind. For instance, you will at once acknowledge a difference in kind between the spectrum [...]
[...] have an absorption of bands. This I shall venture to call a metalloidal absorption. Of course if we were merely limited to the spectrum of these dis tant stars, in spite of the enormous skill and care which Mr. Huggins and Father Secchi have brought to bear upon this inquiry, we [...]
[...] sun is, after all, our sun, merely for the reason that it is the nearest star; and therefore it is clear to you that if we observe the sun with anything like the attention that it deserves, bearing in [...]
[...] dry P %, know that what a scientific man has to do in any research is not merely to add fact to fact, and to go blindly looking after facts irrespective of order. What he has to do after he has ac cumulated a certain number of facts is, to try whether it is pos [...]
Nature13.07.1876
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 13. Juli 1876
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] mean an institution in which, as far as training is con cerned, the higher education of the whole man is contem plated. Now this means more than mere intellectual training—far more than mere intellectual instruction—for it means such a training as will turn out a man of high [...]
[...] great cities what they are, and in which progress is neces sary to a continuance of their well-being. Now these inevitable conditions are not merely destined to regulate all future steps that may be taken for the spread of higher education, but they have already [...]
[...] volume of rather more than 400 pages. Such an undertaking, though it may, at first sight, appear a mere piece of surplusage to those who know how extensive is the already existing Galileo literature, is yet abundantly justified by recent events. Within the [...]
[...] the Index Congregation (March 5, 1616), which reduced the revolutionary theory, for all Roman Catholic astro nomers, to the level of a mere hypothesis, convenient indeed for the representation of phenomena, but not corresponding to actual external facts. This, the un [...]
[...] a clear recognition of the constitution of nature in its absolute and final form. That this object was so suc cessfully achieved is attributable not merely to Galileo's philosophic, but, in the first instance at least, perhaps even more to his literary eminence. The external form of [...]
[...] almost prostrated by illnesses of various kinds; yet those are mistaken who think that the book before us contains merely a few meagre scraps thrown together to make up a volume. In spite of illnesses and of the fact that as in duty bound he made all haste to get to the end of [...]
[...] always crowded ; but I have the impression that if the above regulation were widely understood there would be such a gathering, not of the merely curious, who would attend as at an entertainment in natural magic, but of those deeply interested in the topics discussed, as would prove too large for the accommoda [...]
[...] together and explain) not merely the simpler facts of hereditary transmission, but those very curious though abundant cases in which a character is transmitted in a [...]
[...] observe in the living state, ‘ Protobathybius.’ It will be figured and described in the Report of the expedition. I will merely state here that these masses consisted of pure protoplasm, with only accidental admixture of calcareous particles, such as formed the sea-bottom. They formed [...]
[...] endeavour to show you one method of their production. Here I have an ordinary photographic print which has not been treated with gold, but merely immersed in sodium hyposulphite and then washed. I immerse it in a solution of mercurous chloride which I have in this dish, and immediately a bleaching [...]
Nature19.11.1874
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 19. November 1874
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] posts in Paris which gave him a powerful sway over geo logical and mining matters, especially such as were under the guidance of the State. Hence it was not merely his great reputation, but his official position, which enabled him for so many years in great measure to control the [...]
[...] unlearn, concerning the origin of many common medicinal substances. In some cases the corrections necessary arise merely out of questions of priority in botanical nomenclature, but in others the errors are founded in the wrong identification of the plants. For instance, 7ateorhiza [...]
[...] unalloyed satisfaction is that which refers to “Micro scopical Structure.” The descriptive paragraphs are, no doubt, as good as words can make them, but mere words are insufficient for the purpose. If anyone doubts this, let him try to construct a drawing of microscopic struc [...]
[...] reality; or, on the other hand, let him endeavour to identify one vegetable production out of a number closely allied, by means of a mere verbal definition of characters. Either task is difficult at best, some times impossible. It is not to our credit that there [...]
[...] but these multiple images are usually too small to be seen without the aid of a telescope—the objects whose images they are being so distant as to appear mere specks to the naked eye. There is always more or less of change observable in [...]
[...] marked, by way of caution, that the connection between these two curva tures is merely accidental ; the curva ture of the earth is not the cause, nor even a partial cause, of the curvature [...]
[...] Referring you for the details to the last chapter but one of my own recently published edition of Deschanel's “Natural Philosophy,” I will merely say that when a ray is passing through a portion of air which is not equally [...]
[...] This property is illustrated by Fig. 2. It is obvious that the conjugate foci will occur not in pairs merely, but in sets of unlimited number; that is to say, raised proceeding originally from any one point will converge in succession to an indefinite number of other [...]
[...] results he arrived at. Oxygen cannot as a fact be made to combine with nitric oxide in the proportions of one to two by merely varying the shape of the containing vessel ; although by other means we can now effect these two acts of combination. We see, therefore, that Dalton's [...]
[...] acts of combination. We see, therefore, that Dalton's conclusions were correct, although in this case it appears to have been a mere chance that his experimental results rendered such a conclusion possible. [...]
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