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Scientific Progress (Paperback)
James Jeans, William Bragg, E.V. Appleton, E. Mellanby, J.B.S. Haldane, …
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R1,323
Discovery Miles 13 230
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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First published in 1936, this volume contains six of the Halley
Stewart Lectures - originally founded "For Research towards the
Christian Ideal in All Social Life" - by some of the greatest of
English scientists of the mid-20th century, each a leading
authority in his respective field: cosmology, physics, meteorology,
medicine and genetics. The final lecture considers the relationship
between scientific knowledge and human ideals, commenting on the
paradox that a century which produced such scientific advance also
witnessed the most concentrated period of social, economic and
political turmoil in world history.
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Scientific Progress (Hardcover)
James Jeans, William Bragg, E.V. Appleton, E. Mellanby, J.B.S. Haldane, …
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R3,875
Discovery Miles 38 750
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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First published in 1936, this volume contains six of the Halley
Stewart Lectures - originally founded "For Research towards the
Christian Ideal in All Social Life" - by some of the greatest of
English scientists of the mid-20th century, each a leading
authority in his respective field: cosmology, physics, meteorology,
medicine and genetics. The final lecture considers the relationship
between scientific knowledge and human ideals, commenting on the
paradox that a century which produced such scientific advance also
witnessed the most concentrated period of social, economic and
political turmoil in world history.
In this dazzling collection of essays covering a broad range of
fields, from Darwinism and the global population explosion to bird
watching, distinguished scientist and philosopher Sir Julian Huxley
points out new frontiers for scientific research and reaffirms his
belief in the intimate connection of the sciences, particularly
biology, with the pressing social problems of the present and
future. Huxley envisions new horizons for education and divinity
within the framework of evolutionary humanism.
Originally published in 1934 as part of the Cambridge Comparative
Physiology series, this book discusses the process of tissue
differentiation in developing embryos of a variety of species.
Huxley and de Beer examine important aspects of development such as
symmetry, the mosaic stage of differentiation and the relationship
between hereditary factors and differentiation. This book will be
of value to anyone with an interest in the history of science or
embryology.
Originally published during the early part of the twentieth
century, the Cambridge Manuals of Science and Literature were
designed to provide concise introductions to a broad range of
topics. They were written by experts for the general reader and
combined a comprehensive approach to knowledge with an emphasis on
accessibility. The Individual in the Animal Kingdom by Julian
Huxley was first published in 1912. The text contains an
interdisciplinary discussion of individuality in nature, taking
influence from both biology and philosophy.
This detailed study of the different rates of growth of parts of
the body relative to the body as a whole represents Sir Julian
Huxley's great contribution to analytical morphology, and it is
still a basis for modern investigations in morphometrics and
evolutionary biology. Huxley was the first to put the concept of
relative growth - or allometry - upon a firm mathematical
foundation, and since publication of this book in 1932, his work
has been found to have greater implications than even he imagined.
Problems of Relative Growth is at once a formulation of the basic
principles of allometry and a survey of its many and various
occurrences and applications. Examples are taken from such widely
divergent areas as the development of the large claw in male
fiddler-crabs, the size and number of points of deer antlers,
heterogony in neuter social insects, the disproportionate growth of
the human head from infancy to adulthood, and the formation of
spiral shapes in certain mollusk shells and of the curved shape of
the rhinoceros' horn. Starting from the fact of obvious disharmonic
growth, Huxley formulates his first and fundamental law - that of
the Constant Differential Growth Ratio. He then demonstrates that
the distribution of growth potential occurs in an orderly and
systematic way - that there are growth-gradients culminating in
growth-centers. Other topics treated include multiplicative and
accretionary kinds of growth, the role of hormones and mutations,
and the relevance of the entire investigation to the problems of
orthogenesis, recapitulation, vestigial organs, the existence of
nonadaptive characters, physiological genetics, comparative
physiology, and systematics. In theirintroduction to this
unabridged facsimile republication of the original 1932 edition,
Frederick B. Churchill and Richard E. Strauss place Huxley's work
in the context of modern research in history and biology.
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