| Bible - 1901 - 834 pages
...it. Mr. Wallace, who has been regarded as one of the highest authorities on evolution, has maintained that "there are at least three stages in the development...power must necessarily have come into action." "The change from inorganic to organic, when the earliest vegetable cell, or the living protoplasm out of... | |
| Theology - 1898 - 554 pages
...spiritual nature of man as not in any way inconsistent with the theory of evolution. He distinguishes at least three stages in the development of the organic world when some new cause or power must (as he proves) necessarily have come into action. They point clearly to an unseen universe — to a... | |
| Mormons - 1891 - 518 pages
...pleads, to be considered a philosophical explanation of that which he attempts to explain. He says: "There are at least three stages in the development...inorganic to organic, when the earliest vegetable cell, or living protoplasm out of which it arose, first appeared The next stage is still more marvelous, still... | |
| Religion - 1889 - 784 pages
...man's spiritual nature ; and to the objection that this is calling in a new cause, the reply is made that there are at least three stages in the development of the organic world when some new cause must have come into operation. These stages are : first, the change from inorganic to organic ; second,... | |
| Franz Hettinger - Apologetics - 1890 - 388 pages
...development of the human spirit in association with the human body." He also states : a " There are three stages in the development of the organic world,...or power must necessarily have come into action." "That the unconscious, conscious, and intellectual life point clearly to an unseen universe, a world... | |
| 1891 - 546 pages
...or any sudden or abrupt change, in the effects, has already been shown; but we still further point out that there are at least three stages in the development...come into action. "The first stage is the change from the inorganic to organic, when thii earliest vegetable cell, or the hving protoplasm out of which it... | |
| 1891 - 874 pages
...continuity, or any sudden or abrupt change, in tho effects, has already been shown; but wo will further point out that there are at least three stages in the development...cause or power must necessarily have come into action. protoplasm as a chemical compound, could certainly not have produced liviiKj protoplasm — protoplasm... | |
| James Orr - Incarnation - 1893 - 586 pages
...into operation. I may instance Mr. Wallace, a thoroughgoing evolutionist, who recognises three such " stages in the development of the organic world, when...or power must necessarily have come into action," viz. («) at the introduction of life, (&) at the introduction of sensation or consciousness, (c) at... | |
| James Iverach - Christianity - 1894 - 264 pages
...a'superannuated form of thought which cannot be resuscitated at the present hour. Mr. Wallace tells us that " there are at least three stages in the development...world when some new cause or power must necessarily come into action. The first stage is the change from organic to inorganic, when the first vegetable... | |
| Victoria Institute (Great Britain) - Religion and science - 1896 - 380 pages
...by circumstance. And Wallace, who claims with Darwin the discovery of natural selection, insists " that there are at least three stages in the development...cause or power must necessarily have come into action " namely when vegetable or unconscious life, when animal or I do not debate with those who deny the... | |
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