RMRERYTJ–. Outlines of natural theology for the use of the Canadian student [microform] : selected and arranged from the most authentic sources. Natural history; Natural theology; Sciences naturelles; Théologie naturelle. V»! :»l'fl'. IDIOT. extreme cases that the cause of difference is not fundamental, but accidental from arrest of develope- iUUVtUAUVlAMW*! ivtov Mrv/«>iV»^US. Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original work.. Bove
RMRERYJ6–. Outlines of natural theology for the use of the Canadian student [microform] : selected and arranged from the most authentic sources. Natural history; Natural theology; Sciences naturelles; Théologie naturelle. . B Olfactory portion of the r of ditto. X a,mpal lobes are the optip tuber- im. The hemi- d. The convo- 'he anterior and of nearly equal ongest from be- osterior, thougli •e broader, and >r pair. In the but not absent, of the brain re- ;hese creatures. ver the cerebel- lateral lobes, same central y do not project lum, that obloDg running trans- 637 versely inferior and parallel to
RMRET7EP–. Outlines of natural theology for the use of the Canadian student [microform] : selected and arranged from the most authentic sources. Natural history; Natural theology; Sciences naturelles; Théologie naturelle. comparable, in point of size, with the round-headed porpoise, (phoccena melas,) the grampus, (phocana orca,) and the beluga (phoccena leucas). The phoccena crassidens differs from the phoccena melas in the relatively larger temporal fossae, by which it resembles the grampus ; and it differs from ph. orca, and resembles the ph. melas in the continu- ation of the intermaxillary bones ba
RMRET96W–. Outlines of natural theology for the use of the Canadian student [microform] : selected and arranged from the most authentic sources. Natural history; Natural theology; Sciences naturelles; Théologie naturelle. 165 force, is effected ; and as every sucli mctamorplioHis involves, like other analogous translbrmationH, a cliuiige ill the state of the matter tlirou^ii wlii(;h it is cll'cctcd ; so sliould we expect that mental acti- vity would involve the disintegration of the nervous siihstauce which thus ministers to it, and such ap- pears to be the case.. External surf Jioe, tihewing convoIuti
RMRET941–. Outlines of natural theology for the use of the Canadian student [microform] : selected and arranged from the most authentic sources. Natural history; Natural theology; Sciences naturelles; Théologie naturelle. 174. 'I I ! ,«•«. that a material machinery should exist within us which, when set in motion by some stimulus from without, should have all the effect of the most per- fect contrivance and forethought? What is the principle of intelligence by which it acts, indepen- dent as it is of our own conscious volition ? Theories of all kinds, he shews, have been formed in reply. Plato, in his
RMRERYAC–. Outlines of natural theology for the use of the Canadian student [microform] : selected and arranged from the most authentic sources. Natural history; Natural theology; Sciences naturelles; Théologie naturelle. />•. 578 serve to elucidate a declaration made by Dr. Knox, as to the unsuitableness of the climate of the Ame- ricas to the European people. There are many strong reasons for receiving—but partially—the statement made by the learned anatomist, since many other close observers are likewise impressed with the conviction that there is a tendency to de- generacy in the European settle
RMRET9B0–. Outlines of natural theology for the use of the Canadian student [microform] : selected and arranged from the most authentic sources. Natural history; Natural theology; Sciences naturelles; Théologie naturelle. m manifest themselves a$ vital force—one q£ the mQ9i cliaracteiristic operationa of this being the procbtctim of new tissue, which m it» turn may become the instrument of a similar metamorphosis. And we have the same kind of evidence that light and heat, actmg upon the organic germ, become transformed into vital force, which we possess of the conversion of beat into electricity (?) by
RMRERYD2–. Outlines of natural theology for the use of the Canadian student [microform] : selected and arranged from the most authentic sources. Natural history; Natural theology; Sciences naturelles; Théologie naturelle. 668 and looking to Egypt now, we ask, where is the Egyptian ? Both Dr. Morton and Messrs. Nott and Gliddon present us to a race which they declare to be a mixed race, nor can we discover any valid reason for supposing that this compound people were preceded by an aboriginal race. " "We read," says Messrs.Nott and G-liddon, "the 'CraniaEgyp- tiacd' of Morton with in
RMRERYY2–. Outlines of natural theology for the use of the Canadian student [microform] : selected and arranged from the most authentic sources. Natural history; Natural theology; Sciences naturelles; Théologie naturelle. 606 ance of its functions and offices ? On the contrary, it is admitted that the intellectual and moral condi- tions of mankind are in accordance with the degrees of perfection to which the brain is developed, and in proportion to the exercise which the instrument undergoes is its increase in power and size. This is particularly noticed in the case of idiots, who, al- though possessin
RMRET8AC–. Outlines of natural theology for the use of the Canadian student [microform] : selected and arranged from the most authentic sources. Natural history; Natural theology; Sciences naturelles; Théologie naturelle. 1^ m. li i: I tl a I? u [k 364 there is no one point in the history of any single creature, which is a legitimate beginning of its exist- ence. And this is not a law of some particular spe- cies, but of all: it pervades all classes of animals, all classes of plants : the life of every organic being is whirling in a ceaseless circle, to which one knows not how to assign ani/ commenc
RMRET96D–. Outlines of natural theology for the use of the Canadian student [microform] : selected and arranged from the most authentic sources. Natural history; Natural theology; Sciences naturelles; Théologie naturelle. V] 7 ^? ^1 y IMAGE EVALUATION TEST TARGET (MT-3) 1.0 1^ li^ 12.2 u U4 I.I ua lis 1.8 Photographic Sciences Corporation. Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original work.. Bovell, James, 1817-1880. [Toronto? : s. n. ]
RMRET94M–. Outlines of natural theology for the use of the Canadian student [microform] : selected and arranged from the most authentic sources. Natural history; Natural theology; Sciences naturelles; Théologie naturelle. 162 II lip operations, has begun to claim for itself the origina- tion of many phenomena which were before attri- bated to the direct effort of the mind, or the will; and we can judge from this fact alone how many false observations in psychology are corrected by the simple comprehension of the laws of reflex activity. The phenomena of reflex action, however, were not allowed to rest
RMRET8H7–. Outlines of natural theology for the use of the Canadian student [microform] : selected and arranged from the most authentic sources. Natural history; Natural theology; Sciences naturelles; Théologie naturelle. 328 . f ; f Hi. adduces most elaborate testimony in support of the doctrine as above laid down: "Let us," he says, " in grappling with the vast multiplicity of our sub- ject, att«3iiij.> /.^uacing and simplifying it by means of th« classifying principle ; not simply, howcTer— again recurring to the remark of the metaphysician —as an internal principle given up by nat
RMRET9BF–. Outlines of natural theology for the use of the Canadian student [microform] : selected and arranged from the most authentic sources. Natural history; Natural theology; Sciences naturelles; Théologie naturelle. IMAGE EVALUATION TEST TARGET (MT-3). /^^< C ^"j.^ 1.0 :p I.I 2.8 t 1^ 2.5 III 1.8 1.25 1.4 J4 "< 6" - ? r^ '/ Photographic Sciences Corporation 23 WEST MAIN STREET WEBSTER, N.Y. M580 (716) 873-4503. Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustr
RMRERYWF–. Outlines of natural theology for the use of the Canadian student [microform] : selected and arranged from the most authentic sources. Natural history; Natural theology; Sciences naturelles; Théologie naturelle. 516 from the preflsatv of the snperinciiinbent viscera, conseqiM&t on habitual attempts at progression on the lower extremities, is merely speculatiye. Those features of the cranium of the onr- angs which stamp the character of the irrationalbrutemoBt strongly upon their frame, are, however, of a kind, and the result of a law, ort- ginally impr^^ssed upon the speCiVv: which cannot
RMRET811–. Outlines of natural theology for the use of the Canadian student [microform] : selected and arranged from the most authentic sources. Natural history; Natural theology; Sciences naturelles; Théologie naturelle. 412 posed of from twenty to forty; and, in some species, is four times the length of the head, and equal to the entire length of the body and tail; while the length of the head (in P. dolichodirus) is less than one- thirteenth the entire skeleton. The skull resembles that of the crocodile in its general form, but is rela- tively smaller, and is more related to the lacertian type. The
RMRERY3X–. Outlines of natural theology for the use of the Canadian student [microform] : selected and arranged from the most authentic sources. Natural history; Natural theology; Sciences naturelles; Théologie naturelle. 614. is no evidence of their being so ancient as some scep- tics imagine. After describing the rapidity of some formations in the West Indies and Scotland, he says: The shores of the Bermuda Islands afford interest- ing examples of this class of deposits in different states of consolidation. The sea surrounding the Bermudas abounds in corals and shells ; and from the action of the
RMRET841–. Outlines of natural theology for the use of the Canadian student [microform] : selected and arranged from the most authentic sources. Natural history; Natural theology; Sciences naturelles; Théologie naturelle. > 402 ledge in embryology and palaeontology justifies now such a conclusion." In examining the agreement between this succession, and the phases of the em- bryonic growth of living animals, we may therefore take for granted, that the order of succession of their fossil representatives is sufficiently present to the mind, to afford a satisfactory basis of comparison. No class
RMRERY49–. Outlines of natural theology for the use of the Canadian student [microform] : selected and arranged from the most authentic sources. Natural history; Natural theology; Sciences naturelles; Théologie naturelle. k. m " It ' 610 queinada, writing of the Peruvians, says, " As to the custom of appearing fierce in war, it was in some provinces ordered that the mother or their attendants should make the faces of their children long and rough, and their foreheads broad ; as Hip- pocrates and Galen relate of Macrocephali, who had them moulded by art into the elevated and conical form &q
RMRET7HT–. Outlines of natural theology for the use of the Canadian student [microform] : selected and arranged from the most authentic sources. Natural history; Natural theology; Sciences naturelles; Théologie naturelle. f) i. 460 separates the mind from mere animal instinct; furnishing an example of intelligence in a creature some way removed from that quodrumanous tpye which, in its external configuration, and in some respects in its external structure, approaches that being who is the last and most perfect of the whole creation. But what an unfinished work does he contemplate : harmony and beauty p
RMRET7Y5–. Outlines of natural theology for the use of the Canadian student [microform] : selected and arranged from the most authentic sources. Natural history; Natural theology; Sciences naturelles; Théologie naturelle. 419. "m in osteological details, to the megatherium. The sloths are ar- ranged by naturalists in a tribe termed tar- digrada, from their feeble power of pro- gression on the surface of the land ; for the same reason they are caWed paresseux by the French, and shths by the English. They are of slender form and small size: the largest species is but little larger than a cat. They h
RMRET7RF–. Outlines of natural theology for the use of the Canadian student [microform] : selected and arranged from the most authentic sources. Natural history; Natural theology; Sciences naturelles; Théologie naturelle. . Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original work.. Bovell, James, 1817-1880. [Toronto? : s. n. ]
RMRET8BJ–. Outlines of natural theology for the use of the Canadian student [microform] : selected and arranged from the most authentic sources. Natural history; Natural theology; Sciences naturelles; Théologie naturelle. ] (I I >. f! *, i i / ' < t. 352 i^ successively introduced upon earth in past geologi- cal ages. Among the oldest formations, we find pedunculated crinoids only, and this order remains prominent for a long period of successive periods; next come free crinoids and asteroids; next echi- noids, the successive appearance of which, since the triassic period to the present day, coinc
RMRET8RB–. Outlines of natural theology for the use of the Canadian student [microform] : selected and arranged from the most authentic sources. Natural history; Natural theology; Sciences naturelles; Théologie naturelle. >^ Photographic Sciences Corporation. 33 VtfiST MAIN STRIET WIBSTIR.N.Y. 14580 (716) 873-4503 > '^. Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original work.. Bovell, James, 1817-1880. [Toronto? : s. n. ]
RMRET8MH–. Outlines of natural theology for the use of the Canadian student [microform] : selected and arranged from the most authentic sources. Natural history; Natural theology; Sciences naturelles; Théologie naturelle. 280. :| '1. Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original work.. Bovell, James, 1817-1880. [Toronto? : s. n. ]
RMRET959–. Outlines of natural theology for the use of the Canadian student [microform] : selected and arranged from the most authentic sources. Natural history; Natural theology; Sciences naturelles; Théologie naturelle. r t 'I i' r. 166 may be considered as functiois of the cerebrum. On the other hand, in the control and direction which the will has the power of exerting over the course of the thoughts, we have the evidence of a new and independent power, which is entirely opposed in its very nature to all the automatic ten- dencies ; and which, according as it is habitually exerted, tends to render
RMRET990–. Outlines of natural theology for the use of the Canadian student [microform] : selected and arranged from the most authentic sources. Natural history; Natural theology; Sciences naturelles; Théologie naturelle. 112. meet and result in objective existence ; for reason unfolds to us not one force working in nature as sub- ordinate to another, but One Supreme Force, All- Powerful, Absolute Existence, originating and creat- ing forces which are objectivised, manifested in forms. Thus there may be a relationship between the several forces as there is in the several forms of matter, and yet by the
RMRET000–. Outlines of natural theology for the use of the Canadian student [microform] : selected and arranged from the most authentic sources. Natural history; Natural theology; Sciences naturelles; Théologie naturelle. r*^ 502. Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original work.. Bovell, James, 1817-1880. [Toronto? : s. n. ]
RMRET8E5–. Outlines of natural theology for the use of the Canadian student [microform] : selected and arranged from the most authentic sources. Natural history; Natural theology; Sciences naturelles; Théologie naturelle. '/ Photographic Sciences Corporation 23 WEST MAIN STREET WEBSTER, NY. 14580 (716) 872-4503. Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original work.. Bovell, James, 1817-1880. [Toronto? : s. n. ]
RMRET7T4–. Outlines of natural theology for the use of the Canadian student [microform] : selected and arranged from the most authentic sources. Natural history; Natural theology; Sciences naturelles; Théologie naturelle. . Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original work.. Bovell, James, 1817-1880. [Toronto? : s. n. ]
RMRERYEM–. Outlines of natural theology for the use of the Canadian student [microform] : selected and arranged from the most authentic sources. Natural history; Natural theology; Sciences naturelles; Théologie naturelle. i><i. / > 556 waxed rebellious and fat in wickedness—no sooner do they corrupt themselves, as the nations around them, than the blessing is taken away—at least for a time—and their place supplied by a remnant of the good that came out of them, and a foreign, but convinced race, grafted in, to take up the chorus of praise and thanksgiving due to the long-suffering patience of
RMRERYNW–. Outlines of natural theology for the use of the Canadian student [microform] : selected and arranged from the most authentic sources. Natural history; Natural theology; Sciences naturelles; Théologie naturelle. 528. rif ^^f Miaawfof con- sciousness, not merely for im- pressions of the organs of sense, but also for changes in the cortical substance of the cerebrum; so that until the CEREBRXJM AND SENSORY GANGLIA, latter havc re- acted downwards on the sensorium, we have no con- sciousness cither of the formation of ideas or of any intellectual process of which these may be the sub- jects.
RMRERY9D–. Outlines of natural theology for the use of the Canadian student [microform] : selected and arranged from the most authentic sources. Natural history; Natural theology; Sciences naturelles; Théologie naturelle. m 682 ,1. low in moral power, high in its animal and in- stinctive or automatic capabilities. The unlet- tered Australian sighs not for knowledge, his heart quickens not its pulse at the touch of one generous emotion, or at the sight of human woe. The Afri- can, dead to all high and lofty sense of morality, dwelling amidst scenes of brute violence, familiar- ised from infancy to manho
RMRERYW6–. Outlines of natural theology for the use of the Canadian student [microform] : selected and arranged from the most authentic sources. Natural history; Natural theology; Sciences naturelles; Théologie naturelle. 518 IL| 1^' M. ! • I fP. ferences, and are certainly not greater or more cha- racteristic than are the varieti; ; of crania in the same nation ; if we compare, for instance, the crania of men of one race, not only of varying intellectual states, but of moral states, do we not also find the most de- cided differences! Take for instance the illustrative sketches: the one exhibiting a hu
RMRET8PP–. Outlines of natural theology for the use of the Canadian student [microform] : selected and arranged from the most authentic sources. Natural history; Natural theology; Sciences naturelles; Théologie naturelle. M 264. mii which are undergoing thickening, was, in truth, long ago pointed out by Von Mohl; but neither he nor any of his successors seem to have noticed how completely this fact does away with that activity of the primordial utricle, and passivity of the cell-wall, which they all assume. We have here, in fact, the cell-wall commencing and carrying through its morphological changes a
RMRET7FG–. Outlines of natural theology for the use of the Canadian student [microform] : selected and arranged from the most authentic sources. Natural history; Natural theology; Sciences naturelles; Théologie naturelle. GIGANTIC IRISH DEER. antlers were both absolutely and relatively larger in the extinct species : this, in fact, constitutes one of its best characteristics, and involves other differences in the form and proportions of its osseous frame- work. One of the modifications in the skeleton of megaceros, which relates to the vast weight of the head and neck, is the stronger proportions of it
RMRET7GR–. Outlines of natural theology for the use of the Canadian student [microform] : selected and arranged from the most authentic sources. Natural history; Natural theology; Sciences naturelles; Théologie naturelle. li mm i f t^i t: 1. m is the coast of northern Asia which bounds the polar sea. The trees of a temperate climate—-the oak, the beech, the maple, the poplar, and the birch— which now attain their highest limit somewhere about T0° of north latitude, and then are dwarfed to minute shrubs, appear there to have grown at the very verge of the polar basin ; in the condition of vast and luxur
RMRET7TC–. Outlines of natural theology for the use of the Canadian student [microform] : selected and arranged from the most authentic sources. Natural history; Natural theology; Sciences naturelles; Théologie naturelle. 428 remarkable deviation from known types of the class reptilia. In the amblyrhynchi, the most exclusively vegetable feeders of the saurian order, the alveolar process, beset with teeth, is continued round the front of the mouth ; the junction of the two rami of the lower jaw, at the symphysis, presenting no eden- tulous interval whatever, and the lips not being more produced than in
RMRET8GT–. Outlines of natural theology for the use of the Canadian student [microform] : selected and arranged from the most authentic sources. Natural history; Natural theology; Sciences naturelles; Théologie naturelle. 334. A m:^:h I The earlier flora of the tertiary division presents an aspect widely different from that of any of the previous ones. The ferns and their allies sink into their existing proportions ; nor do the c^niferse, pre- viously so abundant, occupy any longer a prominent place. On the other hand, the dicotyledinous herbs and trees, previously so inconspicuous in creation, are la
RMRERYP6–. Outlines of natural theology for the use of the Canadian student [microform] : selected and arranged from the most authentic sources. Natural history; Natural theology; Sciences naturelles; Théologie naturelle. ; i, 527 oblongata ; and, in the lowest vertebrata, they con- stitute by far the largest portion of the entire ence- phalon. 4. The cerebellum, which is a sort of offshoot from the upper extremity of the medulla oblongata, lying behind the preceding. 6. The cerebral hemispheres—a pair of ganglionic masses which lie upon the ganglia of special sense, capping them over more or less comp
RMRET8KJ–. Outlines of natural theology for the use of the Canadian student [microform] : selected and arranged from the most authentic sources. Natural history; Natural theology; Sciences naturelles; Théologie naturelle. 304 mi n. # ^ the highest organised and last created class of ani- mals ; and to shew that, with extinct as with exist- ing mammalia, particular forms were assigned to particular provinces, and what is still more interest- ing and suggestive, that the same forms were re- stricted to the same provinces at the pliocene periods as they are at the present day." A.ustralia, at present
RMREPXXN–. Outlines of natural theology for the use of the Canadian student [microform] : selected and arranged from the most authentic sources. Natural history; Natural theology; Sciences naturelles; Théologie naturelle. 856 pi Hi I II'-. scheme which was laid " in the beginning." Nay! so evident is it that the plan of creation has been one of progression, that it was even surmised—till re- search upset the dream—that all things were mutu- ally convertible, and the world but a system of de- velopement. Geologists and naturalists unanimously accord their testimony to such truths as are alorie
RMRET8K5–. Outlines of natural theology for the use of the Canadian student [microform] : selected and arranged from the most authentic sources. Natural history; Natural theology; Sciences naturelles; Théologie naturelle. Ml*" : I 1- 310 of this class, which form its bulk at present. The pterodactyles, which . tve preceded the clasps of birds, and the icthyosauri, which have preceded the appearance of the Crustacea, are other examples of such prophetic types. The admirable and accurate description of the " Life of a Hair," as drawn by Mr. Paget, illustrated well that special adaptation o
RMRET84W–. Outlines of natural theology for the use of the Canadian student [microform] : selected and arranged from the most authentic sources. Natural history; Natural theology; Sciences naturelles; Théologie naturelle. ill 1^ m. 394 universe—its whole as well as its particular parts, are and have been the constant care and designed appointment of an All-Wise, All-Powerful, ever present Power. A little reflection on the important events which have been revealed, must carry home the conviction that, amid all the changes which the world, in its inorganic elements, has passed through, there has been a M
RMRET064–. Outlines of natural theology for the use of the Canadian student [microform] : selected and arranged from the most authentic sources. Natural history; Natural theology; Sciences naturelles; Théologie naturelle. 492 in the whale, acquiring their presumed highest de- velopement, these cartilages, now grown to the size of bolsters, return after breathing, into the vast nos- trils of the whale from which tL^y had been momen- tarily withdrawn, filling them up, sealing them her- metically against the pressure of a thousand fathoms deep of water, which they sustain with ease, when, plunging into th
RMRERYBX–. Outlines of natural theology for the use of the Canadian student [microform] : selected and arranged from the most authentic sources. Natural history; Natural theology; Sciences naturelles; Théologie naturelle. than any we had hitherto met. The mode of dres- sing the hair, which lay upon their shoulders, toge- ther with their general features, again reminded me of the Egyptians. The features given are frequently met with ^ but they are by no means universal. The inhabitants of the island of Menye, as seen by Liv- ingstone, were muscular, and had large ploughman hands. Their colour was the sa
RMRERY1W–. Outlines of natural theology for the use of the Canadian student [microform] : selected and arranged from the most authentic sources. Natural history; Natural theology; Sciences naturelles; Théologie naturelle. . Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original work.. Bovell, James, 1817-1880. [Toronto? : s. n. ]
RMRET93K–. Outlines of natural theology for the use of the Canadian student [microform] : selected and arranged from the most authentic sources. Natural history; Natural theology; Sciences naturelles; Théologie naturelle. 1 r!i iii l : 1 iii'l 1^ ;! f•' i • i I -|:' 210 oxygen, with three of azote—^and they will germi- nate accordingly. The general law cannot be vio- lated ; while the power of adaptation, by which the seed is adjusted to the circumstances, is itself regu- lated by the universal law which measures the cause by the effect, and which determines that its action shall be always the same i
RMRET8HR–. Outlines of natural theology for the use of the Canadian student [microform] : selected and arranged from the most authentic sources. Natural history; Natural theology; Sciences naturelles; Théologie naturelle. 326 i . 1 I. ts i'. lowest in the scale of the great division vertebrcta, we are unable to perceive a vestige until we reacn the highest zone of the upper silurian, and are about to enter on the Devonian period. Even on that horizon, the minute fossil fishes, long ago noticed by myself, are exceedingly scarce ; and none have since been found in strata of higher antiquity. In fact, the
RMRET88J–. Outlines of natural theology for the use of the Canadian student [microform] : selected and arranged from the most authentic sources. Natural history; Natural theology; Sciences naturelles; Théologie naturelle. I'U. Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original work.. Bovell, James, 1817-1880. [Toronto? : s. n. ]
RMRET8JA–. Outlines of natural theology for the use of the Canadian student [microform] : selected and arranged from the most authentic sources. Natural history; Natural theology; Sciences naturelles; Théologie naturelle. 322. not say, " Let these lights be created," using bara; or, " Let these lights be made," using aasa; but Yehi, " Let them be for the purpose of dividing the day from the night." In fact, the passage recog- nises their previous existence, and only assigns them a new and resuscitated function, to give light —the one by day and the other by right—and to be
RMRET7M4–. Outlines of natural theology for the use of the Canadian student [microform] : selected and arranged from the most authentic sources. Natural history; Natural theology; Sciences naturelles; Théologie naturelle. I- f-> t. 442 and ant-eaters are the living representatives. But as the extinct forms dififer greatly from the existing ones in their gigantic proportions—short massive extremities and thick and short tail—their mode of life must have been very dissimilar. ,.,.^ .,p .^,., We have here, then, evidence that while the South American fauna was determined at this re- mote period, as was
RMRET98A–. Outlines of natural theology for the use of the Canadian student [microform] : selected and arranged from the most authentic sources. Natural history; Natural theology; Sciences naturelles; Théologie naturelle. 118. I !:. .ii I . I i i I ism, even a beginning in the same limit of the meet- ing simple activities, and working on each side away from the limit; a throwing of simple activities in opposite directions from the limit of contact. Not a counteracting and resisting, but a divelent and dis- parting activity ; not an antagonistic, but hereafter known as distinctly a diremptive movement.
RMRET9A0–. Outlines of natural theology for the use of the Canadian student [microform] : selected and arranged from the most authentic sources. Natural history; Natural theology; Sciences naturelles; Théologie naturelle. 79 there is diminislied motion, or cessation of move- ment. It is interesting sometimes, as well as instructive, to trace back the origin of doctrines ; and in this instance it is remarkable to discover the modern theory of the correlation of force unmistakeably de- clared in the Timoeus of Plato : " Let us investigate the nature and affections of fire and water, air and earth, p
RMRERYMF–. Outlines of natural theology for the use of the Canadian student [microform] : selected and arranged from the most authentic sources. Natural history; Natural theology; Sciences naturelles; Théologie naturelle. . Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original work.. Bovell, James, 1817-1880. [Toronto? : s. n. ]
RMRET97W–. Outlines of natural theology for the use of the Canadian student [microform] : selected and arranged from the most authentic sources. Natural history; Natural theology; Sciences naturelles; Théologie naturelle. 119 that while the diremptive activity disparts and loosens the antagonism, the antagonistic activity on the other hand restrains and binds in the divellency, and thus the diremptive can neither go off wholly on either side and leave the limit void, nor the an- tagonism come up from each side and make the limit full, but both antagonism and diremption meet in the limit and make a thir
RMRERY18–. Outlines of natural theology for the use of the Canadian student [microform] : selected and arranged from the most authentic sources. Natural history; Natural theology; Sciences naturelles; Théologie naturelle. r Photographic Sciences Corporation 23 WEST MAIN STREET WEBSTER, NY. 14580 (716) 872-4503. Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original work.. Bovell, James, 1817-1880. [Toronto? : s. n. ]
RMRERYF6–. Outlines of natural theology for the use of the Canadian student [microform] : selected and arranged from the most authentic sources. Natural history; Natural theology; Sciences naturelles; Théologie naturelle. . Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original work.. Bovell, James, 1817-1880. [Toronto? : s. n. ]
RMRET7GJ–. Outlines of natural theology for the use of the Canadian student [microform] : selected and arranged from the most authentic sources. Natural history; Natural theology; Sciences naturelles; Théologie naturelle. In I'. Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original work.. Bovell, James, 1817-1880. [Toronto? : s. n. ]
RMRERYYR–. Outlines of natural theology for the use of the Canadian student [microform] : selected and arranged from the most authentic sources. Natural history; Natural theology; Sciences naturelles; Théologie naturelle. r*^ 502. Fist? liili 'W be in ignorance, but at once the earliest and best known are the wise ones of the earth; and when we do encounter fools, they are the degraded aud rebellious oflf-shoots of intelligent sires. The his- tory of man affords conclusive evidence of the wisdom and goodness of Jehovah ; and although there may be much in that history which is difficult to understand, y
RMRET7K8–. Outlines of natural theology for the use of the Canadian student [microform] : selected and arranged from the most authentic sources. Natural history; Natural theology; Sciences naturelles; Théologie naturelle. m m-. '.M. W 450 one segment of the earth's surfacie, however broad; but are largely developed in nearly all known re- gions. The argument is therefore untenable in face of the knowledge we have acquired, that amidst the profusion of all other forms of aquatic life, fishes only are absent from strata of this early age. This prevalence of a wideiy-spi'ead, primeval ocean, and of a surf
RMRET81C–. Outlines of natural theology for the use of the Canadian student [microform] : selected and arranged from the most authentic sources. Natural history; Natural theology; Sciences naturelles; Théologie naturelle. rSii 111 [I r!. Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original work.. Bovell, James, 1817-1880. [Toronto? : s. n. ]
RMRET947–. Outlines of natural theology for the use of the Canadian student [microform] : selected and arranged from the most authentic sources. Natural history; Natural theology; Sciences naturelles; Théologie naturelle. H 166. intellect and will within, may be set into motion, and :hat similar motion, either by the one or the other. For example, a sensation, and the idea of a sensation, will often excite the very same consen- suous movements. By thinking of a nauseous dish which has disgusted us, we may renew all the incon- venience we experienced from it. Many persons faint away by imagining vividly
RMRERYM7–. Outlines of natural theology for the use of the Canadian student [microform] : selected and arranged from the most authentic sources. Natural history; Natural theology; Sciences naturelles; Théologie naturelle. 632 i I. It is not a little singular that Dr. Pritchard should have used this peculiar construction of the brain as an argument to shew how the skull may become modified by preponderance of one or the other por- tions of the brain: he says, " The greater relative developement of the jaws and zygomatic bones, and of the bones of the face altogether, in domparison with the size of
RMRERYEX–. Outlines of natural theology for the use of the Canadian student [microform] : selected and arranged from the most authentic sources. Natural history; Natural theology; Sciences naturelles; Théologie naturelle. i><i. Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original work.. Bovell, James, 1817-1880. [Toronto? : s. n. ]
RMRERYHB–. Outlines of natural theology for the use of the Canadian student [microform] : selected and arranged from the most authentic sources. Natural history; Natural theology; Sciences naturelles; Théologie naturelle. 543 two parts, and dividing them into anterior and pos- terior convolutiotis. This division of the longitudinal convolutions, this addition of new convolutions, is found only in the elephant, the apes, and in man. Fourteenth group.—In the apes, and especially the monkeys, the convolutions are not so undulating and voluminous as in the elephant and whale ; thus they appear at first sig
RMRET8M4–. Outlines of natural theology for the use of the Canadian student [microform] : selected and arranged from the most authentic sources. Natural history; Natural theology; Sciences naturelles; Théologie naturelle. 288. » endowed with a power cf endurance, which ig as endless as the self-existent Omnipotence from which it sprang. Except on such considerations, weknownot how to receive the- declaration, " Be fruitful and multiply, and replenish the earth ; behold I have given you every herb bearing seed, and every tree in which is the fruit of a tree yielding seed. Let the earth bring forth
RMRERY29–. Outlines of natural theology for the use of the Canadian student [microform] : selected and arranged from the most authentic sources. Natural history; Natural theology; Sciences naturelles; Théologie naturelle. [v. before the trade-wind, and threat^^n ultimate deso- lation. The sand has already surmounted the lofty hills which form the southern boundary of the beau- tiful valley of Lurin, and io flowing down in large waves over the cultivated ground. The same phe- nomenon is observable on the elevated plain which is called the Tablada, where the tops of the hills appear like Egyptian oases,
RMRET7F8–. Outlines of natural theology for the use of the Canadian student [microform] : selected and arranged from the most authentic sources. Natural history; Natural theology; Sciences naturelles; Théologie naturelle. r..f (lis. m It ' ?!t ir ','«,. Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original work.. Bovell, James, 1817-1880. [Toronto? : s. n. ]
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