| American Antiquarian Society - Electronic journals - 1890 - 684 pages
...present through a phase from which other sciences have safely emerged ; and the new views with reference to the Antiquity of Man though still looked upon with distrust and apprehension, will, 1 doubt not, in a few years, be regarded with as little disquietude as are now those discoveries in... | |
| Electronic journals - 1866 - 688 pages
...present through a phase from which other sciences have safely emerged ; and the new views with reference to the antiquity of man, though still looked upon...which at one time excited even greater opposition." The title of the several chapters of the work will shew still farther how the author arranges and treats... | |
| Theology - 1866 - 904 pages
...present through a phase from which other sciences have safely emerged ; and the new views with reference to the antiquity of man, though still looked upon...which at one time excited even greater opposition." The tone of these remarks is respectful and friendly to the claims of revealed truth ; but the assumption... | |
| 1872 - 862 pages
...there cannot be in reality any variance between them, and confident that the new views in relation to the antiquity of man, though still looked upon with distrust and apprehension, will in a few years bo regarded with as little disquietude as are those discoveries in astronomy and geology... | |
| Science - 1872 - 798 pages
...the distinguished author, of whose researches we are about to give some account, these new views " will, I doubt not, in a few years, be regarded with...which at one time excited even greater opposition." It is now pretty generally admitted that the first appearance of Man in Europe dates from a period... | |
| Science - 1872 - 806 pages
...the distinguished author, of whose researches we are about to give some account, these new views " will, I doubt not, in a few years, be regarded with...which at one time excited even greater opposition." It is now pretty generally admitted that the first appearance of Man in Europe dates from a period... | |
| John Wells Foster - History - 1874 - 432 pages
...passing through a phase from which other sciences have safely emerged, and the new views in reference to the Antiquity of Man, though still looked upon...which at one time excited even greater opposition."* A brief glance at the progress of scientific inquiry will show how vastly our views of the grandeur... | |
| Leisure - 1881 - 818 pages
...some men of science, and which he thinks will in a few years be regarded with as little disquietude as those discoveries in astronomy and geology which at one time excited even greater distrust and opposition. The work referred to indicates vast research, and is characterised by painstaking... | |
| Alice Beck Kehoe - History - 1998 - 308 pages
...present through a phase from which other sciences have safely emerged; and the new views with reference to the Antiquity of Man, though still looked upon...which at one time excited even greater opposition. (Lubbock 1865, ix) Archaeology should not raise the disquietude that Wilson's ethnology provoked. Pre-historic... | |
| Alice Beck Kehoe - History - 1998 - 308 pages
...present through a phase from which other sciences have safely emerged; and the new views with reference to the Antiquity of Man, though still looked upon with distrust and apprehension, will, 1 doubt not, in a few years be regarded with as little disquietude as are now those discoveries in... | |
| |