19 APR 2013 by ideonexus

 Science, Religion, and the Motion of the Earth

We may distinguish the progress of each science as it is in itself, which has no other limit than the number of truths it includes within its sphere, and the progress of a nation in each science, a progress which is regulated first by the number of men who are acquainted with its leading and most important truths, and next by the number and nature of the truths so known. In fine, we are now come to that point of civilization, at which the people derive a profit from intellectual knowledge, n...
Folksonomies: science religion astronomy
Folksonomies: science religion astronomy
  1  notes

Science worked from reality, Religion condescended to allow for the motion of the Earth.

04 JAN 2012 by ideonexus

 Sir Charles Bell on the Phylogeny of the Fetus' Brain

Man has two conditions of existence in the body. Hardly two creatures can be less alike than an infant and a man. The whole fetal state is a preparation for birth ... The human brain, in its earlier stage, resembles that of a fish: as it is developed, it resembles more the cerebral mass of a reptile; in its increase, it is like that of a bird, and slowly, and only after birth, does it assume the proper form and consistence of the human encephalon.
Folksonomies: evolution phylogeny
Folksonomies: evolution phylogeny
   notes

Which recapitulates its evolutionary history (note: need reference for this)