34 examples of huxley's in sentences

| | | | III.AS REGARDS PROTOPLASM, in Relation to Prof. HUXLEY'S | | Physical Basis of Life.

The adrenal element in the personality must be considered in every disturbance, morbid, personal, or social involving brunette types, Huxley's dark white, Mediterranean-Iberians, red-haired persons, and even pigment-spotted fair people.

But to those who have no leisure to study him, I should recommend the reading of Professor Huxley's third lecture on the origin of species.

And, from a multitude of scientific works, we recommend also to the general reader Huxley's Autobiography and his Lay Sermons, Addresses, and Reviews, partly because they are excellent expressions of the spirit and methods of science, and partly because Huxley as a writer is perhaps the clearest and the most readable of the scientists.

(E.M.L.) Huxley's Life of Hume.

While preparing himself to graduate from the University of London, he worked in Huxley's laboratory.

I am sorry to have to insist upon this fact: but till Professor Huxley's dreamand mineis fulfilled, and our schools deign to teach, in the intervals of Latin and Greek, some slight knowledge of this planet, and of those of its productions which are most commonly in use, even this fact may need to be re-stated more than once.

Yet, on looking round upon the London crowds that were particularly requested not to tease the cannibals, my first thought was that Huxley's paradox remained true.

[Footnote 2: Among the works on Hume we may mention Jodl's prize treatise, 1872, and Huxley's Hume (English Men of Letters), 1879.

We turned once toward the Mulets, and saw Huxley's form projected against the sky as he stood upon a pinnacle of rock; he gave us a last wave of the hand and descended, while we receded from him into the solitudes.

People who could not in 1850 understand Carlyle's distinction between the Delusive and the Eeal, could not help understanding Huxley's comparison of life and death to a game of chess with an unseen opponent who never makes a mistake.

And Huxley's impersonal Science seemed a more present aid in the voyage round Cape Horn than Carlyle's personal and impossible Hero.

He perceived Huxley's Vertebrata upon the side-table.

SEE Lawrence, D. H. Retrospect; an omnibus of Aldous Huxley's books.

Mr. Huxley's new Jerusalem.

No article that has appeared in any periodical for a generation back excited so profound a sensation as Mr. Huxley's memorable paper On the Physical Basis of Life, published in this Review in February 1869.

(d) T.H. Huxley, Science and Culture, in "Science and Education:" 1. How far the principles here set forth bear out Huxley's definition of education (page 47).

(k) Consult several biographies of great menfor example, Morley's Gladstone, Froude's Carlyle, Darwin's Life, Huxley's Lifeand make a comparative study of their early reading.

The Australians have been very carefully studied by many observers, and the results entirely overthrow Mr. Huxley's bold statement that 'in its simplest condition, such as may be met with among the Australian savages, theology is a mere belief in the existence, powers, and dispositions (usually malignant) of ghost-like entities who may be propitiated or scared away; but no cult can properly be said to exist.

The Hebrews' indifference to the departed soul is, in fact, a puzzle, especially when we consider their Egyptian educationso important an element in Mr. Huxley's theory.

We began by examining Mr. Huxley's endeavours to find traces of ancestor-worship (in his opinion the origin of Jehovah-worship) among the Israelites.

We now return to Mr. Huxley's account of the evolution from ghost-cult to the cult of Jehovah.

But as -li-y-Tooboo had no sacrifice, contrary to Mr. Huxley's averment, he was not 'a deified ghost, or a being of like nature to these.'

This view is at the opposite extreme from Huxley's, for it overlooks the advantages mankind has gained by means of the social instinct and the social solidarity which it secures.

The course and method of evolution, or of the 'cosmic process'to use Huxley's termis imperfectly described if the methods and principles of human action are left out of account.

34 examples of  huxley's  in sentences