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Editore: Fayard, 1986
ISBN 10: 2213017018ISBN 13: 9782213017013
Da: Ammareal, Morangis, Francia
Libro
Softcover. Condizione: Très bon. Ancien livre de bibliothèque. Légères traces d'usure sur la couverture. Edition 1986. Ammareal reverse jusqu'à 15% du prix net de cet article à des organisations caritatives. ENGLISH DESCRIPTION Book Condition: Used, Very good. Former library book. Slight signs of wear on the cover. Edition 1986. Ammareal gives back up to 15% of this item's net price to charity organizations.
Editore: Hachette Livre Bnf, 2013
ISBN 10: 201179028XISBN 13: 9782011790286
Da: Lucky's Textbooks, Dallas, TX, U.S.A.
Libro
Condizione: New.
Editore: Hachette Livre Bnf, 2013
ISBN 10: 2013356412ISBN 13: 9782013356411
Da: Lucky's Textbooks, Dallas, TX, U.S.A.
Libro
Condizione: New.
Editore: Hachette Livre Bnf, 2012
ISBN 10: 2012762425ISBN 13: 9782012762428
Da: Lucky's Textbooks, Dallas, TX, U.S.A.
Libro
Condizione: New.
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Usato - A partire da EUR 71,39
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Editore: Hachette Livre Bnf, 2017
ISBN 10: 2019130769ISBN 13: 9782019130763
Da: Lucky's Textbooks, Dallas, TX, U.S.A.
Libro
Condizione: New.
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Editore: Hachette Livre Bnf, 2013
ISBN 10: 2012927432ISBN 13: 9782012927438
Da: Lucky's Textbooks, Dallas, TX, U.S.A.
Libro
Condizione: New.
Editore: Hachette Livre Bnf, 2017
ISBN 10: 201402426XISBN 13: 9782014024265
Da: Lucky's Textbooks, Dallas, TX, U.S.A.
Libro
Condizione: New.
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Editore: Hachette Livre Bnf, 2017
ISBN 10: 2019130742ISBN 13: 9782019130749
Da: Lucky's Textbooks, Dallas, TX, U.S.A.
Libro
Condizione: New.
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Editore: Hachette Livre Bnf, 2018
ISBN 10: 2329106505ISBN 13: 9782329106502
Da: Lucky's Textbooks, Dallas, TX, U.S.A.
Libro
Condizione: New.
Editore: Hachette Livre Bnf, 2013
ISBN 10: 2011790255ISBN 13: 9782011790255
Da: Lucky's Textbooks, Dallas, TX, U.S.A.
Libro
Condizione: New.
Editore: Hachette Livre Bnf, 2013
ISBN 10: 2011790263ISBN 13: 9782011790262
Da: Lucky's Textbooks, Dallas, TX, U.S.A.
Libro
Condizione: New.
Editore: Hachette Livre Bnf, 2013
ISBN 10: 2011790271ISBN 13: 9782011790279
Da: Lucky's Textbooks, Dallas, TX, U.S.A.
Libro
Condizione: New.
Editore: Hachette Livre Bnf, 2017
ISBN 10: 2011921880ISBN 13: 9782011921888
Da: Lucky's Textbooks, Dallas, TX, U.S.A.
Libro
Condizione: New.
Editore: Paris, Ernest Flammarion, s.d. (vers 1913)., 1913
Da: Librairie Le Jardin des Muses, Blangy le château, NORMA, Francia
Membro dell'associazione: ILAB
Libro
Couverture rigide. Condizione: Bon. In-12 de 340pp. Reliure demi-chagrin brun, dos à nerfs, titre doré. D'abord botaniste, Lamarck se consacre ensuite à la zoologie des insectes et des vers. Au début du XIXème siècle, il a réalisé la classification des invertébrés.
Editore: Hachette Livre Bnf, 2017
ISBN 10: 2019130750ISBN 13: 9782019130756
Da: Lucky's Textbooks, Dallas, TX, U.S.A.
Libro
Condizione: New.
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Editore: Hachette Livre Bnf, 2018
ISBN 10: 2329106513ISBN 13: 9782329106519
Da: Lucky's Textbooks, Dallas, TX, U.S.A.
Libro
Condizione: New.
Editore: c. 1816, Paris, 1816
Da: Frame, Madrid, Spagna
Arte / Stampa / Poster
Condizione: ACEPTABLE. Botanique de Lamarck Jean-Baptiste Lamarck (1744-1829) Esta importante obra destaca tanto por la cantidad como por la calidad de sus descripciones. En esta obra, Lamarck recogió y amplió los trabajos de otros naturalistas, describiendo plantas que procedían de ámbitos geográficos muy diferentes, desde el continente europeo hasta los trópicos. El acierto en la selección de sus dibujantes convierte cada una de las láminas de la obra de Lamarck en dibujos magistrales y pequeñas obras de arte Fossier Del. / Benard Direxit) Formato (cm): 16x25.
Editore: c. 1816, Paris, 1816
Da: Frame, Madrid, Spagna
Arte / Stampa / Poster
Condizione: ACEPTABLE. Botanique de Lamarck Jean-Baptiste Lamarck (1744-1829) Esta importante obra destaca tanto por la cantidad como por la calidad de sus descripciones. En esta obra, Lamarck recogió y amplió los trabajos de otros naturalistas, describiendo plantas que procedían de ámbitos geográficos muy diferentes, desde el continente europeo hasta los trópicos. El acierto en la selección de sus dibujantes convierte cada una de las láminas de la obra de Lamarck en dibujos magistrales y pequeñas obras de arte Fossier Del. / Benard Direxit Formato (cm): 16x25.
Editore: c. 1816, Paris, 1816
Da: Frame, Madrid, Spagna
Arte / Stampa / Poster
Condizione: ACEPTABLE. Botanique de Lamarck Jean-Baptiste Lamarck (1744-1829) Esta importante obra destaca tanto por la cantidad como por la calidad de sus descripciones. En esta obra, Lamarck recogió y amplió los trabajos de otros naturalistas, describiendo plantas que procedían de ámbitos geográficos muy diferentes, desde el continente europeo hasta los trópicos. El acierto en la selección de sus dibujantes convierte cada una de las láminas de la obra de Lamarck en dibujos magistrales y pequeñas obras de arte Fossier Del. / Benard Direxit Formato (cm): 16x25.
Editore: Dentu [&] the author, Paris, 1809
Prima edizione
First edition. EVANS 103 - CLASSICAL ACCOUNT OF LAMARCK'S THEORY OF EVOLUTION. First edition, an extremely important association copy with extensive contemporary learned and critical annotations by a prestigious scientist and colleague of Lamarck. This was his most complete presentation of his theory of evolution, "a classic in the literature of evolutionary theory" (PMM). This copy was owned and annotated by the great French chemist Louis-Bernard Guyton de Morveau (1737-1816). The annotations are lengthy and well-informed, citing contemporary authors such as Cuvier, Cabanis, and Richerand, and demonstrate the great depth and breadth of the annotator's learning. Importantly, Guyton de Morveau adheres to the theory of evolution, unlike many of Lamarck's contemporaries. Part I of the Philosophie zoologique presents in detail Lamarck's theory of evolution as the result of two factors, the tendency of species toward increasing complexity and the influence of the environment, responsible for all variations from this norm. Although the concept of ranging all forms of life in a single series, from the simplest to the most complicated, dated back to antiquity, Lamarck's innovation was to suggest "that this scale corresponds to an order of historical development of the higher forms. This he did by tracing the progression in the reverse direction and observing the gradual changing, simplification and ultimate disappearance of the features distinguishing the higher forms as each lower scale is reached" (PMM). In Part II, Lamarck "developed his views on the physical nature of life, its spontaneous productions resulting in simple cellular tissue, and its characteristics at the simplest level, the lower ends of the plant and animal series . In [the third part] Lamarck deals in great detail with the problem of a physical explanation for the emergence of higher mental facilities . Lamarck's breakthrough was tying a progressive development of higher mental facilities in a physical way to structural development of the nervous system . Higher mental faculties could emerge precisely because they were a product of increased structural complexity . For Lamarck one of the most important events in the evolutionary process was the development of the nervous system, particularly the brain, because at that point animals began to from ideas and control their movements" (DSB). Darwin initially discredited Lamarck's theory but later redacted his opinion in the 'Historical Introduction' to the third edition of On the Origin of Species stating Lamarck "did the eminent service of arousing attention to the probability of all change in the organic as well as in the inorganic world being the result of law, and not of miraculous intervention" (PMM). "Lamarck's great intellectual journey began with a public address about evolution, delivered in 1800 during a month that the revolutionary government had auspiciously named Floréal, or flowering. He then developed the first comprehensive theory of evolution in modern science - an achievement that won him a secure place in any scientific hall of fame or list of immortals - despite the vicissitudes of his reputation during his own lifetime and immediately thereafter" (Stephen Jay Gould, The Lying Stones of Marrakech, p. 141). ABPC/RBH record the sale of only three other copies since Norman, and certainly none of comparable importance to our copy. Provenance: Louis-Bernard Guyton de Morveau (1737-1816) (extensive annotations throughout in his hand). "Lamarck states [in the Philosophie zoologique] that his new theory is needed in order to explain two well-known phenomena in the world of organisms. The first is that animals show a graded series of 'perfection.' Under increasing perfection Lamarck understood the gradual increase in 'animality' from the simplest animals to those with the most complex organization, culminating in man. He did not assess perfection in terms of adaptedness to the environment or by the role an organism plays in the economy of nature but simply in terms of complexity. The other phenomenon in need of explanation is the amazing diversity of organisms . A further ingredient added by Lamarck is the actual transformation of species in a phyletic line. 'After a long succession of generations . individuals, originally belonging to one species, become at length transformed into a new species distinct from the first' (pp. 38-39 - references here and below are to Elliott's English translation, 1914). Everywhere in his discussions Lamarck reiterates the slowness and gradualness of evolutionary change . 'An enormous time and wide variation in successive conditions must doubtless have been required to enable nature to bring the organization of animals to that degree of complexity and development in which we see it at its perfection' (p. 50). This is no problem because for nature 'time has no limits and can be drawn upon to any extent' (p. 114). "Numerous students of Lamarck's work have asked themselves what new observations or new insights had induced Lamarck to adopt this new viewpoint in 1800. What apparently happened was that, in the late 1790s, Lamarck took over the mollusk collection of the Paris Museum after the death of his friend Bruguière. When he started to study these collections which contained both fossil and recent mollusks, he found that many of the living species of mussels and other marine mollusks had analogues among fossil species. Indeed it was possible, in many cases, to arrange the fossils of the earlier and more recent Tertiary strata into a chronological series terminating in a recent species. In some cases where the material was sufficiently complete, it was possible to establish virtually unbroken phyletic series. In other cases, he found that the recent species extended far back into the Tertiary strata. The conclusion became inescapable that many phyletic series had undergone a slow and gradual change throughout time. Probably no other group of animals was a.