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         Darwin George:     more books (101)
  1. The Tides And Kindred Phenomena In The Solar System by George Howard Darwin, 2010-09-10
  2. Mental Evolution in Animals by George John Romanes, 2010-09-10
  3. The Evolution of Satellites. by George Howard Darwin, 1898
  4. Present-Day Golf by George & Darwin, Bernard Duncan, 1900
  5. Italy 1992 (Frommer's Comprehensive Travel Guides) by George McDonald, Darwin Porter, 1992-01-15
  6. A House by the River. Newham Grange to to Darwin College. A history of the site, buildings and former inhabitants. by Margaret Keynes, 1984
  7. Ebbe und Flut sowie verwandte Erscheinungen im Sonnensystem (German Edition) by George Howard Darwin, 1902-01-01
  8. Frommer's Europe (Frommer's Complete) by Darwin Porter, Danforth Prince, et all 2010-10-12
  9. Charles Darwin and Victorian Visual Culture.(Book review): An article from: Wordsworth Circle by George Levine, 2006-09-22
  10. The Structure and Distribution of Coral Reefs by Charles Darwin, Thomas George Bonney, 2010-01-12
  11. The Tides and Kindred Phenomena in the Solar System. The Substance of Lectures Delivered in 1897 at the Lowell Institute, Boston, Massachusetts by George Howard Darwin, 2010
  12. Book of the Links, The - A Symposium on Golf by Sir George & Bernard Darwin, Martin H F Sutton, FLS, H S Colt, A D Hall Riddell, 1912
  13. Unbinding Your Church (Pastor's and Leaders' Guide to the Real Life Evangelism Series) by Martha Grace Reese, 2008-01-01
  14. The Encore Magazine, a Continuing Anthology, May 1944 by Dent (Editor) Santayana, George; Darwin, Charles; Crane, Stephen; Huxley, Aldous (Contributing) Smith, 1944

81. ESA Science & Technology: ESA's Hipparcos Project Scientist To Give George Darwi
This year s UK Royal Astronomical Society george darwin Lecture will be The annual george darwin Lecture, established in 1927, covers all fields of
http://sci.esa.int/science-e/www/object/index.cfm?fobjectid=12482

82. ESA Science & Technology: Sir George Darwin
Sir george darwin, portrait by M. Gertler, 1912; in the National Portrait Gallery,London By courtesy of the National Portrait Gallery, London.
http://sci.esa.int/science-e/www/object/index.cfm?fobjectid=12483

83. Sir George Darwin And The Capture Theory Of Satellites
Title Sir george darwin and the capture theory of satellites Authors Hinks, ARJournal The Observatory, Vol. 38, p. 365366 (1915) Publication Date
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Title: Sir George Darwin and the capture theory of satellites Authors: Hinks, A. R. Journal: The Observatory, Vol. 38, p. 365-366 (1915) Publication Date: Origin: OBS Bibliographic Code:
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84. Jupiter's Galilean Satellites (George Darwin Lecture)
Title Jupiter s Galilean satellites (george darwin Lecture) Authors de Sitter, W.Journal Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Vol.
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Title: Jupiter's Galilean satellites (George Darwin Lecture) Authors: de Sitter, W. Journal: Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Vol. 91, p.706 ( MNRAS Homepage Publication Date: Origin: ADS Bibliographic Code:
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85. Department Of Rhetoric
darwin’s Plots Evolutionary Narrative in darwin, george Eliot, and NineteenthCenturyFiction. Boston Routledge, 1983. Benjamin, Andrew E., Geoffrey N.
http://www.rhetoric.umn.edu/rstc_reading.html

RSTC
Core Areas
M.A. Requirements

Ph.D. Requirements
... RSTC
Ph.D Reading Lists Rhetorical Theory
Science and Rhetoric

Feminist Theory in Science, Technology, and Communication

Scientific and Technical Communication Pedagogy
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Scientific and Technical Communication Research and Theory

Rhetorical Theory, History, Criticism
Primary Works Greek Period Sophists: Protagoras and Gorgias, "Fragments" in Older Sophists. Ed. Rosamond Kent Sprague. Plato: Gorgias (any edition); Phaedrus . (Nehamas and Woodruff edition has an excellent Introduction.) Isocrates: "Against the Sophists" in Isocrates (Loeb edition vol. 2) "Antidosis" in Isocrates (Loeb edition vol.2) Aristotle: The Rhetoric . George Kennedy, trans. Oxford UP and either Politics Nicomachean Ethics Roman Period Cicero: Quintilian: Institutio Oratoria , BKs II, VI, X, and XII (Loeb edition) Middle Ages/Renaissance St. Augustine: De Doctrina Christiana (On Christian Doctrine) , Bk IV Bacon, Francis : Advancement of Learning (Vickers edition has helpful notes) Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries Vico, Giambattista:

86. Duquesne University Library: Books By Charles Darwin
darwin s plots evolutionary narrative in darwin, george Eliot, Levine, georgeLewis. darwin and the novelists patterns of science in Victorian fiction
http://www.library.duq.edu/news/darwin/darwin_books.htm
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Special Collections

Quick Jump to . . . . . . Course Reserves . . . Distance Learners . . . E-ZBorrow . . . ETD . . . Faculty Resources . . . How do I . . .? . . . ILLiad . . . Instruction . . . Library Hours . . . Online Forms . . . Pathfinders . . . Regional Libraries . . . Research Assistance . . . Suggest a Purchase . . . Site Map Library Home Page News and Notes Darwin > Books by Charles Darwin
Darwin Day 2005
Books by Charles Darwin Selected bibliography of available Darwin materials in the Gumberg Library BOOKS BY CHARLES DARWIN (1809-1882) Autobiography. [1st American ed.] 1959
Charles Darwin's notebooks, 1836-1844: geology, transmutation of species, metaphysical enquiries. 1987.
Darwin and Henslow: the growth of an idea; letter 1831-1860. 1967
Darwin for today: the essence of his works. 1963
The Darwin reader. 1956
The descent of man, and selection in relation to sex ... [2nd ed., rev. and augmented]. 1874
The different forms of flowers on plants of the same species... 1896
The expression of emotions in man and animals. 1965

87. Search - Directory Of Special Collections Of Research Value In Canadian Librarie
darwin Yarish Collection of george William Russell (AE) Queen s University,Douglas Library, WD Jordan Special Collections and Music Library. Subjects
http://www.collectionscanada.ca/collectionsp-bin/colldisp/l=0/c=170
Darwin Yarish Collection of George William Russell (AE)
Queen's University, Douglas Library, W.D. Jordan Special Collections and Music Library Subjects
Russell, George William; Irish literature History
The collection was established in 1984. It was purchased in 1983 with a grant and special library funds. This collection forms part of the Rare Book Collection, Special Collections. Description
The collection is considered the "largest and most carefully selected assembly of Russell's work in private hands" by Anglo-Irish scholar Dr. Norman MacKenzie. The collection is supplemented by other Irish literature holdings (e.g. W.B. Yeats, Monk Gibbon, Katharine Tynan and others). Most of the material is rare and primary source material. The library collects relevant material when available. Secondary material and reference works are also added regularly as they become available. Language
English. Holdings
112 titles; 2 serials. Supplementary material to support this collection will be found in the main stacks collection. Bibliographic Access
The collection is catalogued on-line. LC subject headings and classification are used. Items catalogued before June 1980 and after February 1990 are recorded in the National Library Union Catalogue. Special indexes and/or databases include "imprint" files.

88. SS > NF Reviews > George Dyson
george Dyson. darwin among the Machines. Penguin. 1997. Review This is a leisurely,meandering, insightful and deeply fascinating exploration of the
http://www-users.cs.york.ac.uk/~susan/bib/nf/d/gergdysn.htm
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George Dyson
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  • Kenneth Bower The Starship and the Canoe Biography of Freeman Dyson and George Dyson
Books : reviews
George Dyson. Darwin among the Machines . Penguin. 1997
Review:
This is a leisurely, meandering, insightful and deeply fascinating exploration of the relationship between machines and minds, from an historical perspective. It covers a lot of ground, exploring the key themes are information, evolution, communications, emergence, and the growing complexity of machines leading to them having (probably incomprehensible) minds of their own. This is all shot through with the feeling of a deep love of machines. Something about abandoned machines-the suspension of life without immediate decay-evokes a mix of fear and hope. When the machine stops, we face whatever it is that separates death from life. Each chapter is titled after a particular work about machines, life, and the mind. This is used as the focus (or sometimes merely the excuse) for a discussion of the theories and thoughts, often quoting their own words, of a wide range of thinkers. We get all the usual suspects - Gottfried von Leibnitz, Charles Babbage, Charles Darwin, Kurt Godel, Alan Turing

89. Victorian Novel, 1851-67 - Required Reading
george Levine, darwin and the Novelists Patterns of Science in VictorianFiction (1988); Joseph Litvak, Caught in the Act Theatricality in the
http://www.vanderbilt.edu/AnS/english/Clayton/318reading.htm
Required Reading
Primary Texts
See Course Calendar for due date
  • Charles Dickens, Bleak House William Makepeace Thackeray, Henry Esmond Charlotte Bronte, Villette Elizabeth Gaskell, North and South Wilkie Collins, The Woman in White Mary Elizabeth Braddon, Lady Audley's Secret George Eliot, Felix Holt, The Radical Anthony Trollope, The Last Chronicle of Barset
Return to Course Homepage
Secondary Texts (1851-1867)
Choose one for Oral Report
  • Walter Bagehot, The English Constitution Isabella Mary Beeton, The Book of Household Management Charles Darwin, The Origin of Species Elizabeth Gaskell, The Life of Charlotte Bronte The Germ. A Hypermedia Critical Edition Alexander William Kinglake, The Invasion of the Crimea: Its Origin, and an Account of its Progress down to the Death of Lord Raglan Harriet Martineau, British Rule in India: A Historical Sketch Samuel Smiles, Self-Help Karl Marx, The Eighteenth Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte Henry Mayhew, London Labour and the London Poor John Stuart Mill, Utilitarianism Florence Nightingale

90. George Herbert Mead: On Darwin's Origin Of Species
Citation george Herbert Mead. On the Influence of darwin s Origin of Species .Unpublished manuscript (circa 1909?). 17 pages.
http://spartan.ac.brocku.ca/~lward/Mead/Unpublished/Meadu06.html
On the Influence of
Darwin's Origin of Species
Citation: George Herbert Mead. "On the Influence of Darwin's Origin of Species". Unpublished manuscript (circa 1909?). 17 pages. On the Influence of Darwin's Origin of Species The Origin of Species Principia has influenced human thought so immediately and so profoundly as have the Origin of Species and the following works from Darwin's pen. If he many times repaid to other sciences what he borrowed from them in suggestion and material, if the conception of evolution which he has made current has become perhaps the most important development of the (2) recent thought the ground for this must be found in the conditions which obtained at the time at which the Origin of Species appeared. It is to the conditions that I desire to direction your attention this afternoon. It is first of all appropriate that we consider the situation of the physical sciences, which had achieved so much, and which presented the ideal of secure results and accepted method toward which the biological and social sciences turned envious eyes. The increase in the power of telescopes brought new fields of the heavens within the ken of the astronomers. The possibility of nice measurement of the positions of the fixed stars and the determination of parallaxes of certain stars, the recognition that there were systems among the stars, and that the ordering of the stars in the heavens suggested a system of the whole heavens, and especially the study of the nebulae brought the solar system into relation with the rest of the heavens. The question of the history of the solar system and later of the whole physical universe presented

91. Darwin Botanic Gardens
george Brown darwin Botanic Gardens PO Box 496 PALMERSTON NT 0831 Ph 08 89811958 Fax 08 - 8981 1647. Email - darwin.botgardens@nt.gov.au
http://www.anbg.gov.au/chabg/bg-dir/034.html
Directory of Australian Botanic Gardens and Arboreta
Edited by Jan Wilson and Murray Fagg, ANBG George Brown Darwin Botanic Gardens
PO Box 496
PALMERSTON NT 0831
Ph:
Fax:
Email:
darwin.botgardens@nt.gov.au
Web Site:
Authority:
Established:
Area:
41 ha
Location: Geranium St, Stuart Park, Darwin Entry Fees: None Open: Monday to Sunday 24 hours Number of Paid Staff: Number of Volunteers: Planting Records: computer % of Plants Labelled: % Native Aust Plants: Threatened Plant Prog: none % of collection vouchered: Vouchers held at: Northern Territory Herbarium, Darwin (DNA) Public Access Herbarium: yes Special Collections: none Indoor Exhibition Space: yes Plant material available For public sale: no Exchange with other Gardens : seeds and plants To Research Institutions: seeds and plants Friends: Friends of the Darwin Botanic Gardens Inc PO Box 36435 Winnellie 0821 http://darwinfriends.zapto.org Return to: CHABG home page Directory index Updated August 15, 2005 Murray Fagg

92. DARWIN, SIR GEORGE HOWARD. SCIENTIFIC PAPERS. PSC Reprint.
darwin, SIR george HOWARD. SCIENTIFIC PAPERS 5 volumes. Cambridge, Ma., 19071916.Reprint. Journal reprint available from Periodicals Service Company (PSC)
http://www.periodicals.com/stock_e/d/ttl51305.html
Journal reprints, antiquarian backsets, back volumes and back issues from
Periodicals Service Company and Schmidt Periodicals GmbH
DARWIN, SIR GEORGE HOWARD. SCIENTIFIC PAPERS
5 volumes. Cambridge, Ma., 1907-1916. Reprint. Bound Complete set $ 400.-
Request a quotation for part sets, single volumes and issues of this title.
Available from:
Periodicals Service Company Schmidt Periodicals GmbH 11 Main Street
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93. George Eastman House Julia Margaret Cameron Series
Portrait of Charles darwin 3/4 face, bust, No. 1; nearly profile bust, No. Copyright © 2001 george Eastman House, Rochester, NY
http://www.geh.org/ne/mismi3/m197600200007_ful.html
Julia Margaret Cameron
George Eastman House
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Cameron, Julia Margaret
English (b. India, 1815-1879) TITLE ON OBJECT: Charles Darwin 1868 / Reprinted from copy negative of original print
PUBLISHER: (Autotype Company ?)
carbon print
27.5 x 20.6 cm.
Museum purchase
GEH NEG: 37383
BIBLIOGRAPHIC REFERENCES:
Cameron, Julia Margaret. Victorian Photographs of Famous Men and Fair Women. New York: Harcourt, Brace and Company, 1929. p. 124 (v).// Gernsheim, Helmut. Julia Margaret Cameron: Her Life and Photographic Work. Millerton, NY: Aperture, 1975. p. 124 (v).// GEH submitted this image, among others, to the Museum Education Site Licensing Project - Round 1, 1994.// INSCRIPTION: mat recto-(handwritten in ink) title, "from Mrs. Julia Margaret Cameron's negative", (handwritten in pencil) "543" mat verso-(handwritten in pencil) "This is not (underlined) an original Cameron. Modern print from her negative" SUBJECT: personage, scientist / Darwin, Charles

94. Manuscripts Catalogue
List of letters from Lord Kelvin to Sir george darwin. Given by Lady darwin inNovember Letter of introduction for george darwin, son of Charles darwin.
http://special.lib.gla.ac.uk/manuscripts/search/resultsn.cfm?NID=7941&RID=

95. Lecture: Dr. George Sim Johnston: The Death Of Darwinism
george Sim Johnston is a New York writer whose works appear frequently in He is the author of Did darwin Get it Right? Catholics and the Theory of
http://www.thomasaquinas.edu/news/newsletter/1999/fall/johnston.htm
Latest News Back to friends and visitors
Dr. George Sim Johnston
The Death of Darwinism
George Sim Johnston is a New York writer whose works appear frequently in such places as The Wall Street Journal, Crisis, and First Things. He is the author of "Did Darwin Get it Right?: Catholics and the Theory of Evolution." Following is our abridged version of an article published in the June, 1995 issue of Lay Witness, from which he gave his lecture to the College on April 16, 1999. Although it is seldom aired in public, there is a sharp debate among scientists today about almost every aspect of evolutionary theory. The controversy is not over evolution per se, but over the means by which it happened. The crux of the issue is not evolution, but teleology. ither life forms came about by blind chance or they did not. Darwin's theory of natural selection is the only one available which purports to explain how homo sapiens and other species are exclusively the result of natural forces. This is why the debate over Darwin's theory, and not evolution itself, is so important. It is Darwin's theory, moreover, and not another, which is taught in our schools. And the fact that most writing on the subject does not make the crucial distinction between "evolution" and "Darwinism" simply muddles the issue.

96. Darwin | Sir | George Howard | 1845-1912 | Mathematician And Astronomer
darwin Sir george Howard 18451912 mathematician and astronomer.Correspondence to Sir Archibald Geikie Sir george Howard darwin to Peter Martin
http://www.nahste.ac.uk/pers/d/GB_0237_NAHSTE_P1400/
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  • Correspondence to Sir Archibald Geikie: Sir George Howard Darwin to Peter Martin Duncan
  • 97. NAHSTE: Correspondence To Sir Archibald Geikie: Sir George Howard Darwin To Pete
    There are a few letters from both Sir george Howard darwin (18451912) and his darwin Sir george Howard 1845-1912 mathematician and astronomer
    http://www.nahste.ac.uk/cgi-bin/view_isad.pl?id=GB-0237-Sir-Archibald-Geikie-Gen

    98. RFI - - George Bush Contre Charles Darwin
    Protocle de Kyoto, alors la réponse américaine sera non» /I , a répété,
    http://www.rfi.fr/actufr/articles/067/edito_chro_37303.asp

    rfimusique

    rmc moyen-orient

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    rfi sofia
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    Capter RFI
    l'antenne Les ©missions a Toute l'actualit© Revues de presse Editos et chroniques Invit©s ... Football d ialoguer Le club RFI Le m©diateur Les forums Les chats ... Sondage RFI c'est vous l M FI L'agence de presse T alent+ Formation internationale votre service Offres d'emploi R FI Service de presse Dossier de presse (pdf) Le rapport annuel (pdf) Annual report (pdf) ... L'histoire a ide Plan du site Nous contacter Site map A Editorial international du 06/07/2005 George Bush contre Charles Darwin Richard Lab©vi¨re (Photo RFI) Si le plan d'action du G8 contre le r©chauffement climatique «ressemble au Protocle de Kyoto, alors la r©ponse am©ricaine sera non» , a r©p©t©, avant-hier, le pr©sident George Bush qualifiant le dit protocole «d'accord pouri pour l'©conomie am©ricaine». Et le conseiller du pr©sident pour la s©curit© Steeve Hadley ajoute encore que si la position de Washington est, maintenant d'admettre la r©alit© de ce r©chauffement, il n'est absolument pas question de signer le protocole de Kyoto. Certes, la d©claration finale du G8 de Gleneagles comportera quelques phrases pour reconna®tre que le r©chauffement climatique s'explique, en autres, par l'activit© humaine, mais sur le fond rien, absolument rien n'a boug©. Sign© en 1997 et ratifi© par 141 pays, le protocole de Kyoto est officiellement entr© en vigueur en f©vrier 2005. Son objectif: imposer   trente pays industrialis©s de r©duire de 5,2% leurs ©missions de gaz   effet de serre d'ici A 2012. Aujourd'hui l'objectif est loin, tr¨s loin d'ªtre atteint. Selon l'Onu, l'Europe n'a baiss© ses ©missions que de deux point et demi. Premier pays ©metteur de gaz   effet de serre, les Etats-Unis qui se sont retir©s du protocole en 2001, ont augment© leurs rejets de plus de 12%.

    99. The Political Graveyard: Index To Politicians: Peck
    Peck, Erasmus darwin (18081876) — of Ohio. Peck, george Washington (1818-1905) —also known as george W. Peck — of Livingston County, Mich.; Lansing,
    http://politicalgraveyard.com/bio/peck.html
    Questions? Return to The Political Graveyard main page
    Index to Politicians: Peck

    100. Project MUSE
    darwin s Plots Evolutionary Narrative in darwin, george Eliot and 2000);Catherine Gallagher on theories of culture, darwin, george Eliot,
    http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/victorian_poetry/v041/41.4kuduk.html
    How Do I Get This Article? Athens Login
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    This article is available through Project MUSE, an electronic journals collection made available to subscribing libraries NOTE: Please do NOT contact Project MUSE for a login and password. See How Do I Get This Article? for more information.
    Login: Password: Your browser must have cookies turned on Kuduk, Stephanie "Victorian Poetry as Victorian Studies"
    Victorian Poetry - Volume 41, Number 4, Winter 2003, pp. 513-518
    West Virginia University Press

    Excerpt
    It has become almost customary to begin discussions of Victorian poetry with a lament. Whether the occasion is formal or simply that of everyday conversation among colleagues, we tend to bemoan the low profile of the field, the misunderstandings and inadequate attention to which Victorian poets have been subjected, and the tyrannical dominance of the field's neighbors, Romantic and modern poetry and the Victorian novel. Victorian poetry itself, and its presence in every arena of Victorian culture and society, points the way forward. To say poetry permeated Victorian life is to insist upon a fact doubtless endorsed by most if not all the readers of this journal, but it also is to remind ourselves about the deep texture of the world we are engaged in trying to understand and describe. Claims about the autonomy of the aesthetic realm notwithstanding, we know that poetry and ideas about poetry were fundamental to the time. This is true not of canonical verse alone but of all poetry, canonical and forgotten, high and low, avant garde and conventional, hortatory and anti-didactic, philosophical and psychological. To recognize this is to see that the importance of Victorian poetry to...

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