... knowledge of the class of bodies to which the particular specimen may belong. Not only are observations of any kind liable to certain fallacies arising out of the previous notions which the observer may entertain in regard to the constitution of the... The Microscope and its revelations - Page 154by William Benjamin Carpenter - 1856 - 778 pagesFull view - About this book
| Edward Bausch - Microscopes - 1897 - 212 pages
...the actions to which his attention is directed, but even the most practiced observer is apt to lake no note of such phenomena as his mind is not prepared to appreciate. Errors and imperfections of this kind can only be corrected, it is obvious, by general advance in scientific... | |
| Edward Bausch - Microscopes - 1897 - 212 pages
...objects or the nature of the actions to which his attention is directed, but even the most practiced observer is apt to take no note of such phenomena as his mind is not prepared to appreciate. Errors and imperfections of this kind can only be corrected, it is obvious, by general advance in scientific... | |
| Edward Bausch - Microscopes - 1897 - 214 pages
...previous notions which the observer may entertain in regard to the constitution of the objects or the nature of the actions to which his attention is directed, but even the most practiced observer is apt to lake no note of such phenomena as his mind is not prepared to appreciate.... | |
| Simon Henry Gage - Histology - 1899 - 272 pages
...previous notions which the observer may entertain in regard to the constitution of the objects or the nature of the actions to which his attention is directed, but even the most practiced observer is apt to take no note of such phenomena as his mind is not prepared to appreciate.... | |
| Simon Henry Gage - Microscopes - 1901 - 324 pages
...previous notions which the observer may entertain in regard to the constitution of the objects or the nature of the actions to which his attention is directed, but even the most practiced observer is apt to take no note of such phenomena as his mind is not prepared to appreciate.... | |
| Simon Henry Gage - Microscope and Microscopy - 1917 - 492 pages
...previous notions which the observer may entertain in regard to the constitution of the objects or the nature of the actions to which his attention is directed,...phenomena as his mind is not prepared to appreciate. Errors and imperfections of this kind can only be corrected, it is obvious, by general advance in scientific... | |
| Simon Henry Gage - Histology - 1920 - 504 pages
...previous notions which the observer may entertain in regard to the constitution of the objects or the nature of the actions to which his attention is directed,...phenomena as his mind is not prepared to appreciate. Errors and imperfections of this kind can only be corrected, it is obvious, by general advance in scientific... | |
| Simon Henry Gage - Histology - 1925 - 568 pages
...previous notions which the observer may entertain in regard to the constitution of the objects or the nature of the actions to which his attention is directed,...phenomena as his mind is not prepared to appreciate. Errors and imperfections of this kind can only be corrected, it is obvious, by general advance in scientific... | |
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