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Virginia P. Dawson

Kirjat ja teokset yhdessä paikassa: 6 kirjaa, julkaisuja vuosilta 1987-2013, suosituimpien joukossa Nature's Enigma: The Problem of the Polyp in the Letters of Bonnet, Trembley and Reaumur, Memoirs, American Philosophical Society (Vol. 174). Vertaile teosten hintoja ja tarkista saatavuus suomalaisista kirjakaupoista.

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6 kirjaa

Kirjojen julkaisuhaarukka 1987-2013.

Ideas into Hardware

Ideas into Hardware

Virginia P. Dawson

BOOKS EXPRESS PUBLISHING
2004
sidottu
This document was generated for the NASA Glenn Research Center, in accordance with a Memorandum of Agreement among the Federal Aviation Administration, National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), The Ohio State Historic Preservation Officer, and the Advisory Council on Historic Preservation. The City of Cleveland's goal to expand the Cleveland Hopkins International Airport required the NASA Glenn Research Center's Rocket Engine Test Facility, located adjacent to the airport, to be removed before this expansion could be realized. To mitigate the removal of this registered National Historic Landmark, the National Park Service stipulated that the Rocket Engine Test Facility be documented to Level I standards of the Historic American Engineering Record (HAER). This history project was initiated to fulfill and supplement that requirement.
Nature's Enigma: The Problem of the Polyp in the Letters of Bonnet, Trembley and Reaumur, Memoirs, American Philosophical Society (Vol. 174)
Two striking discoveries made 1740 a turning point in the history of 18th-century biology. Charles Bonnet established that aphids could reproduce without male fertilization. Shortly afterwards Abraham Trembley proved that a tiny aquatic animal, the fresh water polyp, or hydra, could regenerate from cuttings like some plants. The discovery of the polyp was important because of the disturbing metaphysical issues that it raised. In their letters written during the decade of the 1740s to Reaumur, the great French Academician, both Trembley & Bonnet referred to the polyp as an enigma. Not only did it seem to present a new mode of animal reproduction, previously unsuspected, but it called into question the prevailing mechanistic view of animal biology & brought into focus the problem of animal soul. Drawing on some of the most illuminating letters from the private archives of the Trembley family, this study focuses on the discovery of the polyp, using the correspondence of Bonnet & Trembley to understand their common Genevan background & their possible differences in approach from that of Reaumur.