382:, the pre-empting of a feature that evolved for some other reason, such as the use of feathers, which evolved for thermal insulation, for flying. Otherwise, the feathers would present a problem, as they could only evolve in animals that already fly. There is, however, no clear pre-adaptive function of rationality. The differences between human and animal rationality or irrationality are still being experimentally defined, a topic not covered by Barnett. His sequel to the human story in ‘’The Epic of Man’’ concentrates on anatomical development. He presumes, following anthropological tradition, that the growing skills of man are linked to the increase in brain size (a presumption often questioned and still not proved). The documentation of these skills, rather than any theory of wonder or rationality, is his main concern in that series.
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268:, the perceptible form of rationality is an act, an "accomplished fact", as opposed to a mere potency, or "possibility" hidden within something else. Some acts, however, retain something of potency about them. These are called active potencies. Those who seek fame and gain in Pythagoras are no doubt rational, and do wonder, but they choose not to pursue philosophic investigation, which is as yet only a possibility within them. Since wonder and rationality are the same type of object and serve the same purpose of being the specific difference of man, one might suspect that they are to some degree the same thing. Philosophy is a rational undertaking and wonder, the source of philosophy, must be under the same umbrella.
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716:. For example, each part includes such an independent quotation just below the title, as is often the practice in scientific works. Concerning the few Biblical quotes, one reader remarked that the "text was written as if the clergy were looking over Mr. Barnett's shoulder and crossing out anything that might be in conflict with the story of Adam and Eve". Whether the statement is to be judged true is a matter of opinion. Certainly, the Bible is not used as justification for any hypothesis in the entire work, which, unlike the Bible, portrays the evolution of the natural world in every part.
924:. The article format is the same: text by Barnett illustrated by many of the same artists and photographers. Panoramic fold-outs depict the ancient tribesmen carrying out their reconstructed cultural activities. These latter were duly compared to the activities of select modern tribesmen of the times. Ironically those ways were permanently altered by the exposure. The 1950s were times of great archaeological changes also, due to the multiplication of sites and discoveries. The magazine series finally presents the ancestors of modern Europe (
1038:. When it appeared in 1961 it was considerably different from the magazine articles. The WorldCat citation for APA lists Barnett as the author along with Time Life. The printed version ignores Barnett, citing the Editors of LIFE as the author and Time Incorporated as the publisher. The book itself is divided into 16 parts, not 10. China, the Maya, and the Incas have been added, as well as new material on
346:"a convoluted mass of soft tissue which enables him to perceive the world around him with unique acuity and respond to stimuli with a subtlety and self-consciousness that sets him apart from all other living things. It invests him, moreover, with a power which no other creature ever possessed – the power to modify the environment, to govern and alter the very course of evolution ...."
685:"Indeed, it is probable that the mammals may have survived and succeeded to hegemony of the earth not in spite of but by reason of their very weakness and obscurity, their smallness in a world dominated by giants, their nakedness in a world of armor plate -- in particular, by their fear and sensitivity and awareness in a world of unperceiving, insensate, brainless brutes."
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558:, showed the same desert scene by day and by night. A perfectionist, Wilson worked slowly and included as much detail as possible in the panoramas. He was unable to finish by the deadline, and some animals were painted by Robert Gartland. Both paintings were presented to the Peabody Museum in 1976 by Wilson's nephews.
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Appealing to the public in general, rather than to any select scientific audience, his text can be criticized of being florid, sometimes to a ludicrous degree. As one reader put it, " Enjoyed "Creatures of the Sea" most of all because of the way
Lincoln Barnett slings the King's English around. While
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Some minor schematic diagrams were cut to better fit the format of the book. Some of
Chesley Bonestell's art, notably the painting illustrating the end of the Earth, were removed, possibly because they were seen as dated by then. Jane Werner Watson's edition for young readers cropped many pictures or
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X. The Arctic
Barrens - published Jun 7, 1954. Life on the cold tundra was described in this installment, with a gatefold showing the seasonal transitions of the tundra. LIFE photographer Fritz Goro and reporter Jim Goode camped on the tundra for some seven weeks to obtain all the photos they needed,
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by the hundreds lie scattered along the evolutionary path from then to now. There is a gradation, suggesting that rationality did develop gradually. It was the anthropologists of the 20th century who began to propose that the specific difference of man is only one or some subdivisions of rationality
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were frequent, as well as individual scientific articles on various expeditions and wildlife. Barnett played no part in these, as he was not a regular employee of the magazine. One of its reporters in World War II, he had resigned in 1946 to pursue a career as an independent writer. He did his major
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spanned 50 feet from nose to tail and carried his terrible head 18 to 20 feet above the ground. His hind legs were superbly muscled, from his thick thighs down to his three-toed, cruelly taloned feet. His main weapon of attack was his murderous mouth which had a gape of incredible size and was armed
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Lincoln
Barnett's style is populist rather than mathematical. Totally absent are the calculations and traditional proofs of geology and the other natural sciences. He does repeat or summarize some statistics derived from those sciences of the times, without much reference to the sources. His work is
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III. The Face Of the Land - published Apr. 15, 1953 Surface geology was the focus of the third part, which provided overviews of mountain formation and erosion. The geological formation of the New York area was included as a sample history. The gatefold showed forces of uplift in a bare landscape on
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When all is said and done about rationality, we are left with the problem of finding a complex that is minimally present in some form in animals but gradually grows more complex in humans until it accounts for their great success and power . Apparently, rationality would seem to be a pre-condition
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while a poor student at Yale. His working original was painted first on a 10-foot roll of rag paper. The mural made his career. In 1953, Zallinger, then a famous artist and permanent employee of the Museum, was asked to paint some illustrations for fold-outs in the LIFE Magazine series. He used the
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II. The
Miracle Of the Sea - published Feb. 9, 1953. The second part of the series discussed the geology and geography of the ocean, its, and its effect on coastlines. The first to include a gatefold, it featured a panoramic geological cross-section of the Atlantic and Pacific coastlines of North
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was introduced to LIFE's readership as "the greatest series of science stories we have ever produced". It promised a "unified, understandable picture story of the planet Earth" authored by
Lincoln Barnett, "one of the most literate authors in the field of science". The series itself started two
256:“Rationality” and “Wonder” are not necessarily mutually contradictory if both are regarded as potencies, or the powers to produce human behavior; that is, all humans have the power to act rationally or experience wonder, but they may not necessarily actually do so. Pythagoras said (reportedly):
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After publishing part XII on
Mettler's Woods, LIFE received mail from the Citizens' Committee for the Preservation of Mettler's Woods, which congratulated them for the article and encouraged readers to help save the forest from destruction. Eventually, a letter from the Committee was published
1013:, moved in 1961 to restructure his holdings. LIFE Magazine was less successful, but Time Books was very successful. Luce took the advice of a new employee, Jerome (Jerry) Hardy, who had recently come to Time, Inc. from another publishing house. In 1959 he had launched a series of books,
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s article "not only stimulated several hundred persons to contribute to the fund to save one of the last primeval
American forests, but encouraged the United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners of America to contribute $ 75,000 in memory of W. L. Hutcheson". The forest was renamed the
863:, with its several incarnations, successfully brought the intricacies of science to the baby boom generation. By the time the book version was being published, endorsements were printed by notable people, including paleontologist Roy Chapman Andrews, filmmaker Walt Disney, and Admiral
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issues later. Each part was assigned to a reporter, who was granted eight months to research the subject, organize the data, and oversee the photography and artwork. This opportunity to travel, learn, and explore on company expense was known informally as a "Luce fellowship".
1614:, Vol. 33, No. 23. NOTE: Article in the original issue is at pages 85-103; 19 total), only the last 15 (89 to 103) pages are available (first few pages , which may include some ads, seem to be missing) - however - an image of the first page (page 85) of Part I is at =>
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In 1959, the handwriting appeared on the wall, so to speak, for LIFE Magazine. Circulation began to fall, due to competition with television, and fell even further in 1960. Barnett forged ahead with the book form of the Darwin series, returning to the title and concept of
362:. Amidst doubts about how successful rationality is as a strategy over geologic time, the theorists were finding increasing difficulty in defining it and discovering when it began. Each subdivision of rationality developed its counterpart in animal behavior studies:
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of Dutch Guiana was covered in part XI, with photos and several double-page spreads and a gatefold painted by
Zallinger illustrating life in the forest. Zallinger, photographer Alfred Eisenstaedt, and reporter David Bergamini spent two months in Surinam gathering
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Whether of rationality or of wonder, Barnett’s definitions offer a logical problem: man becomes different from the animals because of wonder, but wonder is the difference. Some animal therefore must have wondered. The problem, however, belongs to the concept of
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and ended up spending two weeks, a fact Ewing remembered years later. She also had the idea of representing the seafloor in panoramic view, and drafted the concept on a scotch-taped "giant toilet paper roll" of paper 85 feet long. The final artwork was done by
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removed them altogether; for instance, the
Paleocene landscape was removed, while the eroded geological panorama was relegated to the endpapers. This led to some odd situations, with some captions referring to animals that were cropped out of the picture.
1042:. Many of the parts correspond to the previous LIFE articles, but the names have been changed, and the material has been rewritten. Barnett has been listed as Senior Writer, and 9 other writers have been added, but none of the parts are signed.
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universe. At the time of publication, his parts were up-to-date with contemporary theories on the natural world, but major scientific breakthroughs in astronomy, geology, and biology date the series. For instance, the sections on geology assume
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VII. Creatures Of the Sea - published Nov 30, 1953 After the physical properties of the ocean in part II, part VII introduced the organisms living in it. The gatefold showed the diversity of marine life on one side, and benthic organisms on the
1063:. The 25th volume is a series index. Barnett, however, does not appear in any of the 25, or in any other series. He has moved on to other books. In his place Time Life has recruited other notable writers and scientists in their fields, such as
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XIII. The Starry Universe - published Dec 20, 1954 Part XIII closed the series on a suitably grand scale, with Bonestell's art depicting the stars and planets. The gatefold showed a scale depiction of the solar system on one side, and the
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229:, or reasoning, had defined reason, or rationality, as the ability to apply logic. Furthermore, he asserted, it is the one property that distinguishes man from the other animals. Centuries later, in a study of one of Aristotle’s works,
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VI. The Age Of Mammals - published Oct 19, 1953 Zallinger was commissioned to produce another panoramic mural, this time showcasing the evolution of mammals in North America across the Cenozoic, from small Paleocene animals to the
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Still, among the scientists, the purple prose does its job of conveying awe at the natural world. Paleontologist George Olshevsky described Lincoln Barnett's text as having "the grandeur of the universe contained in every word".
916:, in ten parts (all signed by Barnett) beginning with the November 7, 1955 issue, and ending with the May 6, 1957, issue. It focused on the development and history of human civilization, material that is usually covered under
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V. The Pageant Of Life - published Sept. 7, 1953 After a discussion of evolution, the history of life on Earth is recounted, starting with single-celled organisms and ending with the demise of the dinosaurs. For the gatefold,
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book’ rewrote and re-edited much of the magazine material. The first edition appeared in 1960 under the banner of Time, Inc., and was soon followed by others, including a special edition for young people by
276:, rather than to Barnett. The record of the rocks presents a stepped sequence of species already complete, but the concept of evolution requires continuous change. The transitions between steps are missing.
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of the next generation elucidate further that wonder is a perplexity eliciting feelings of ignorance. Barnett’s next assertion departs somewhat from the classical tradition. He supposes that wonder is the
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of 1957-1958 was duly planned and was duly reported in advance by a single article in LIFE Magazine. Data collected during this international research undertaking unexpectedly proved and resurrected
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such as the desert, rainforest, and woodland, which depend on more immediate observation, are still more or less accurate as far as they go, which today is more limited in reach. They reflect the
771:. Writing in the mid-20th century, he was well aware of this development. He copes briefly with Einstein in the last few pages of the last part as a special topic, but for the most part modern
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mentions Zallinger's dinosaurs as the spark that ignited his passion for prehistory; ironically, Bakker himself would later argue against Zallinger's rendition. George Olshevsky also cites
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Nobel Prizer Sir Winston Churchill had an easier subject, he can't hold a candle to this guy Barnett". The rationale for mammalian dominance of the Earth from Ch. VI is only one example.
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XII. The Woods Of Home - published Nov 8, 1954 Terrain more familiar to LIFE's readers was discussed here, as the effects of the seasons are observed in the changing woods. Artwork by
354:“Of the more than one million species of animals on earth man is capable of killing all but a few without recourse to the weapons he ingeniously contrives for his own destruction.”
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From 1961 on, Time Life produced hundreds of books in dozens of series, typically about 20 books a series. The one that most closely emulates Barnett’s interest is perhaps the
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VIII. The Coral Reef - published Feb 8, 1954. Types of coral reef, different species of coral, and the colorful denizens of the Great Barrier reef were present in this part.
474:, the first installment of the series covered the formation of the Earth, its composition, and its eventual demise. Contemporary principles of geology were also introduced.
1164:. Pythagoras, reports Diogenes, hypothesized a three-part soul: intelligence, reason, and passion. He attributed two also to animals, but only reason exclusively to man.
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Finally, apparently as part of Barnett's effort to interest a wide audience, the text features quotations from non-scientific literature, including the Judaeo-Christian
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between men and animals, which in evolution "caused him to leave behind the animal forbears from which he sprang." From it "the questioning spirit of man was born."
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867:. The "Letters to the Editors" page frequently featured glowing reviews of the series, as well as letters from creationists that either embraced or rejected it.
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defines "will" as an active rational potency, as opposed to "nature," an active irrational potency, which is what animals would have in Porphyry’s system. See
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with moderate success. In consultation with the LIFE editorial staff he proposed a new division that would publish series of books on specific topics. In 1961
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In those years great changes were being reported by LIFE, which seemed to be obsoleting the series articles as fast as they could be written. For example, the
993:. Darwin seemed to him to be the true heir to classical science, investigating, like Aristotle and his students, the puzzling circumstances of nature. Unlike
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is neglected. There is no force of gravity in the relativistic universe; however, it is acceptable to use the language of gravity with relativistic meanings.
740:. This dichotomy of theory developed in the 20th century and continues today. Faced with it, Barnett chose the more classical theories for his presentation.
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703:, the mightiest and most fearsome flesh-eater that ever terrorized the land. A towering agent of destruction, endowed with gigantic strength and power,
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a selective summarization of some of the major scientific theories about "the world we live in," greatly enhanced by prize-winning art and photography.
342:. Barnett indulges in this sort of speculation himself at the end of the part on mammals, anatomically selecting the human brain (Part VI, LIFE p 109):
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There is also marked personification and some bias. Large prehistoric mammals, for instance, are variously described as being "awkward" or "witless".
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IV. The Canopy Of Air - published Jun. 8, 1953. Part 4 was the only issue not to be featured on the cover of LIFE; instead, the cover story was on
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spanned a diverse range of topics concerning planet Earth and universe, and employed the talents of artists and photographers, including cameramen
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This expression of unease about the outcome of the wonder story long after Barnett’s death would become shrill cries of warning concerning the
928:) and then ends abruptly, without a book edition for the time being. Notably missing from the series are the Far East and the Americas, where
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from December 8, 1952, to December 20, 1954. A science series, it comprised 13 parts published on an average of every eight weeks. Written by
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The passage expresses a studied optimism, but, in the middle of the 2oth century, there is a certain degree of prophetic hypocrisy about it:
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depicted animals of forest and pond, as well as insects of the ground and the trees. The photographs were taken in Mettler's Woods, now the
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recapped the definition of man as a mortal, rational, sensible, animate substance, which survived as the main definition into modern times.
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Time Life was able to restore and improve many dropped projects from the archives of LIFE. One of the first was the single book based on
536:. The mural was eventually revised dramatically for the Peabody Museum, with several animals (such as the mammoth) revamped completely.
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as introducing him to science, and adds that he suggested authoring an updated version; however, LIFE's editors were not interested.
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in book form is a not-to-be-missed opportunity for any family—old or young, it's a wonderful and exciting adventure in learning."
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Barnett’s first few pages of the first part expound his philosophy of natural history. It begins in the classical tradition with
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ought to be in book form. It is extraordinarily well done, comprehensive and at the same time comprehendible—a great thing."
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was created under Hardy’s management. It joined the scientific research assets of LIFE with the book publishing assets of
760:. The paleontological parts (V and VI) are especially dated, considering the speed of new discoveries in the field and the
550:, part IX explained the vicissitudes of life in the desert and the adaptations of desert animals. The gatefold, painted by
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The frontier of research had already dissociated itself from the Newtonian universe in Barnett's time, in favor of the
1270:," hence psychology, "the study of the soul" is to be translated as "the study of the mind." Animals thus have minds.
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announcing that they had "raised to funds to purchase and study these woods and adjoining woodlands", adding that
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America. The part was given to science reporter Nancy Genet, who requested "a couple of hours" with oceanographer
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for the development of rationality. The paradox is nothing new to evolutionary problems. The answer is generally
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some 24 volumes of Natural History, 1961-1965, each expanding and updating some article or part of an article of
980:, the foundation of today's plate tectonics in geology, yet the magazine mentions it no further. Articles on the
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of the time. Neither Barnett nor any other writer had any hint of the massive changes to the biomes caused by
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260:"in life, some grow up with servile natures, greedy for fame and gain, but the philosopher seeks for truth."
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name only appears in the first issue. In that issue also and in all subsequent issues the name is
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that states a Knowledge editor's personal feelings or presents an original argument about a topic.
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https://cdn.shopify.com/s/files/1/2990/2012/products/fullsizeoutput_8950_600x.jpg
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2007:, Vol. 56, No. 4, p. 74. The original was published in 1962 by Barnett and Time.
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A popular explanation of this now esoteric branch of philosophy can be found at
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writing for LIFE as an independent contractor, bringing the art staff with him.
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featured clouds, air currents, chemical cycles, and other atmospheric phenomena.
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one side, and the same landscape after the effects of erosion on the other side.
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943:. From the June 30, 1958 to the October 19, 1959 issues, an eight-part series,
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1377:. Twentieth World Congress of Philosophy. Boston: The Paideia Project On-Line.
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The Possibility of Free Will: John Duns Scotus and William James on the Will
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1031:. The magazine would now decline, but Time Life would rise to new heights.
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and that the animals have a share in others. The main suggestions have been
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was released in book form in 1955, abridged in 1956 for younger readers by
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Their existence was proved subsequently. After the chemical structure of
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1955:, Vol. 38, No. 19, p. 157. Note that LIFE Magazine was a subsidiary of
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4.9 m × 34 m (16 ft × 110 ft)
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are beyond his chosen classical subject matter. For example, Newton's
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was Zallinger's preliminary, detailed study. The actual mural in the
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205:(Part I, LIFE p 85), a conventional motivation known as early as the
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This advertisement of the Kroger display version appeared in 1964: "
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1160:, Book VIII, paragraphs 30-34, reports that Aristotle wrote a book,
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Now, he who is perplexed and wonders believes himself to be ignorant
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and was published in 1953, the ability to reconstruct parts of the
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Representative survey of the natural history of the age of dinosaurs
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layer, narrowly placed in abeyance by world collaborative action.
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The Universe and Dr. Einstein, with a Foreword by Albert Einstein
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was also the basis for a science series by the German comic book
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IX. The Land Of The Sun - published Apr 5, 1954 Focusing on the
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1150:. He was probably not the first to arrive at this difference.
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606:, and re-released in a three-volume "Family Edition" in 1962.
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I. The Earth Is Born - published Dec. 8, 1952. Illustrated by
295:, or genetic map of a species, ensued. The resulting field of
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Girl wondering at a bird. Tête d'Etude l'Oiseau, by Bouguereau
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An Einstein expert and popularizer, he had already published
697:"The apogee of development was attained with the creation of
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personal reflection, personal essay, or argumentative essay
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https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.117.3045.509.a
1390:"A Pragmatist View of Rationality and Cultural Difference"
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Science series that ran in Life magazine from 1952 to 1954
225:(and students), author of the earliest surviving work on
2019:
The World We Live In Special Edition For Younger Readers
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Time is also often cited as the publisher of the series.
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https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.117.3045.510
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Animal communication, animal minds, and animal language
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1961:
The Editorial Staff of Life; Barnett, Lincoln (1955).
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XI. The Rain Forest - published Sep 20, 1954 The lush
2249:"The Rise and Fall of Time Life Books (2,310 words)"
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The World We Live In: Part II The Miracle Of The Sea
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compares genetic sequences to produce more accurate
2119:Barnett, Lincoln Kinnear; Einstein, Albert (1948).
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The World We Live In: Part XIII The Starry Universe
1783:
The World We Live In: Part VII Creatures of the Sea
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The World We Live In: Part III The Face Of The Land
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Introduction to the logical categories of Aristotle
932:is now known to have been innovated independently.
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562:and by the end were reduced to living on macaroni.
1821:The World We Live In: Part IX The Land Of The Sun
935:After helping to produce the various editions of
2070:The World We Live In: Part V The Pageant Of Life
1912:The World We Live In: Part XII The Woods Of Home
1745:The World We Live In: Part V The Pageant Of Life
1494:Seed, Amanda; Byrne, Richard (7 December 2010).
1262:. Traditionally the specific active potency is "
693:in Ch. V does not escape this treatment either.
1840:The World We Live In: Part X The Arctic Barrens
1726:The World We Live In: Part IV The Canopy Of Air
2017:Watson, Jane Werner; Barnett, Lincoln (1956).
1802:The World We Live In: Part VIII The Coral Reef
1607:The World We Live In: Part I The Earth Is Born
241:(only to then vainly reject its usage), while
2266:Barnett, L.; Time-Life International (1961).
1876:The World We Live In: Part XI The Rain Forest
264:But in traditional philosophy; specifically,
221:Tradition had gone in a different direction.
8:
2051:The World We Live In: Part VI Age Of Mammals
1764:The World We Live In: Part VI Age Of Mammals
1564:Announcing The Greatest Life Science Series
1430:Laland, Kevin N.; Janik, Vincent M. (2006).
1237:(MA). Texas A&M University. p. 13.
598:After its successful run at LIFE magazine,
2184:"Letters to the Editors". (Jun. 20, 1955)
1403:(1). University of Hawaii Press: 581–596.
1228:"Chapter II: John Duns Scotus on the Will"
787:prevails, but its equivalent relativistic
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1174:Porphyry. "Chapter III – of Difference".
939:, Barnett went back to his true passion,
806:, such as the rapid melting of the polar
664:Learn how and when to remove this message
315:. The last common ancestor is dated to 6
2107:Re: First Book for Smart Dino Enthusiast
1055:. For example, parallel to the article,
514:mural was used; however, the version in
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1374:The Classical Conception Of Rationality
1323:"The cognitive bases of human tool use"
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1009:Time’s principal owner and co-founder,
810:, the bleaching of most of the world's
708:with rows of six-inch saberlike teeth."
311:. Man’s closest living relative is the
2123:. New York: William Sloane Associates.
2021:. Golden Books (USA) and Collins (GB).
1978:Announcing the New Special Edition of
180:which showed two sides of a scenario.
814:, and the threat to the atmosphere's
7:
556:American Museum of Natural History
35:Zallinger was asked to paint this
14:
2228:Barnett, Lincoln Kinnear (1960).
122:Peabody Museum of Natural History
44:Peabody Museum of Natural History
1544:(Bachelor’s). University of Lund
622:
441:
420:
394:
2001:Now in a Special Family Edition
1439:Trends in Ecology and Evolution
360:human impact on the environment
2270:. New York: Time Incorporated.
1965:. New York: Time Incorporated.
1858:Life Sent Expedition To Tundra
1650:10.1126/science.117.3045.509.a
970:International Geophysical Year
1:
2247:Hatch, Denny (June 1, 2001).
1496:"Animal Tool-Use: Minireview"
1330:Behavioral and Brain Sciences
1299:10.1525/aa.1949.51.3.02a00010
743:Barnett primarily offers the
303:than were possible with only
266:The Theory of Act and Potency
2232:The wonders of life on earth
2077:, Vol. 35, No. 10, pp. 68-69
1632:"The Earth Is Born - Letter"
1432:"The animal cultures debate"
1280:de Laguna, Grace A. (1949).
991:The Wonders of Life on Earth
946:The Wonders of Life on Earth
189:Wonder, rationality, and man
47:original for this mural for
2211:The World Studies the World
1980:Life's The World we Live In
1586:Hamblin, Dora Jane (1977).
1538:Johansson, Sverker (2001).
1140:Aristotle (1999). "1098a".
1103:philosophy begins in wonder
1017:, containing extracts from
522:is significantly different.
2346:
1959:The book is thus cited as
1451:10.1016/j.tree.2006.06.005
949:traces the development of
750:geophysical global cooling
49:The Great Age of Dinosaurs
2198:Die Welt in der wir leben
2158:, Vol. 38, No. 19, p. 159
2141:, Vol. 38, No. 19, p. 157
2058:, Vol. 35, No. 16, p. 109
1900:, Vol. 37, No. 11, p. 177
1864:, Vol. 36, No. 23, p. 116
1573:, Vol. 33, No. 21, p. 129
1516:10.1016/j.cub.2010.09.042
1342:10.1017/S0140525X11001452
1282:"Culture and Rationality"
1209:New Catholic Encyclopedia
1192:, Book VIII, paragraph 8.
878:Hutcheson Memorial Forest
579:Hutcheson Memorial Forest
148:appeared in the pages of
42:in the Great Hall of the
28:
2188:, Vol. 38, No. 25, p. 14
2175:, Vol. 37, No. 22, p. 12
2094:, Vol. 35, No. 19, p. 11
1397:Philosophy East and West
1371:Walczak, Monika (1998).
1226:Burke, C.M. (May 2005).
963:Darwin’s World of Nature
910:was followed closely by
794:The sections on various
2039:, Vol. 35, No. 25, p. 1
1987:, Vol. 41, No. 20, p. 5
1669:NOTE: Two-Page Letter:
1388:Rorty, Richard (1992).
1286:American Anthropologist
51:illustration in Part V.
2236:. New York: Time, Inc.
2169:Letters to the Editors
2088:Letters to the Editors
2033:Letters to the Editors
1321:Vaesen, Krist (2012).
1211:. The Gale Group, Inc.
858:
841:
710:
687:
644:by rewriting it in an
356:
348:
198:
126:New Haven, Connecticut
2152:An Extraordinary Book
2135:An Extraordinary Book
1949:An Extraordinary Book
1203:Clarke, W.N. (2003).
1040:Cultural Anthropology
918:Physical Anthropology
893:The World We Live In
842:
825:
695:
683:
500:The Canopy Of The Air
352:
344:
196:
97:Panorama through time
2311:(December 20, 1954).
2296:(September 7, 1953).
1999:The World We Live In
1963:The World We Live In
1894:In Next Week's Issue
1566:The World We Live In
1069:Francis Clark Howell
1053:The World We Live In
995:The World We Live in
937:The World We Live In
908:The World We Live In
889:The World We Live In
861:The World We Live In
846:The World We Live In
829:The World We Live In
762:Dinosaur Renaissance
730:The World we Live In
600:The World we Live in
516:The World We Live In
463:The World We Live In
323:Intermediate fossils
309:transitional fossils
184:Barnett’s philosophy
158:The World We Live In
145:The World We Live In
61:Rudolph F. Zallinger
2301:The Starry Universe
2286:The Pageant of Life
2208:Scherschell, Frank
2171:". (Nov. 29, 1954)
1594:. New York: Norton.
1509:(23): R1032–R1039.
1188:Diogenes Laertius,
1162:On the Pythagoreans
1048:Life Nature Library
837:Roy Chapman Andrews
455:(December 20, 1954)
450:The Starry Universe
434:(September 7, 1953)
429:The Pageant of Life
368:tool use by animals
305:comparative anatomy
216:specific difference
23:The Age of Reptiles
2073:" (Sept. 7, 1953)
2035:". (Dec 21, 1953)
2003:". (Jan 24, 1964)
1983:". (Nov 12, 1956)
1896:". (Sep 13, 1954)
1748:" (Sept. 7, 1953)
1710:" (Apr. 15, 1953)
1569:". (Nov 24, 1952)
1144:Nicomachean Ethics
1057:The Age of Mammals
646:encyclopedic style
633:is written like a
604:Jane Werner Watson
575:Walter Linsenmaier
552:James Perry Wilson
413:(December 8, 1952)
301:phylogenetic trees
287:was deciphered by
253:, "man the wise."
199:
162:Alfred Eisenstaedt
2330:Magazine articles
2154:". (May 9, 1955)
2137:". (May 9, 1955)
2090:". (Nov 9, 1953)
2054:" (Oct 19, 1953)
1951:". (May 9, 1955)
1938:, Vol. 37, No. 25
1919:, Vol. 37, No. 19
1883:, Vol. 37, No. 12
1879:" (Sep 20, 1954)
1847:, Vol. 36, No. 23
1828:, Vol. 36, No. 14
1790:, Vol. 35, No. 22
1786:" (Nov 30, 1953)
1771:, Vol. 35, No. 16
1767:" (Oct 19, 1953)
1752:, Vol. 35, No. 10
1733:, Vol. 34, No. 23
1729:" (Jun. 8, 1953)
1714:, Vol. 34, No. 15
1691:" (Feb. 9, 1953)
1644:(3045): 509–510.
1610:" (Dec. 8, 1952)
1590:That Was The Life
1152:Diogenes Laërtius
978:continental drift
789:curved space-time
777:quantum mechanics
738:classical physics
700:Tyrannosaurus rex
691:Tyrannosaurus rex
674:
673:
666:
567:Amazon rainforest
508:Rudolph Zallinger
472:Chesley Bonestell
386:Magazine articles
237:simplified it to
174:Chesley Bonestell
170:Rudolph Zallinger
141:
140:
2337:
2272:
2271:
2263:
2257:
2256:
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2219:
2218:, Vol. 43, No. 3
2214:(July 15, 1957)
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2014:
2008:
1994:
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1968:
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1939:
1926:
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1915:" (Nov 8, 1954)
1907:
1901:
1890:
1884:
1871:
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1860:" (Jun 7, 1954)
1854:
1848:
1843:" (Jun 7, 1954)
1835:
1829:
1824:" (Apr 5, 1954)
1816:
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1809:, Vol. 36, No. 6
1805:" (Feb 8, 1954)
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1469:. Archived from
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1245:. Archived from
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1125:
1118:(1960). "982b".
1112:
1106:
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1004:The Golden Press
781:particle physics
724:Factual accuracy
669:
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289:Watson and Crick
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2325:Life (magazine)
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2268:The epic of man
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1934:(Dec 20, 1954)
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1660:
1630:(May 8, 1953).
1628:Urey, Harold C.
1626:
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1603:
1599:
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1577:
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1532:
1503:Current Biology
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1409:10.2307/1399670
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1086:
1081:
1059:, is the book,
941:natural History
913:The Epic of Man
905:
883:Paleontologist
865:Richard E. Byrd
824:
779:, and advanced
754:plate tectonics
726:
670:
659:
653:
650:
642:help improve it
639:
627:
623:
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596:
512:Age of Reptiles
460:
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437:
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372:animal language
239:rational animal
191:
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154:Lincoln Barnett
136:Yale University
73:
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52:
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12:
11:
5:
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2279:External links
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974:Alfred Wegener
953:’s Theory of
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