Life may be something not only ultra-terrestrial, but even immaterial, something outside our present categories of matter and energy ; as real as they are but different, and utilizing them for its own purpose. What is certain is that life possesses the... Elementary Theosophy - หน้า 104โดย Louis William Rogers - 1917 - 214 หน้ามุมมองทั้งเล่ม - เกี่ยวกับหนังสือเล่มนี้
| Sir Oliver Lodge - 1905 - 200 หน้า
...the power of vitalising the complex material aggregates which exist on this planet, and of utilising their energies for a time to display itself amid terrestrial...body moves about and strives after many objects, some worthy, some unworthy ; it acquires thereby a certain individuality, a certain character. It may realise... | |
| Sir Oliver Lodge - 1906 - 294 หน้า
...the power of vitalising the complex material aggregates which exist on this planet, and of utilising their energies for a time to display itself amid terrestrial...body moves about and strives after many objects, some worthy, some unworthy ; it acquires thereby a certain individuality, a certain character. It may realise... | |
| Andrew Allan - 1907 - 252 หน้า
...the power of vitalising the complex material aggregates which exist on this planet, and of utilising their energies for a time to display itself amid terrestrial...perpetually arriving and perpetually disappearing.' We have been accustomed to believe that life resided only in the animal body, and that when it departed... | |
| Charles London Arnold - 1907 - 316 หน้า
...they are but different, and utilizing them for its own purpose. What is certain is that life possesses power of vitalizing the complex material aggregates...utilizing their energies for a time to display itself amid material surroundings, and it seems to disappear or evaporate whence it came. It is perpetually arriving... | |
| L.W. Rogers - 1923 - 294 หน้า
...volume on Life and Matter this distinguished scientist says: "What is certain is that life posseses the power of vitalizing the complex material aggregates...body moves about and strives after many objects, some worthy, some unworthy; it acquires thereby a certain individuality, a certain character. It may realize... | |
| |