SPECIATES.................1 (0.000%)
burden of the very trait that speciates it, 71234 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 2: THE SEARCH FOR LOST INSTINCT : INSTINCT IN MAN AND ANIMAL
 
 SPECIATION................23 (0.003%)
maintain nowadays that the conditions for speciation have always been the same. 47333 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
and seems to be concerned with speciation in a pattern of larger systematic units which was laid down in the more or less remote past, 47356 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
as the source of genesis and speciation, 47365 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
equilibrium model" of macroevolution, argues that speciation is a "geologically instantaneous phenomenon."49487 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VII: DIMENSIONS OF QUANTAVOLUTION: Chapter 30 Intensity, Scope and Suddenness -
the numbers. Further, in biological development speciation is much less important than major changes, 54939 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 2: DESTRUCTION OF THE SOLAR BINARY: Chapter 12: QUANTAVOLUTION OF THE BIOSPHERE: HOMO SAPIENS -
natural change has probably ceased. Much speciation will probably come under human control, 54942 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 2: DESTRUCTION OF THE SOLAR BINARY: Chapter 12: QUANTAVOLUTION OF THE BIOSPHERE: HOMO SAPIENS -
and other groups. In the Cenozoic, "speciation was rampant, 54990 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 2: DESTRUCTION OF THE SOLAR BINARY: Chapter 12: QUANTAVOLUTION OF THE BIOSPHERE: HOMO SAPIENS -
Tinkle, Donald W. (1974), "Species and Speciation" in Ency. 60141 SOLARIA-BINARIA: - - - BIBILIOGRAPHY -
might say the same of all speciation, 61065 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : NATURAL SELECTION
Adaptiveness is brought about by selection. Speciation, 63052 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : MUTATION
construed) as the factor bringing about speciation from hominid to man. 63084 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : MUTATION
boxing ring outlined by an assumed speciation: ' 63378 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : EXTERNAL PRODUCERS OF MUTATION
an assumed speciation: 'what happens in speciation? ', 63378 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : EXTERNAL PRODUCERS OF MUTATION
happens in speciation? ', not 'what causes speciation? ' 63379 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : EXTERNAL PRODUCERS OF MUTATION
not 'what causes speciation? ' A rapid speciation, 63379 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : EXTERNAL PRODUCERS OF MUTATION
the viable combination is struck, the speciation occurs instantly. 63384 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : EXTERNAL PRODUCERS OF MUTATION
with normally prevailing rates of mutation, speciation is unlikely under either the Modern Synthesis or the 'punctuated equilibrium' theory. 63386 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : EXTERNAL PRODUCERS OF MUTATION
enhance the chances of a viable speciation by mutation, 63414 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : EXTERNAL PRODUCERS OF MUTATION
only extinction that occurs, but also speciation. 63436 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : EXTERNAL PRODUCERS OF MUTATION
and other environmental changes bring about speciation, 63644 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : AN ATMOSPHERIC TRANSFORMATION
or to one of the quantum speciation school of thought, 64858 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 4: THE GESTALT OF CREATION : A PRIMORDIAL SCENARIO
time was needed to permit the speciation of man and that probably little time was actually available, 68756 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : THE UNREDEEMABLE APEMAN
that insists upon point-by- point speciation; 68762 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : THE UNREDEEMABLE APEMAN
 
 SPECIE....................1 (0.000%)
more or less as meaningful, sub specie aeternitates, 75676 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 7: THE GOOD, THE TRUE, AND THE BEAUTIFUL : CAUSATION
 
 SPECIES...................581 (0.072%)
Geological Columns. 08.Exponential Apocalypses. 09. Species Mass Changes and Extinction.55 INTRODUCTION TO THE SERIES - - - TABLE OF CONTENTS: -
CC 08. Exponential Apocalypses. DD 09. Species Mass Changes and Extinction.97 INTRODUCTION TO THE SERIES - - - TABLE OF CONTENTS: -
in 1869 in the "Origin of Species" that "anyone whose disposition leads him to attach more weight to unexplained difficulties than to the explanation of a certain number of facts will certainly reject my theory." 152 QUANTAVOLUTION AND CATASTROPHE: PART 1: Introduction to the series - - -
4 5 9. Evolution. The present species of life have unexceptionally developed from ever earlier forms that themselves originated by environmental adaptation in isolation and occasional successive chemical mutations. 375 QUANTAVOLUTION AND CATASTROPHE: PART 2: THE Q-C TEST - - -
1 2 3 4 5 9. Species Mass Changes and Extinction. 508 QUANTAVOLUTION AND CATASTROPHE: PART 2: THE Q-C TEST - - -
Species Mass Changes and Extinction. Extant species have simultaneously on occcasion been drastically reduced in numbers and type or extinguished while new species were being generated and old ones modified by holistic mutated gene leadership. 510 QUANTAVOLUTION AND CATASTROPHE: PART 2: THE Q-C TEST - - -
and type or extinguished while new species were being generated and old ones modified by holistic mutated gene leadership. 511 QUANTAVOLUTION AND CATASTROPHE: PART 2: THE Q-C TEST - - -
a sudden gestalt as a schizoid species controlling multiple selves, 518 QUANTAVOLUTION AND CATASTROPHE: PART 2: THE Q-C TEST - - -
more, or the death of one species will hardly affect many species. 684 QUANTAVOLUTION AND CATASTROPHE: PART 3: A Comment on the Q-C Test and Its Individual Items - - -
one species will hardly affect many species. 684 QUANTAVOLUTION AND CATASTROPHE: PART 3: A Comment on the Q-C Test and Its Individual Items - - -
ages. M 9. Evolution. The present species of life have unexceptionally developed from ever earlier forms that themselves originated by environmental adaptation in isolation and occasional successive chemical mutations.752 QUANTAVOLUTION AND CATASTROPHE: PART 3: A Comment on the Q-C Test and Its Individual Items - - -
competing for scarce goods with other species and individuals, 759 QUANTAVOLUTION AND CATASTROPHE: PART 3: A Comment on the Q-C Test and Its Individual Items - - -
individuals, brought into being as a species by a genetic mutation or related series of mutations, 759 QUANTAVOLUTION AND CATASTROPHE: PART 3: A Comment on the Q-C Test and Its Individual Items - - -
identity by separation from otherwise similar species, 761 QUANTAVOLUTION AND CATASTROPHE: PART 3: A Comment on the Q-C Test and Its Individual Items - - -
rafting at considerable speed. DD 9. Species Mass Changes and Extinction. 997 QUANTAVOLUTION AND CATASTROPHE: PART 3: A Comment on the Q-C Test and Its Individual Items - - -
Species Mass Changes and Extinction. Extant species have simultaneously on occcasion been drastically reduced in numbers and type or extinguished while new species were being generated and old ones modified by holistic mutated gene leadership.999 QUANTAVOLUTION AND CATASTROPHE: PART 3: A Comment on the Q-C Test and Its Individual Items - - -
and type or extinguished while new species were being generated and old ones modified by holistic mutated gene leadership.1000 QUANTAVOLUTION AND CATASTROPHE: PART 3: A Comment on the Q-C Test and Its Individual Items - - -
of Q implies the decimation of species and paleontology increasingly locates and admits to the catastrophic ending of species. 1003 QUANTAVOLUTION AND CATASTROPHE: PART 3: A Comment on the Q-C Test and Its Individual Items - - -
admits to the catastrophic ending of species. 1004 QUANTAVOLUTION AND CATASTROPHE: PART 3: A Comment on the Q-C Test and Its Individual Items - - -
admit the sudden creation of new species in the same conditions of catastrophe whereas the Q theorists can claim that the same conditions allowed the springing forth in quick time of new families and species. 1005 QUANTAVOLUTION AND CATASTROPHE: PART 3: A Comment on the Q-C Test and Its Individual Items - - -
quick time of new families and species. 1007 QUANTAVOLUTION AND CATASTROPHE: PART 3: A Comment on the Q-C Test and Its Individual Items - - -
theory accounts for the persistence of species as well as the destruction and creation of species to produce the puzzling array of flora and fauna of today.1007 QUANTAVOLUTION AND CATASTROPHE: PART 3: A Comment on the Q-C Test and Its Individual Items - - -
as the destruction and creation of species to produce the puzzling array of flora and fauna of today.1008 QUANTAVOLUTION AND CATASTROPHE: PART 3: A Comment on the Q-C Test and Its Individual Items - - -
a sudden gestalt as a schizoid species controlling multiple selves, 1012 QUANTAVOLUTION AND CATASTROPHE: PART 3: A Comment on the Q-C Test and Its Individual Items - - -
that the dinosaurs and most other species were destroyed en masse in a brief time interval by the impact of an extra-terrestrial object,1151 QUANTAVOLUTION AND CATASTROPHE: PART 4: PROSPECTIVE CHANGES IN THE Q-C TEST - - -
Appalachian Mountains apparition, comet appearence of species Appenine Range applied science April Apuane Alps Apuseni Mountains Aqaba, 1572 QUANTAVOLUTION AND CATASTROPHE: PART 5: The Scope of Quantavolution - - -
generation genesis genesis and extinction of species genetic realization genetics Geneva, 2999 QUANTAVOLUTION AND CATASTROPHE: PART 5: The Scope of Quantavolution - - -
electrical Sparkling Goat" Sparta, Spartan specialization species specific charge ratio specific gravity spectre spectroscopy spectrum spectrum class of stars spectrum measurement speech speech disorders speleothem Spencer, 5407 QUANTAVOLUTION AND CATASTROPHE: PART 5: The Scope of Quantavolution - - -
Title consecutive pages Darwin Origin of Species 153 Hoyle Nature of the Universe 116 Einstein Relativity 60 Eddington New Pathways in Science 191 Tinbergen Herring Gull's World 161 Von Frisch Bees, 8406 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 1: - Chapter 4: A PROPER RESPECT FOR AUTHORITY -
not to distinguish 'lower' from 'higher' species. 8896 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 1: - Chapter 5: THE BRITISH CONNECTION -
before Darwin published the Origin of Species by Natural Selection, 10415 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 2: - Chapter 8: HOMO SCHIZO MEETS GOD -
or in the transaction with other species and inorganic nature and whether uniformitarian or disastrous, 10487 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 2: - Chapter 8: HOMO SCHIZO MEETS GOD -
state in a pre-potentiated hominid species, 10687 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 2: - Chapter 8: HOMO SCHIZO MEETS GOD -
because of the catastrophe. 8. Many species were extinguished catastrophically. 11355 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 3: - Chapter 9: NEW FASHIONS IN CATASTROPHISM -
caused the periodic extermination of most species. 12257 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 3: - Chapter 9: NEW FASHIONS IN CATASTROPHISM -
as well as the death of species to radiation disasters. 12259 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 3: - Chapter 9: NEW FASHIONS IN CATASTROPHISM -
with life. The recent fixation of species, 13360 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 3: - Chapter 11: CLOCKWORK -
have been real: gradual changes occur; species can develop in isolation, 13362 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 3: - Chapter 11: CLOCKWORK -
of catastrophic change and origin of species by potentiation comes forward. 13366 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 3: - Chapter 11: CLOCKWORK -
If Charles Darwin's Origins of Species sold out through a book store in 1859 it was because writing and printing were still for gentlemanly use and the book was not deposited behind a mass of their friends. 18443 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 5: - Chapter 15: THE KNOWLEDGE INDUSTRY -
environmental stresses. Perhaps half the plant species are instances of proportional structural explosions. 20051 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 5: - Chapter 17: THE ADVANCEMENT OF SCIENCE -
in order to survive as a species. 20081 COSMIC HERETICS: PART 5: - Chapter 17: THE ADVANCEMENT OF SCIENCE -
of Niagara Falls, the adaptation of species to desert conditions, 21736 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 01: COSMIC INSTABILITY : IMPACTS ON EARTH
have mutated and created new plant species 5 . 22177 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 02: HIGH ENERGY FROM SPACE : HEAVY-BODY IMPACTS
marks the rise and fall of species. 22577 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 02: HIGH ENERGY FROM SPACE : THE EXPONENTIAL PRINCIPLE
to be suspected, or else the species originated in the past several thousand years: 22580 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 02: HIGH ENERGY FROM SPACE : THE EXPONENTIAL PRINCIPLE
America 35 . Given a niche, a species fills it quickly. 22584 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 02: HIGH ENERGY FROM SPACE : THE EXPONENTIAL PRINCIPLE
has many variables determining it, including species adaptations and mutations that may cause greater or lesser light requirements. 22872 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 03: COLLAPSING TESTS OF TIME : CORAL REEFS
base of measurement. However, not all species ingest 14C in the same amounts, 23198 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 03: COLLAPSING TESTS OF TIME : RADIOCARBON (CARBON-14) DATING
rates must be calculated for different species. 23199 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 03: COLLAPSING TESTS OF TIME : RADIOCARBON (CARBON-14) DATING
time. The more numerous the identical species of the two fossil assemblages, 23396 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 03: COLLAPSING TESTS OF TIME : THE FOSSIL RECORD AND MUTATING TIME
The record of its period and species may be incomplete. 23401 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 03: COLLAPSING TESTS OF TIME : THE FOSSIL RECORD AND MUTATING TIME
Or the fossil assemblage of various species may have been zoned and then have been transported to another area and placed, 23402 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 03: COLLAPSING TESTS OF TIME : THE FOSSIL RECORD AND MUTATING TIME
life forms quickly. Plant and animal species require time to adapt to environments (life niches), 23415 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 03: COLLAPSING TESTS OF TIME : THE FOSSIL RECORD AND MUTATING TIME
processes and long life to the species. 23417 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 03: COLLAPSING TESTS OF TIME : THE FOSSIL RECORD AND MUTATING TIME
is allotted for the evolution of species. 23422 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 03: COLLAPSING TESTS OF TIME : THE FOSSIL RECORD AND MUTATING TIME
niches for pre-existing and new species, 23424 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 03: COLLAPSING TESTS OF TIME : THE FOSSIL RECORD AND MUTATING TIME
that mass extinctions and arrivals of species occur in correlation with catastrophes, 23544 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 03: COLLAPSING TESTS OF TIME : 58 TESTS IN DISPUTE
changes that produce the evolution of species. 23547 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 03: COLLAPSING TESTS OF TIME : 58 TESTS IN DISPUTE
that its farthest expeditions into space, species, 23697 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 03: COLLAPSING TESTS OF TIME : THE DISSOLUTION OF TIME
time. If we believe that the species was exterminated at once, 23730 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 03: COLLAPSING TESTS OF TIME : OF MAMMONTHS AND AMBER
a nitrogen cycle. Most of the species of today existed. 24821 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 05: SOLARIA BINARIA : THE WORLD OF PANGEA
survival. But the extinction of a species was a rare event. 24823 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 05: SOLARIA BINARIA : THE WORLD OF PANGEA
too, was the birth of a species. 24824 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 05: SOLARIA BINARIA : THE WORLD OF PANGEA
changed a ratio between and among species; 24825 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 05: SOLARIA BINARIA : THE WORLD OF PANGEA
revolutionary mass extinction and creation of species of flora and fauna become clearer.25049 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 05: SOLARIA BINARIA : SUMMARY REFLECTIONS UPON THE CHANGING WORLD SYSTEM
floods and the extermination of some species. 25379 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 06: THE URANIANS : THE ICE DUMPS
was being reduced even as the species itself realized its human qualities. 25419 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 06: THE URANIANS : THE CREATION OF MAN
the air accompanied explosive seismism. Most species were greatly reduced in numbers.25421 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 06: THE URANIANS : THE CREATION OF MAN
quantavoluted by disaster 8 . The human species began the period as a stupid hominid but speedily acquired a human nature. 25426 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 06: THE URANIANS : THE CREATION OF MAN
We begin then with a single species homo sapiens schizotypicalis, 25905 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 06: THE URANIANS : OLD AND NEW WORLD CONCORDANCES
ecumenical culture. It follows that this species found its way to the wide reaches of Pangea, 25906 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 06: THE URANIANS : OLD AND NEW WORLD CONCORDANCES
most dessicated zones of North America. Species after species of large game animal perished not long after its the dessication's onset - mastodon,25970 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 06: THE URANIANS : CLIMATE CHANGES AND TIME
zones of North America. Species after species of large game animal perished not long after its the dessication's onset - mastodon,25971 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 06: THE URANIANS : CLIMATE CHANGES AND TIME
others were devastated. Animal and plant species would have been threatened with extinction. 26988 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 07: EARTH PARTURITION AND MOON BIRTH : LUNAR WORSHIP
been threatened with extinction. The human species was no exception ; 26988 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 07: EARTH PARTURITION AND MOON BIRTH : LUNAR WORSHIP
the general destruction of the monstrous species. 27129 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 07: EARTH PARTURITION AND MOON BIRTH : LEGENDARY CHAOS AND THE MOON
brought desiccation and extirpation of many species "but the Indians survived." 27220 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 07: EARTH PARTURITION AND MOON BIRTH : THE MOON IN MESO-AMERICA
64. Ibid. Note the quantavolutionary mass species extinction and new creation here.27755 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 07: EARTH PARTURITION AND MOON BIRTH : Notes (Chapter Seven: Earth Parturition and Moon Birth)
of cosmic debris and particles. The species were again decimated and their populations drastically reduced. 28235 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 08: SATURN'S CHILDREN : THE DOWNFALL OF SATURN : NOVA AND DELUGE
certainty be identified as of a species live or extinct, 28513 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 09: THE OLYMPIAN RULERS : THE DEVIL SETH
while the heavens remained unsettled. The species was repeopling the Earth from a few thousands of survivors to many millions. 28740 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 09: THE OLYMPIAN RULERS : REPEATED DISASTERS
emplacement, the extermination and birth of species, 30508 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 11: THE DEVIL'S ADVOCATE -
bombs probably cannot exterminate this hardy species. 30963 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 12: VICTORY OF THE SUN : THE PROPENSITY TO SURVIVE
consider that the reproducibility of the species amounts to an ultimate mechanism of escape from extinction in chaos and war.30978 CHAOS AND CREATION: - - CHAPTER 12: VICTORY OF THE SUN : THE PROPENSITY TO SURVIVE
between catastrophe and extinction genesis of species, 32845 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: - - CHAPTER 1: Quantavolutions -
or animals, including one's own species in extremis, 33189 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART I: ATMOSPHERICS: Chapter 2 The Gaseous Complex -
and changed without destroying utterly the species. 33194 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART I: ATMOSPHERICS: Chapter 2 The Gaseous Complex -
life of large areas and the species it contains are modern, 33443 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART I: ATMOSPHERICS: Chapter 2 The Gaseous Complex -
the immediate transport of resilient living species around the world by such means.)33834 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART I: ATMOSPHERICS: Chapter 3 Hurricanes and Cyclones -
blasts of gases and charged particles, species extinctions may occur. 34377 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART I: ATMOSPHERICS: Chapter 4 Magnetism and Axial Tilts -
floor. In as much as these species' extinctions were quite recent, 35212 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART I: ATMOSPHERICS: Chapter 5 Electricity -
animals, then or soon extincted as species, 35216 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART I: ATMOSPHERICS: Chapter 5 Electricity -
a role in the mutation of species 19 , 36093 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART I: ATMOSPHERICS: Chapter 7 Fire and Ash -
as modern times. He regards many species of plants and animals as fire-prone, 36100 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART I: ATMOSPHERICS: Chapter 7 Fire and Ash -
square miles snuffed out over 200 species at one waterhole alone. 36120 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART I: ATMOSPHERICS: Chapter 7 Fire and Ash -
to the north, which contains living species of oceanic type. 36162 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART I: ATMOSPHERICS: Chapter 7 Fire and Ash -
and absolute dates of strata and species. 36855 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART II: EXOTERRESTRIAL DROPS: Chapter 8 Falling Dust and Stone -
with an incongruous assembly of other species, 37161 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART II: EXOTERRESTRIAL DROPS: Chapter 9 Gases, Poisons and Foods -
the extinction of a number of species, 37230 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART II: EXOTERRESTRIAL DROPS: Chapter 9 Gases, Poisons and Foods -
total environmental stress on a given species." 37241 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART II: EXOTERRESTRIAL DROPS: Chapter 9 Gases, Poisons and Foods -
account for a large number of species extinctions 8 . 37244 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART II: EXOTERRESTRIAL DROPS: Chapter 9 Gases, Poisons and Foods -
hand in the great extinctions of species that have marked geological history. 37478 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART II: EXOTERRESTRIAL DROPS: Chapter 9 Gases, Poisons and Foods -
when the dinosaurs and many other species, 37484 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART II: EXOTERRESTRIAL DROPS: Chapter 9 Gases, Poisons and Foods -
mutation, and to the evolution of species. 37527 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART II: EXOTERRESTRIAL DROPS: Chapter 9 Gases, Poisons and Foods -
their enemies, and thus were extinguished. Species closely resembling one another are to be found both in oceans and freshwater lakes and rivers. 38019 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART II: EXOTERRESTRIAL DROPS: Chapter 10 Metals, Salt and Oil -
90,000 (some say 110,000) species of fossil animals known presently, 38361 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART II: EXOTERRESTRIAL DROPS: Chapter 10 Metals, Salt and Oil -
Minerals would be formed, elements transmuted, species extincted and new forms created in the radiation storms. 38652 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART II: EXOTERRESTRIAL DROPS: Chapter 11 Encounter and Collisions -
interrupt the reproduction cycle of the species; 38986 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART II: EXOTERRESTRIAL DROPS: Chapter 11 Encounter and Collisions -
best for evolution and quantavolution of species; 39139 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART III: HYDROLOGY: Chapter 12 Water -
by three quite different 'aggregates of species. 39897 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART III: HYDROLOGY: Chapter 14 Floods and Tides -
of specimens of a great many species. 40370 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART III: HYDROLOGY: Chapter 14 Floods and Tides -
remarkable instance of rapid evolution of species." 40377 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART III: HYDROLOGY: Chapter 14 Floods and Tides -
of over six meters, two dozen species of elephant, 40377 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART III: HYDROLOGY: Chapter 14 Floods and Tides -
to Indo-China threw sand over species and genera in mountains thousands of feet high." 40385 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART III: HYDROLOGY: Chapter 14 Floods and Tides -
subcontinent. Frantic proliferation and extinction of species occurred, 40423 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART III: HYDROLOGY: Chapter 14 Floods and Tides -
wood. These locations consist of different species, 40470 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART III: HYDROLOGY: Chapter 14 Floods and Tides -
I suggest here is adopted, these species existed before the ice and they may one day provide new fossil discoveries.40991 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART III: HYDROLOGY: Chapter 15 Ice Fields of the Earth -
Earth, including many thousands of existing species and with most Earth rocks still present. 41968 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART IV: CRUSTAL TURBULENCE: Chapter 17 Volcanism -
Earth rocks still present. If those species could survive, 41969 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART IV: CRUSTAL TURBULENCE: Chapter 17 Volcanism -
Sea, a shallow home for innumerable species until the new oceans were created to house them.42277 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART IV: CRUSTAL TURBULENCE: Chapter 18 Sinking and Rising Lands -
carried the vast majority of marine species and supported a thriving population of plants and terrestrial animals, 42308 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART IV: CRUSTAL TURBULENCE: Chapter 18 Sinking and Rising Lands -
of rifting.) However, the number of species whose remains have been found in separate areas where there was once Gondwanaland (that is, 42468 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART IV: CRUSTAL TURBULENCE: Chapter 18 Sinking and Rising Lands -
are alive. Earthworms of the same species are found in Australia, 42470 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART IV: CRUSTAL TURBULENCE: Chapter 18 Sinking and Rising Lands -
identical as well as related fossil species, 42474 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART IV: CRUSTAL TURBULENCE: Chapter 18 Sinking and Rising Lands -
observations about vast sudden catastrophes of species, 42565 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART IV: CRUSTAL TURBULENCE: Chapter 18 Sinking and Rising Lands -
human manufacture, as well as continental species of flora and fauna. 42707 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART IV: CRUSTAL TURBULENCE: Chapter 18 Sinking and Rising Lands -
the same authors. (Actually, subaerial fossil species have been found at 1000 m depths.) 43576 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART V: RIFTS, RAFTS AND BASINS: Chapter 20 Thrusting and Orogeny -
intent upon preserving the evolution of species, 43616 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART V: RIFTS, RAFTS AND BASINS: Chapter 20 Thrusting and Orogeny -
upon preserving the evolution of species, species would mutate to their present forms in two to thirty leaps, 43616 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART V: RIFTS, RAFTS AND BASINS: Chapter 20 Thrusting and Orogeny -
made; nor does the mutation of species await a sunny "bowr of earthly blisse." 43639 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART V: RIFTS, RAFTS AND BASINS: Chapter 20 Thrusting and Orogeny -
and adaptive saltations are differentiating many species and exterminating many more.43644 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART V: RIFTS, RAFTS AND BASINS: Chapter 20 Thrusting and Orogeny -
in the warm oceans; the marine species of today originated in the shallow Tethyan waters. 44009 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART V: RIFTS, RAFTS AND BASINS: Chapter 21 Ocean Basins -
abysses of the ocean contain only species whose origins in shallower waters are patent. 44016 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART V: RIFTS, RAFTS AND BASINS: Chapter 21 Ocean Basins -
of the dinosaurs and most marine species. 44263 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART V: RIFTS, RAFTS AND BASINS: Chapter 21 Ocean Basins -
heat, explosion, suffocation, and famine, many species survived. 44330 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART V: RIFTS, RAFTS AND BASINS: Chapter 21 Ocean Basins -
is being rapidly invaded by similar species from both directions, 45423 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART V: RIFTS, RAFTS AND BASINS: Chapter 24 Continental Tropism and Rafting -
fact is considered: consistent stratification of species around the world, 45755 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART V: RIFTS, RAFTS AND BASINS: Chapter 24 Continental Tropism and Rafting -
to mark the extermination of most species. 46021 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART V: RIFTS, RAFTS AND BASINS: Chapter 24 Continental Tropism and Rafting -
the prolific regenerative capacity of all species, 46031 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART V: RIFTS, RAFTS AND BASINS: Chapter 24 Continental Tropism and Rafting -
units of each of a million species have of surviving the conditions of lunagenesis?46033 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART V: RIFTS, RAFTS AND BASINS: Chapter 24 Continental Tropism and Rafting -
also, and perhaps more important, of species that never reached their potential limits, 46325 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART V: RIFTS, RAFTS AND BASINS: Chapter 25 Sediments -
more than 400 specimens of other species in the same deposit. 46580 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 26 Fossil Deposits -
connection. Pangean world distributions of many species of flora and fauna, 46584 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 26 Fossil Deposits -
and living, can be traced. Living species that have no way of traversing present-day barriers are discovered to exist on both sides of the barriers, 46585 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 26 Fossil Deposits -
of Africa, India and Siberia. Extinct species of one area are alive in another area, 46587 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 26 Fossil Deposits -
Africa. Specimens of the same extinct species are found in areas separated by modern geography.46589 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 26 Fossil Deposits -
demands a reconstruction of how aquatic species developed. 46593 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 26 Fossil Deposits -
the generation of individual variations within species and the prolongation of their careers. 46595 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 26 Fossil Deposits -
sea; so with every other aquatic species. 46597 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 26 Fossil Deposits -
for the survival of an aquatic species would be to migrate or be turbulently transported from a Pangean center in a flooding action that settled into a temporary pond on the way across the land and towards what was to be the ocean. 46631 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 26 Fossil Deposits -
ocean shelf, where almost all aquatic species concentrate, 46634 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 26 Fossil Deposits -
growth of the population of the species at this stage would produce numbers sufficient to choke the oceans in a thousand years.46636 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 26 Fossil Deposits -
years. In the oceanic abyss, few species are found, 46639 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 26 Fossil Deposits -
species are found, and the same species are more commonly found on the continental shelf with few mutations. 46639 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 26 Fossil Deposits -
fossil ancestors." The fact, however, that species do inhabit the abyss signifies that the abyss, 46641 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 26 Fossil Deposits -
be teeming with adapted and mutated species. 46643 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 26 Fossil Deposits -
few analogous niches for today's species, 46651 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 26 Fossil Deposits -
seamounts carry imbedded fossils of current species that give 8 to 12, 46655 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 26 Fossil Deposits -
preserved. Large shark teeth of unknown species abound. 46657 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 26 Fossil Deposits -
facilitated (as probably with certain dinosaur species). 46668 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 26 Fossil Deposits -
oceanic ridges. The proliferation of such species on such ridges, 46675 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 26 Fossil Deposits -
elephants and sharks in death. Most species of large mammals suffered extinction in undeniably modern times. (46715 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 26 Fossil Deposits -
at only 400 B. C.) The species that could betake themselves to high ground or fly quickly from one place to another survived in larger numbers. 46716 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 26 Fossil Deposits -
have been a blessing to most species, 46724 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 26 Fossil Deposits -
climate where the same or related species exist today. 46729 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 26 Fossil Deposits -
manifested among the plant and animal species, 46733 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 26 Fossil Deposits -
Earth itself? Termites and many insect species are considered geologically ancient. 46766 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 26 Fossil Deposits -
distorted as to populations of the species and to a lesser degree to the kinds and numbers of species.46775 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 26 Fossil Deposits -
to the kinds and numbers of species. 46776 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 26 Fossil Deposits -
the layer and the paucity of species suggests rapid burial after death, 46876 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 26 Fossil Deposits -
when consisting of only a few species always composed of herbivores? 46880 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 26 Fossil Deposits -
mentioned. The animals are of distinct species and were killed together, 46922 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 26 Fossil Deposits -
transported. If the conglomerate contained more species, 46927 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 26 Fossil Deposits -
smashed and disarticulated bones of discordant species (saber-toothed tigers, 46987 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 26 Fossil Deposits -
input to the reconstruction of ancient species from the catastrophes that they would deny, 46996 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 26 Fossil Deposits -
terminations of some certain composite of species. 47004 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 26 Fossil Deposits -
believe in the contemporary existence of species that are conventionally placed in superposition and assigned sequential periods of existence. 47088 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 26 Fossil Deposits -
bulldozer will pick up inter-zonal species are excellent and therefore will place not only 'A' upon 'B' but 'B' upon 'A'. 47105 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 26 Fossil Deposits -
too young to have spawned new species, 47119 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 26 Fossil Deposits -
projects that mankind will extirpate most species of life within this generation in exchange for 1.47208 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
estimates that 25 of all existing species may become extinct by the year 2000 1 ; 47210 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
requires high-energy forces to extinguish species and must need an equally great force to create them. 47214 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
progressive, lacking the capacity to create species (Elohim promises Noah this Deluge would be the last; 47241 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
the survivors anywhere talk of new species, 47242 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
same time increasing the variety of species. 47285 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
term quantavolution was chosen. Probably most species are born or die out at the disastrous junctures of natural history whence the rocks and fossil seas, 47296 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
estimates of 1.5 million extant species and between 3 million and 8. 47299 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
3 million and 8.5 million species as existing but still unidentified 4 . 47300 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
Simpson estimated the number of existing species at two millions. 47302 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
millions. He guessed that the average species endured from 500, 47304 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
a high total estimate of all species of four billions, 47306 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
the number of discoverable or fossilizable species at ten millions, 47309 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
1,105,000 for the living species, 47312 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
fairly complete sum of all past species. 47313 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
grounds for believing that most fossilizable species have already been discovered, 47314 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
discovered, implying that most or all species were created in short order and that a tenth or so have been eliminated. 47315 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
Simpson's two million for living species, 47327 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
Simpson's minimal figure of fossil species, 47330 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
bold as to define absolutely a species, 47332 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
to a million or more living species and over a million fossil species. 47344 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
species and over a million fossil species. 47344 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
physical changes in a collectivity of species that may be unrelated. 47381 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
that may be unrelated. Within a species a saltation of individual changes must be also occurring.47382 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
no phylum, class, order, family, or species is there an indisputable succession of types that is predicted under the neo-Darwinian theory of evolution.47406 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
account for all observable variations between species, 47410 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
species, then the number of transitional species must be exceedingly large. 47410 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
must be exceedingly large. "Furthermore, each species must be exceedingly viable in order to survive long enough to give rise to some 'evolved' descendent." 47411 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
existed. A "transitional form" is the species of life that is both intermediate and ancestral in relation to any two discovered fossil or living forms. "47414 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
The "hopeful monster" is the new species, 47436 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
storms that both alter and destroy species. 47442 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
as a "more settled" period), the species-mix and distribution of the biosphere suffer revolutionary change. 47443 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
trillions of individuals of the standardized species. 47462 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
number of individuals per "long-lived" species has amounted to, 47464 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
are negligible. That is, the transitional species would be a small population. 47467 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
rapidity. If, for every significantly mutated species which survived there were 10,47470 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
10 7 . By contrast, the surviving species averaged l0 12 specimens that might enter the hall of fame of the fossil record. 47471 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
religious and atheistic observers alike. The species, 47486 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
to be put together meaningfully. The species function in the wierdest, 47487 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
existence as best they can. Every species appears probabilistic to the point of impossibility.47489 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
to the point of impossibility. A species may be "fantastically" constructed; 47492 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
somehow, no matter how "senselessly." The species is a whole, 47495 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
elaborated? Stanley's calculations show that species of European mammals of today have on the average survived for one to two million years by conventional calculation (middle pliocene mollusks had a mean duration of 7 my). 47501 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
duration of 7 my). Very few species of short duration (less than 0. 47503 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
occurred in the record. No ephemeral species appeared and disappeared. 47504 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
sudden events in which polymorphs and species are proliferated." 47506 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
times more slowly that most animal species. 47512 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
considered a positive feature of a species in "natural selection," 47515 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
the human and many another 'advanced' species should be regarded as handicapped in the struggle to survive and adapt.47516 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
of other advantages afforded these handicapped species in natural selection. 47520 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
again. The charts of extinction of species are also charts of genesis of new species. 47541 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
also charts of genesis of new species. 47541 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
of genesis of new species. When species are exterminated in large numbers, 47541 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
follow. Paleontologists question whether the new species are alterations of the old, 47542 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
occupied upon the demise of old species. 47570 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
in flora and fauna, of established species. 47578 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
new studies of the extinction of species. 47590 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
first time." There is a partial species overlap of short duration as the Permian moves into the Triassic as he notes in 4 groups of fauna, 47598 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
He estimates that 75 of all species died alongside the dinosaurs, 47608 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
ice ages, differing depositional characteristics of species, 47622 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
estimates that 96 of all marine species may have died out in the late Permian. 47656 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
40 million years (present company excepted). Species, 47663 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
in estimates of their historical numbers. Species are also more susceptible to genesis than the statistically concocted general groups with their assigned, 47664 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
theory, whether microevolutionary or macroevolutionary. Probably species have been extincted and ramified on disastrous occasions that did not affect the existence of the basic forms to which they pertain.47667 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
data on numbers and extinctions of species, 47677 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
in a short time destroy the species. 47699 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
difference, or else sharks are young species and much of their ecology must be young as well, 47719 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
by surface erosion. Living and extinct species mingled in broad confusion. 47748 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
and fish were plentiful. A shark species found in Mississippi turned up here in the Pacific. 47751 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
substitute for isolation, by creating two species in the same niche without the benefits conferred by travel. 47760 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
2. Although an enormous number of species may be extincted, 47790 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
extincted, only several survivors of a species may guarantee a replenishment of continental scope within centuries.47791 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
be entertained that hitherto unused intra-species genetic adaptability can permit survivors of modified form under stresses seemingly quite destructive.47793 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
worse? Assigning the Earth and its species five billion years of self-development may turn out to have been a frustrating detour in the history of the human mind. 47818 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction -
1978), 17-9. 5. 'How Many Species?" 47840 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction : Notes (Chapter Twenty-seven: Genesis and Extinction)
Evolution (1952), 342; Teichert, "How many Species?" 47840 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction : Notes (Chapter Twenty-seven: Genesis and Extinction)
15. S. M. Stanley, "Stability of Species in Geologic Time," 47867 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 27 Genesis and Extinction : Notes (Chapter Twenty-seven: Genesis and Extinction)
meteoroid of middle size. Nevertheless, most species of animals and plants were extincted, 48709 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VI: BIOSPHERICS: Chapter 29 Spectres -
criterion, "Cold and warm weather fossil species occupy contiguous strata or are mixed in the same deposits," 49146 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VII: DIMENSIONS OF QUANTAVOLUTION: Chapter 30 Intensity, Scope and Suddenness -
nor (probably) affect the hearing of species genetically. 49291 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VII: DIMENSIONS OF QUANTAVOLUTION: Chapter 30 Intensity, Scope and Suddenness -
So would "The extinction of 3 species in less than 1 year," 49311 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VII: DIMENSIONS OF QUANTAVOLUTION: Chapter 30 Intensity, Scope and Suddenness -
or "Depopulation by 70 of l species of 10 biological families in less than a year in an area of 1,49312 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VII: DIMENSIONS OF QUANTAVOLUTION: Chapter 30 Intensity, Scope and Suddenness -
The simultaneous appearance of 3 new species" will suffice to indicate a catastrophic innovation. "49318 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VII: DIMENSIONS OF QUANTAVOLUTION: Chapter 30 Intensity, Scope and Suddenness -
his theory of the origin of species by means of natural selection, 49419 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VII: DIMENSIONS OF QUANTAVOLUTION: Chapter 30 Intensity, Scope and Suddenness -
biosphere beyond the sufferance of many species. 49441 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VII: DIMENSIONS OF QUANTAVOLUTION: Chapter 30 Intensity, Scope and Suddenness -
enjoys its idiosyncratic manner suddenness. A species, 49495 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VII: DIMENSIONS OF QUANTAVOLUTION: Chapter 30 Intensity, Scope and Suddenness -
can counterthrust. An extinction of one species can promote the survival of another species. 49552 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VII: DIMENSIONS OF QUANTAVOLUTION: Chapter 30 Intensity, Scope and Suddenness -
can promote the survival of another species. 49552 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VII: DIMENSIONS OF QUANTAVOLUTION: Chapter 30 Intensity, Scope and Suddenness -
a perceptible succession and superposition of species. 49823 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VII: DIMENSIONS OF QUANTAVOLUTION: Chapter 31 The Recency of the Surface -
must assume a given composition of species at zero time. 49893 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VII: DIMENSIONS OF QUANTAVOLUTION: Chapter 31 The Recency of the Surface -
founded upon the need for the species to have evolved beforehand, 50066 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VII: DIMENSIONS OF QUANTAVOLUTION: Chapter 31 The Recency of the Surface -
to the discovery of similar Precambrian species. 50118 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: PART VII: DIMENSIONS OF QUANTAVOLUTION: Chapter 31 The Recency of the Surface -
an affirmative. The extinction of a species is difficult; 50401 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: - - - EPILOGUE -
extinction of tens of thousands of species is more difficult; 50401 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: - - - EPILOGUE -
difficult; the extinction of nearly all species requires the total explosion of the globe.50402 THE LATELY TORTURED EARTH: - - - EPILOGUE -
by biologists to mutate rapidly growing species such as Drosophila, 52979 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 1: ORIGIN AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE BINARY SYSTEM: Chapter 7: THE MAGNETIC TUBE AND THE PLANETARY ORBITS -
Earth consists of more poorly conducting species. 53149 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 1: ORIGIN AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE BINARY SYSTEM: Chapter 8: THE EARTH'S PHYSICAL AND MAGNETIC HISTORY -
for the origin and development of species, 53714 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 1: ORIGIN AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE BINARY SYSTEM: Chapter 9: RADIANT GENESIS -
upon mutable forms, and branching of species is an exponential concept, 53722 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 1: ORIGIN AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE BINARY SYSTEM: Chapter 9: RADIANT GENESIS -
times more capable of producing the species of today. 53725 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 1: ORIGIN AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE BINARY SYSTEM: Chapter 9: RADIANT GENESIS -
enough to originate and develop the species. 53728 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 1: ORIGIN AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE BINARY SYSTEM: Chapter 9: RADIANT GENESIS -
extinction, slightly over one million living species are named today. 53897 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 1: ORIGIN AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE BINARY SYSTEM: Chapter 9: RADIANT GENESIS -
record should show millions of ancestral species to provide the present number, 53898 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 1: ORIGIN AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE BINARY SYSTEM: Chapter 9: RADIANT GENESIS -
shows only about one hundred thousand species. 53899 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 1: ORIGIN AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE BINARY SYSTEM: Chapter 9: RADIANT GENESIS -
the more distinctive and specialized the species, 53910 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 1: ORIGIN AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE BINARY SYSTEM: Chapter 9: RADIANT GENESIS -
final period, environmental disasters extinguished many species, 53913 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 1: ORIGIN AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE BINARY SYSTEM: Chapter 9: RADIANT GENESIS -
the status of families, genera and species. 53915 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 1: ORIGIN AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE BINARY SYSTEM: Chapter 9: RADIANT GENESIS -
It is conceivable that every living species carries in its genetic code instructions for metamorphosis (monsterism). 53922 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 1: ORIGIN AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE BINARY SYSTEM: Chapter 9: RADIANT GENESIS -
instructions and releasing others, quantavoluting a species into a similar but substantially modified species that is altered anatomically, 53928 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 1: ORIGIN AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE BINARY SYSTEM: Chapter 9: RADIANT GENESIS -
into a similar but substantially modified species that is altered anatomically, 53929 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 1: ORIGIN AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE BINARY SYSTEM: Chapter 9: RADIANT GENESIS -
the "gap" of development from one species to another under conventional Darwinian theory. 53932 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 1: ORIGIN AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE BINARY SYSTEM: Chapter 9: RADIANT GENESIS -
1944, p106). Many of the plant species, 53936 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 1: ORIGIN AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE BINARY SYSTEM: Chapter 9: RADIANT GENESIS -
is believed, are replicas of other species ( polyploids), 53936 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 1: ORIGIN AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE BINARY SYSTEM: Chapter 9: RADIANT GENESIS -
the flowering plants may be polyploid species. 54021 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 1: ORIGIN AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE BINARY SYSTEM: Chapter 9: RADIANT GENESIS : Notes on Chapter 9
are often accidents of isolation, or species that can draw upon luckily beneficial reverse or recessed genetic capabilities, 54255 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 2: DESTRUCTION OF THE SOLAR BINARY: Chapter 10: INSTABILITY OF SUPER URANUS -
merged into the plethora of ordinary species if there were not a search party alerted to their possible quantavolution.54484 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 2: DESTRUCTION OF THE SOLAR BINARY: Chapter 11: ASTROBLEMES OF THE EARTH -
self replicating mitosis... biologic diversification of species and habitat. 54852 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 2: DESTRUCTION OF THE SOLAR BINARY: Chapter 12: QUANTAVOLUTION OF THE BIOSPHERE: HOMO SAPIENS -
Alvarez. et at.) 82 . Known living species number upwards of one million; 54927 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 2: DESTRUCTION OF THE SOLAR BINARY: Chapter 12: QUANTAVOLUTION OF THE BIOSPHERE: HOMO SAPIENS -
million; estimates of living but unidentified species may reach to eight and one-half million (Passerini). 54928 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 2: DESTRUCTION OF THE SOLAR BINARY: Chapter 12: QUANTAVOLUTION OF THE BIOSPHERE: HOMO SAPIENS -
million (Passerini). The number of different species since the beginning of life was estimated at five hundred million by Simpson (1952). 54929 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 2: DESTRUCTION OF THE SOLAR BINARY: Chapter 12: QUANTAVOLUTION OF THE BIOSPHERE: HOMO SAPIENS -
hundred million by Simpson (1952). Fossilizable species were estimated at ten million by Teichert, 54930 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 2: DESTRUCTION OF THE SOLAR BINARY: Chapter 12: QUANTAVOLUTION OF THE BIOSPHERE: HOMO SAPIENS -
been identified. Thus, one in fifty species would be fossilizable, 54933 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 2: DESTRUCTION OF THE SOLAR BINARY: Chapter 12: QUANTAVOLUTION OF THE BIOSPHERE: HOMO SAPIENS -
5 000 of all pre-existing species, 54934 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 2: DESTRUCTION OF THE SOLAR BINARY: Chapter 12: QUANTAVOLUTION OF THE BIOSPHERE: HOMO SAPIENS -
the vast majority of pre-existing species. 54936 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 2: DESTRUCTION OF THE SOLAR BINARY: Chapter 12: QUANTAVOLUTION OF THE BIOSPHERE: HOMO SAPIENS -
existing species. Clearly, the definition of species, 54938 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 2: DESTRUCTION OF THE SOLAR BINARY: Chapter 12: QUANTAVOLUTION OF THE BIOSPHERE: HOMO SAPIENS -
under human control, even as existing species will continue on their course of extinction. 54943 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 2: DESTRUCTION OF THE SOLAR BINARY: Chapter 12: QUANTAVOLUTION OF THE BIOSPHERE: HOMO SAPIENS -
Solaria Binaria would not promise the species a reprieve; 54944 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 2: DESTRUCTION OF THE SOLAR BINARY: Chapter 12: QUANTAVOLUTION OF THE BIOSPHERE: HOMO SAPIENS -
and most of their families and species were identifiable, 54951 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 2: DESTRUCTION OF THE SOLAR BINARY: Chapter 12: QUANTAVOLUTION OF THE BIOSPHERE: HOMO SAPIENS -
and species were identifiable, but many species were absent, 54952 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 2: DESTRUCTION OF THE SOLAR BINARY: Chapter 12: QUANTAVOLUTION OF THE BIOSPHERE: HOMO SAPIENS -
that almost all present families and species, 54962 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 2: DESTRUCTION OF THE SOLAR BINARY: Chapter 12: QUANTAVOLUTION OF THE BIOSPHERE: HOMO SAPIENS -
reasons that 96.0 of the species of echinoids were extinguished then, 54979 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 2: DESTRUCTION OF THE SOLAR BINARY: Chapter 12: QUANTAVOLUTION OF THE BIOSPHERE: HOMO SAPIENS -
Basing his estimate upon a standing species diversity of between 45 000 and 240 000 in the Permian, 54980 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 2: DESTRUCTION OF THE SOLAR BINARY: Chapter 12: QUANTAVOLUTION OF THE BIOSPHERE: HOMO SAPIENS -
with between 1800 and 9 600 species, 54982 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 2: DESTRUCTION OF THE SOLAR BINARY: Chapter 12: QUANTAVOLUTION OF THE BIOSPHERE: HOMO SAPIENS -
600 species, from which the present species come. 54982 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 2: DESTRUCTION OF THE SOLAR BINARY: Chapter 12: QUANTAVOLUTION OF THE BIOSPHERE: HOMO SAPIENS -
of extinct reptiles" (Stanley). An average species of late Cenozoic mammal survived one to two million years without transitional forms. 54991 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 2: DESTRUCTION OF THE SOLAR BINARY: Chapter 12: QUANTAVOLUTION OF THE BIOSPHERE: HOMO SAPIENS -
sudden events in which polymorphs and species are proliferated". 54996 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 2: DESTRUCTION OF THE SOLAR BINARY: Chapter 12: QUANTAVOLUTION OF THE BIOSPHERE: HOMO SAPIENS -
to give the impression of new species and families evolving at or between extinction events. 55021 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 2: DESTRUCTION OF THE SOLAR BINARY: Chapter 12: QUANTAVOLUTION OF THE BIOSPHERE: HOMO SAPIENS -
believe, rather, that almost all modern species have survived from the Period of Radiant Genesis, 55024 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 2: DESTRUCTION OF THE SOLAR BINARY: Chapter 12: QUANTAVOLUTION OF THE BIOSPHERE: HOMO SAPIENS -
they both perpetuate and generate a species, 55028 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 2: DESTRUCTION OF THE SOLAR BINARY: Chapter 12: QUANTAVOLUTION OF THE BIOSPHERE: HOMO SAPIENS -
generate a species, Hence, non-populous species can have persisted all along and appeared in the record when their populations expanded under the "right" conditions. 55028 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 2: DESTRUCTION OF THE SOLAR BINARY: Chapter 12: QUANTAVOLUTION OF THE BIOSPHERE: HOMO SAPIENS -
under the "right" conditions. Further, these species and other species already part of the old (Devonian) record have quantavoluted into "new" species under the same catastrophic, 55030 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 2: DESTRUCTION OF THE SOLAR BINARY: Chapter 12: QUANTAVOLUTION OF THE BIOSPHERE: HOMO SAPIENS -
conditions. Further, these species and other species already part of the old (Devonian) record have quantavoluted into "new" species under the same catastrophic, 55030 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 2: DESTRUCTION OF THE SOLAR BINARY: Chapter 12: QUANTAVOLUTION OF THE BIOSPHERE: HOMO SAPIENS -
Devonian) record have quantavoluted into "new" species under the same catastrophic, 55031 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 2: DESTRUCTION OF THE SOLAR BINARY: Chapter 12: QUANTAVOLUTION OF THE BIOSPHERE: HOMO SAPIENS -
that the two are of distinct species; 55048 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 2: DESTRUCTION OF THE SOLAR BINARY: Chapter 12: QUANTAVOLUTION OF THE BIOSPHERE: HOMO SAPIENS -
of Solaria Binaria. The number of species peaked in the period of Pangean Stability and has been steadily reduced by catastrophes.57135 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 2: DESTRUCTION OF THE SOLAR BINARY: Chapter 17: TIME, ELECTRICITY AND QUANTAVOLUTION -
in the waves of extinction of species, 57249 SOLARIA-BINARIA: PART 2: DESTRUCTION OF THE SOLAR BINARY: Chapter 17: TIME, ELECTRICITY AND QUANTAVOLUTION -
transition (metamorphosis) between forms. In some species several forms co-exist within one colony at any moment.58887 SOLARIA-BINARIA: - - - GLOSSARY -
colony at any moment. polyploids are species of plants (and sometimes animals) whose chromosome number exceeds twice the basic set of chromosomes (the haploid number) found in the gamete cell (which) produces a new organism by fertilization with an appropriate gamete cell of the opposite gender. 58891 SOLARIA-BINARIA: - - - GLOSSARY -
University: New York) ---(1952), "How Many Species?," 60077 SOLARIA-BINARIA: - - - BIBILIOGRAPHY -
Stanley, Steven M. (1976), "Stability of Species in Geologic Time," 60099 SOLARIA-BINARIA: - - - BIBILIOGRAPHY -
6 Teichert, Curt (1973), "How Many Species?," 60139 SOLARIA-BINARIA: - - - BIBILIOGRAPHY -
967-9 Tinkle, Donald W. (1974), "Species and Speciation" in Ency. 60141 SOLARIA-BINARIA: - - - BIBILIOGRAPHY -
main factor in the alteration of species. 60714 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : THE SEARCH FOR A BETTER APE
his influential work The Origin of Species by Natural Selection. 60961 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : NATURAL SELECTION
they competed for survival within their species and with representatives of other species.60966 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : NATURAL SELECTION
species and with representatives of other species. 60966 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : NATURAL SELECTION
begging. Thus, a trait of a species, 61011 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : NATURAL SELECTION
common formulation reduces to this: a species which did whatever was done tended to survive in greater numbers. 61012 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : NATURAL SELECTION
changed because the change helped the species to survive. 61015 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : NATURAL SELECTION
righthandedness in about 87 of the species. 61019 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : NATURAL SELECTION
asymmetry and handedness: these 'help the species to survive by promoting dexterity; ' 61022 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : NATURAL SELECTION
own in the evolution of the species. 61046 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : NATURAL SELECTION
sixty times in the Origin of Species.) 61055 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : NATURAL SELECTION
through homo erectus with our own species homo sapiens. 61061 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : NATURAL SELECTION
as having originated and developed all species of life to their present state within a time span which, 61087 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : NATURAL SELECTION
of successive 'chain reactions' to the species wherever its habitat, 61126 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : NATURAL SELECTION
the next individual of one's species, 61140 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : SEVERE LIMITS TO NATURAL SELECTION
and being a member of a species that is reproductively fitter than whatever species at the moment may be cutting into this reproductivity. 61140 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : SEVERE LIMITS TO NATURAL SELECTION
that is reproductively fitter than whatever species at the moment may be cutting into this reproductivity. 61141 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : SEVERE LIMITS TO NATURAL SELECTION
of the same or of different species. 61145 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : SEVERE LIMITS TO NATURAL SELECTION
the changes within an individual and species that have occurred up to Tx can promptly lose their merits as factors in natural selection. 61149 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : SEVERE LIMITS TO NATURAL SELECTION
to zero. The environment which effects species selection is so changeable even under uniformitarian conditions that no 'line of evolution' can be credible as an effect of natural selection.61160 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : SEVERE LIMITS TO NATURAL SELECTION
next an elimination of a competing species by other causes than direct competition, 61162 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : SEVERE LIMITS TO NATURAL SELECTION
play upon the situation of a species. 61164 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : SEVERE LIMITS TO NATURAL SELECTION
years of On the Origin of Species by Natural Selection, 61171 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : SEVERE LIMITS TO NATURAL SELECTION
as 'lucky survivors' versus natural selection. Species do not arise by any provable natural selection but only on occasion flourish thereby or decline, 61210 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : SEVERE LIMITS TO NATURAL SELECTION
seemingly general mode of creating new species and perhaps of destroying many, 61213 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : SEVERE LIMITS TO NATURAL SELECTION
given environment. Many a 'hopelessly inept species' lives on and there are many 'marvelously adapted' fossils of extinct species. 61215 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : SEVERE LIMITS TO NATURAL SELECTION
many 'marvelously adapted' fossils of extinct species. 61216 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : SEVERE LIMITS TO NATURAL SELECTION
judge by the number of existing species. 61218 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : SEVERE LIMITS TO NATURAL SELECTION
all the thousands of alterations of species and individuals designed as 'improvements by natural selection, ' 61223 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : SEVERE LIMITS TO NATURAL SELECTION
with the formidable propensity of every species to reproduce in infinite numbers.61225 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : SEVERE LIMITS TO NATURAL SELECTION
or better than the most complex species, 61228 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : SEVERE LIMITS TO NATURAL SELECTION
that several manlike and other Homo species were contemporary in very ancient times. 61275 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : WAVES OF EVOLUTION
354ff; St. George Mivart, Genesis of Species, 61459 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : Notes (Chapter 1: Slippery Ladders of Evolution)
Among Lower Pleistocene Hominids: The Single Species Hypothesis, 61512 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 1: SLIPPERY LADDERS OF EVOLUTION : Notes (Chapter 1: Slippery Ladders of Evolution)
proto-humans have been of the species homo sapiens (schizotypus) in physiology and culture? 61562 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS -
limits of variation within the single species or how the principal distinction employed -- that interbreeding be impossible -- would apply here. 61588 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS -
distinguishable as skeletons, but are one species; 61614 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS -
to call new specimens by new species names. 61625 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS -
join them together as a single species, 61626 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS -
claims, apart from the many new species of extinct animals that are accredited to him, 61868 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS : AMEGHINO'S ARGENTINE HOMINIDS
coefficients of variations in the human species, 61932 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS : METHODOLOGICAL POSSIBILITIES
variability in comparison with other mammal species 14 . 61933 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS : METHODOLOGICAL POSSIBILITIES
the mental traits of the homo species, 61997 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS : TIME UNNEEDED FOR CULTURE
can be erratic, owing to atmospheric, species, 62083 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS : TIME UNNEEDED FOR CULTURE
fauna including very large and modern species both extant and extinct. 62179 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS : OLDUVAI GORGE
repeated incursions of hominid and faunal species, 62190 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS : OLDUVAI GORGE
penchant of the soma of a species to transmute into a phylum crowned by a mysterious noos 25 . 62290 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS : CHARDIN'S ORTHOGENETICS
up of sub-groupings of a species into isolated pockets, 62380 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS : DOBZHANSKY, SIMPSON AND QUANTUM EVOLUTION
extinction followed by fully developed new species, 62390 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS : DOBZHANSKY, SIMPSON AND QUANTUM EVOLUTION
boundary-periods between extinctions and new species as times of natural catastrophes, 62396 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 2: HOMINIDS IN HOLOGENESIS : DOBZHANSKY, SIMPSON AND QUANTUM EVOLUTION
under special conditions nor whether certain species are more capable of quantavolution than others. 62570 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION -
often in the fossil record, some species change while others remain the same. 62571 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION -
almost happened to Earth. Practically all species that became extinct, 62711 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : ANCIENT CATASTROPHES
the self-awareness of the human species as a whole, 62795 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : QUANTAVOLUTION VS. EVOLUTION
end; it can explain some intra-species changes, 62839 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : QUANTAVOLUTION VS. EVOLUTION
of populations originally belonging to one species, 63053 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : MUTATION
starts with geographical expansion of the species' range to such a degree that two or more populations of one species become reproductively isolated. 63053 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : MUTATION
two or more populations of one species become reproductively isolated. 63054 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : MUTATION
races, in the origin of new species, 63058 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : MUTATION
for further evolution of the human species is something we need not worry about. 63087 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : MUTATION
too specialized to survive in the species? 63129 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : MUTATION
sense; but they affect individuals, not species, 63141 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : MUTATION
many features of the organism (hence species) are systematically calibrated. 63159 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : MUTATION
systematically calibrated. Still, individuals of the species, 63160 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : MUTATION
on the likelihood of quantavolution of species: 63166 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : MUTATION
The instantaneous origin of a new species by a single genetic event can occur but is unusual. 63167 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : MUTATION
not dogmatically, gradualistic 16 . No new species has been proven to form, 63176 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : MUTATION
by biologists for evolution of a species is so long, 63185 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : MUTATION
of the origin and development of species by mutation. 63186 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : MUTATION
gene pool already available to a species and is questionable on the grounds already stated in the preceding chapters. 63189 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : MUTATION
consequences in appearance and behavior among species, 63205 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : MUTATION
and systemic mutations leading to new species and genera 19 . 63237 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : MUTATION
and mostly trivial; yet a given species is integrated functionally, 63252 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : INTELLIGENT MUTATION AND EVOLUTIONARY SALTATIONS
functionally, and differs significantly from another species. 63253 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : INTELLIGENT MUTATION AND EVOLUTIONARY SALTATIONS
individuation within limits of an ongoing species, 63275 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : INTELLIGENT MUTATION AND EVOLUTIONARY SALTATIONS
the structure and function of any species known up to the present and many more. 63287 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : INTELLIGENT MUTATION AND EVOLUTIONARY SALTATIONS
events, a member of the new species be mutated, 63317 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : INTELLIGENT MUTATION AND EVOLUTIONARY SALTATIONS
The process of fixing the next species, 63323 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : INTELLIGENT MUTATION AND EVOLUTIONARY SALTATIONS
only the changed genetic capabilities afforded species that have branched off of its line since the beginning of life. 63333 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : INTELLIGENT MUTATION AND EVOLUTIONARY SALTATIONS
a hundred for the generally of species, 63337 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : INTELLIGENT MUTATION AND EVOLUTIONARY SALTATIONS
under a dozen for the particular species. 63338 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : INTELLIGENT MUTATION AND EVOLUTIONARY SALTATIONS
the structure and functions of a species. 63341 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : INTELLIGENT MUTATION AND EVOLUTIONARY SALTATIONS
but against great odds, preexisting ancestral species can be recreated, 63355 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : INTELLIGENT MUTATION AND EVOLUTIONARY SALTATIONS
to be a dominant trait. A species change is thought to occur by gradual accumulation of small differences. 63367 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : EXTERNAL PRODUCERS OF MUTATION
promote the change. Subsequently, the new species diffuses. 63369 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : EXTERNAL PRODUCERS OF MUTATION
or 10 million years that most species exist. 63381 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : EXTERNAL PRODUCERS OF MUTATION
the main differences between the two species. 63383 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : EXTERNAL PRODUCERS OF MUTATION
isolation, adaptation, and extinction of competing species. 63406 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : EXTERNAL PRODUCERS OF MUTATION
evidence of the wholesale extinction of species. 63434 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : EXTERNAL PRODUCERS OF MUTATION
this would include first that the species have been created and exterminated in waves. 63440 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : EXTERNAL PRODUCERS OF MUTATION
disasters not only mutate and exterminate species; 63448 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : EXTERNAL PRODUCERS OF MUTATION
involving man, is not acceptable; all species were under extinction stress in both Pleistocene and Holocene, 63471 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : EXTERNAL PRODUCERS OF MUTATION
radiation storms 26 . Most large mammal species were wiped out in the late Pleistocene, 63479 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : EXTERNAL PRODUCERS OF MUTATION
of saltation, the leap from one species to another: 63643 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : AN ATMOSPHERIC TRANSFORMATION
mutations were abundantly occurring among all species, 63881 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 3: MECHANICS OF HUMANIZATION : THE SUMMARY MECHANICS
The problems typical of the human species are in the regression of the ego-mechanisms to their primeval but human state, 64386 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 4: THE GESTALT OF CREATION : SELF-CONSCIOUSNESS
animal is 'given his head. ' Many species, 64541 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 4: THE GESTALT OF CREATION : THE STRUGGLE OF THE SELEVES
hologenetically, from the one Hominid 'X' species to the present homo sapiens schizotypus.64677 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 4: THE GESTALT OF CREATION : DIFFUSION OF THE GESTALT
Furthermore, the character of the new species was such as to intimidate the hominids and drive them into marginal living niches. 64685 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 4: THE GESTALT OF CREATION : DIFFUSION OF THE GESTALT
recognized, if a critical mutation of species is to be experienced. 64713 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 4: THE GESTALT OF CREATION : THE DOUBLE CATASTROPHE
were forever commingled in the new species. 64742 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 4: THE GESTALT OF CREATION : THE DOUBLE CATASTROPHE
one year old female of the species homo erectus frater (that is, 64775 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 4: THE GESTALT OF CREATION : A PRIMORDIAL SCENARIO
be modern man, but a different species. 65561 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : TRIBES, CIVILIZATIONS, AND TIME
70 of the great pleistocene mammal species disappeared 9 . 65625 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : MAJOR DEVELOPMENTS EVERYWHERE CONTEMPORARY
any more difficult for the wild species. 65667 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : MAJOR DEVELOPMENTS EVERYWHERE CONTEMPORARY
the psychology of the new human species, 65964 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : AMERICAN CULTURAL ORIGINS
possessed ideology, skills, and zeal. No species could stand against them. 65972 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 5: CULTURAL REVOLUTION : AMERICAN CULTURAL ORIGINS
specialized practices with regard to a species or even a particular animal or plant. 66260 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 6: SCHIZOID INSTITUTIONS -
or whatever its age as a species, 66333 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 6: SCHIZOID INSTITUTIONS : SPEECH AND LANGUAGE
breeding, and herding of varied animal species reflected a projection of human organization into the animal kingdom. 66581 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 6: SCHIZOID INSTITUTIONS : GROUP VS. INDIVIDUAL
reaction and response of a new species of being to continued applications of great internal and external stress. 66752 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 6: SCHIZOID INSTITUTIONS : ORGANIZATION AND CONTROL
and instinctive product of the mammalian species but was the example and instruction of the gods. 66943 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 6: SCHIZOID INSTITUTIONS : SEXUAL RAMIFICATIONS
recollective memory begin. When the anxious species is born and asks of itself an impossible measure of control, 67138 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 6: SCHIZOID INSTITUTIONS : SUBLIMATION
to be numbered among the rare species who have eaten their own kind. 67242 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 6: SCHIZOID INSTITUTIONS : CANNIBALISM
The culture gap between the two species would be wider than their appearances might suggest.67399 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 6: SCHIZOID INSTITUTIONS : VIOLENCE AND WAR
history is the autobiography of this species. 67710 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : HISTORISM
today has been with the human species from its beginnings. 67986 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : HELL
s idea of the origin of species (1844) and the descent of man (1871) were intellectually weak, 68417 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : DARWINIAN HISTORISM
the publication of The Origin of Species, 68470 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : DARWINIAN HISTORISM
find among the genes of any species whatever precise gene, 68489 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : DARWINIAN HISTORISM
Chicago Press, 1948. 22. Origin of Species, 68562 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : Notes (Chapter 7: Psychopathology of History)
by- point; third, that the human species appeared much earlier than 13, 68606 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY -
atmospheric transformation, without which the human species -- and many others -- would be most unlikely to evolve. 68623 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : REAL AND PSYCHIC DISASTER
criticism is ventured, that the human species is known to be very old, 68678 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : A RECENT SMALL SHARP CHANGE
is most human. No other animal species is so ineluctably schizotypical. 68713 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : THE UNREDEEMABLE APEMAN
reflects the intuitive recognition of similar species. 68730 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : THE UNREDEEMABLE APEMAN
are missing. The forces that generate species by mutation are constrained by the necessity to work on what is already potential, 68734 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : THE UNREDEEMABLE APEMAN
already potential, in order for the species to survive in a physical, 68735 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : THE UNREDEEMABLE APEMAN
was refashioned, and great numbers of species were extincted. 68749 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : THE UNREDEEMABLE APEMAN
cultural evolution is impossible. Culture is species specific behavior of homo schizo. 68762 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : THE UNREDEEMABLE APEMAN
proves that man is the only species that dwells outside of itself, 68765 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : THE UNREDEEMABLE APEMAN
during the birth throes of the species, 68774 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : SCHIZOTYPICALITY AND HOMO SAPIENS
call all people by the same species name. 68831 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : SCHIZOTYPICALITY AND HOMO SAPIENS
all people be of the same species in that they apparently can interbreed. 68832 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : SCHIZOTYPICALITY AND HOMO SAPIENS
also suspect that the stress on species intra-reproducibility may be an offshoot of the peculiar sex-sublimated English nineteenth century environment, 68836 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : SCHIZOTYPICALITY AND HOMO SAPIENS
that all people are of one species but also the thesis of this book that all people are to be presumed schizoid. 68850 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : SCHIZOTYPICALITY AND HOMO SAPIENS
nature. Such would be an 'ideal' species, 68869 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : SCHIZOTYPICALITY AND HOMO SAPIENS
a rare chance that such a species exists among us and, 68873 HOMO SCHIZO I: - - Chapter 7: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF HISTORY : SCHIZOTYPICALITY AND HOMO SAPIENS
of the individual mind, the human species does not exist except in transacting minds.69298 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 1: THE NORMALLY INSANE -
accorded us, reserving it for a species of some future event and time. 69303 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 1: THE NORMALLY INSANE -
the idea of sanity. The human species has to be composed of normal sane people; 69362 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 1: THE NORMALLY INSANE -
analogy or counterpart in some other species. 69425 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 1: THE NORMALLY INSANE : S CULTURED MAMMALS
upon as unique to the human species, 69759 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 1: THE NORMALLY INSANE : SELF-AWARENESS
the first days of the human species down through history to the present. 69761 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 1: THE NORMALLY INSANE : SELF-AWARENESS
behavior is characteristic of many animal species, 69792 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 1: THE NORMALLY INSANE : SELF-AWARENESS
around the world. Mammalian and other species can spread rapidly around the world; 70475 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 1: THE NORMALLY INSANE : GENETICS: ARE THERE HOMINIDS AMONG US?
operate upon the original fear. Every species, 70670 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 2: THE SEARCH FOR LOST INSTINCT -
existing structure for experiencing; experience is species- specific and organism-specific.70671 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 2: THE SEARCH FOR LOST INSTINCT -
to render individual choice unnecessary for species survival. 70726 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 2: THE SEARCH FOR LOST INSTINCT : INSTINCT-DELAY
the great fear of the human species is to be closed in and lost in an unfriendly world,70846 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 2: THE SEARCH FOR LOST INSTINCT : SELF-FEAR AND SELF-CONTROL
live with himself as a fixed species. 70847 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 2: THE SEARCH FOR LOST INSTINCT : SELF-FEAR AND SELF-CONTROL
sense of being of the hominidal species of the primates. 70940 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 2: THE SEARCH FOR LOST INSTINCT : THE SENSE OF "I AM"
a human, and of the human species. 71224 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 2: THE SEARCH FOR LOST INSTINCT : INSTINCT IN MAN AND ANIMAL
it, that makes it a unique species, 71234 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 2: THE SEARCH FOR LOST INSTINCT : INSTINCT IN MAN AND ANIMAL
put forward: instinctive behavior in a species is present when, 71255 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 2: THE SEARCH FOR LOST INSTINCT : INSTINCT IN MAN AND ANIMAL
The number of instincts in mammal species subsumable under this definition must be in the hundreds.71257 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 2: THE SEARCH FOR LOST INSTINCT : INSTINCT IN MAN AND ANIMAL
the differences between man and other species, 71425 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 2: THE SEARCH FOR LOST INSTINCT : "YOU CAN'T GO HOME AGAIN"
which to base a separation of species. 71443 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 2: THE SEARCH FOR LOST INSTINCT : "YOU CAN'T GO HOME AGAIN"
so proud of himself as a species, 71445 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 2: THE SEARCH FOR LOST INSTINCT : "YOU CAN'T GO HOME AGAIN"
produces more behavioral effects than any species, 71499 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 2: THE SEARCH FOR LOST INSTINCT : "YOU CAN'T GO HOME AGAIN"
as many as a great many species put together. 71500 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 2: THE SEARCH FOR LOST INSTINCT : "YOU CAN'T GO HOME AGAIN"
stimulation by signs typical to the species, 71727 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 3: BRAINWORK : THE ANIMAL BASEMENT
brain, is so widespread among animal species that it is unlikely to be the source of distinctive human behavior or to have changed to become so. 71748 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 3: BRAINWORK : THE ANIMAL BASEMENT
neural activity accounts for differences among species is unquestionable. 71970 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 3: BRAINWORK : THE LOCATION OF INSTINCT DELAY
sent "back to the drawing boards." Species changes are rarely neat. 72284 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 3: BRAINWORK : HANDEDNESS
dominant genetic structure peculiar to the species, 72424 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 3: BRAINWORK : ORDER AND DISUNITY
the constitution and behavior of the species.) 72425 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 3: BRAINWORK : ORDER AND DISUNITY
convert a phylogenetic bilateralism into a species-specific division of labor and heavy-handedness. 72436 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 3: BRAINWORK : MEMORY AND REPETITION
to fellow members of the same species, 72834 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 4: DISPLACEMENT AND OBSESSION : DISPLACEMENT
so exceed the capabilities of other species. 73017 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 4: DISPLACEMENT AND OBSESSION : TIME AND REMEMBERING
the most ancient determinants of human species behavior. 73378 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 5: COPING WITH FEAR : OMNIPRESENT FEAR
known special sex behavior of every species, 73664 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 5: COPING WITH FEAR : GUILT AND PUNISHMENT
in a maelstrom of delusions. Other species are outdistanced in the race to set up communication systems, 74264 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 6: SYMBOLS AND SPEECH -
dogs, horses, and other non human species), 74357 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 6: SYMBOLS AND SPEECH : ANATOMY
as a member of the human species and whether any exceptions to death occur. 75428 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 7: THE GOOD, THE TRUE, AND THE BEAUTIFUL : THE DISSOLUTION OF LOGIC
of time, every cell and every species, 75739 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 7: THE GOOD, THE TRUE, AND THE BEAUTIFUL : TIME AND SPACE
Science takes homo-specific urges, applies species-specific responses and obtains species- indulgent effects. 75956 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 7: THE GOOD, THE TRUE, AND THE BEAUTIFUL : SCIENCE AS INSTINCT
applies species-specific responses and obtains species- indulgent effects. 75956 HOMO SCHIZO II: - - Chapter 7: THE GOOD, THE TRUE, AND THE BEAUTIFUL : SCIENCE AS INSTINCT
to the dawn of history, many species were quickly and concurrently wiped out or reduced to a few survivors.77561 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 1: SACRED SCANDAL AND DISASTER Chapter 4: CATASTROPHE AND SUBLIMATION : THE GENERAL THEORY OF CATASTROPHE
that the sheer survival of these species was all-important, 77585 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 1: SACRED SCANDAL AND DISASTER Chapter 4: CATASTROPHE AND SUBLIMATION : THE GENERAL THEORY OF CATASTROPHE
materials and objects, and changed many species of animals and plants. 77652 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 1: SACRED SCANDAL AND DISASTER Chapter 4: CATASTROPHE AND SUBLIMATION : THE DISPLACEMENT OF AFFECTS
governed by Zeus, in which the species are fixed, 79380 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 2: GODS, PLANETS, MADNESS Chapter 8: THE TWO FACES OF LOVE : A MOST ANCIENT GODDESS
were more sky-bovines than bovine species to assign to them. 79781 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 2: GODS, PLANETS, MADNESS Chapter 8: THE TWO FACES OF LOVE : CONFUSION COMPOUNDED
refers to them as of the species of plasmoid, 82797 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 2: GODS, PLANETS, MADNESS Chapter 13: HOW THE GODS FLY : ELECTRO-MECHANICS OF THE GODS
it is more doubtful that the species would have become human if it had not humanized the gods. 84902 THE DISASTROUS LOVE AFFAIR OF MOON AND MARS PART 3: THERAPY FOR GROUP FEAR Chapter 17: SETTLED SKY AND UNSETTLED MIND : FROM SAVAGERY TO SUBLIMITY
100 insects of the non-luminous species hemiptera per square foot 27 . 85688 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 1: PLAGUES AND COMETS : COSMIC PLAGUES
with four corner-horns of undesignated species fashioned of wood in one piece with the altar.) 92647 GODS FIRE: - - Chapter 7: THE LEVITES AND THE REVOLTS : REVOLT OF THE GOLDEN CALF
on camels, they are of the species of mobile storage jars. 95673 GODS FIRE: - - - APPENDIX : THE PRAGMATICS OF LEGEND
with those of one or more species. 97016 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 3: KNOWING THE GODS -
gestalt of creation of the human species and in the birth and development of every person thereafter. 98418 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 1: THEOMACHY Chapter 7: MAN'S DIVINE MIRROR -
parental and group training in many species; 99453 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 10: ETHICS AND THE SUPERNATURAL -
The system is both egoistic and species-racial (social). 99695 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 10: ETHICS AND THE SUPERNATURAL -
fact. We know nothing about any species that has the equivalent of schizotypicality and what this affords us. 100793 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 12: NEW PROOFS OF GOD -
us. We can conjecture how many species in all the universe might be schizotypical or have other systems capable of performing operations that we designate as being along the parameter of the human-as-divine up to the exceedingly divine, 100794 THE DEVINE SUCCESSION PART 2: THEOTROPY: Chapter 12: NEW PROOFS OF GOD -
forest has sprung up and new species of plants have been seen. 102084 THE BURNING OF TROY: - - Chapter 1: THE QUANTAVOLUTIONARY SCAN -
the Zodiac for instance) represent recognizable species; 102131 THE BURNING OF TROY: - - Chapter 1: THE QUANTAVOLUTIONARY SCAN -
colleagues, reviews the wholesale extinction of species at certain times, 102174 THE BURNING OF TROY: - - Chapter 1: THE QUANTAVOLUTIONARY SCAN -
disastrous an event? IV. "Every biological species underwent radical change around 3500 years ago in numbers,104627 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 7: NINE SPHERES OF VENUSIAN EFFECTS -
or ignored or is of current species. 104645 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 7: NINE SPHERES OF VENUSIAN EFFECTS -
banks. The leading question, "How many species have existed at a given point in time, 104936 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 8: THE OBLITERATION OF HUMAN SIGNS -
well-answered. Estimates of all the species that have ever existed have been argued on figures around 200,104937 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 1: HISTORICAL DISTURBANCES: Chapter 8: THE OBLITERATION OF HUMAN SIGNS -
exquisite gradualness -- the ice ages, new species, 105297 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 2: GEOLOGICAL ISSUES: Chapter 11: ICE CORES OF GREENLAND -
world -- a wholesale simultaneous extinction of species, 105301 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 2: GEOLOGICAL ISSUES: Chapter 11: ICE CORES OF GREENLAND -
culture stuffed with bones of different species, 106038 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 2: GEOLOGICAL ISSUES: Chapter 12: A FAILED EXCURSION TO THE CAVES OF AQUITAINE -
a retired God, if any, with species evolving gradually in competition, 107656 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 3: WORKING OF THE MIND: Chapter 19: THE 'UNCONSCIOUS' AS A LITERARY REVOLT AGAINST SCIENCE -
Ages "razed" by natural forces, the species "extinguished in waves," 107797 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 3: WORKING OF THE MIND: Chapter 19: THE 'UNCONSCIOUS' AS A LITERARY REVOLT AGAINST SCIENCE -
Descent of Man. (The Origin of Species had been published and immediately sold out in 1859.) 107855 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 3: WORKING OF THE MIND: Chapter 19: THE 'UNCONSCIOUS' AS A LITERARY REVOLT AGAINST SCIENCE : DETAILED EXPOSITION OF THE PROJECT
the following beliefs: the world, the species, 107873 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 3: WORKING OF THE MIND: Chapter 19: THE 'UNCONSCIOUS' AS A LITERARY REVOLT AGAINST SCIENCE : DETAILED EXPOSITION OF THE PROJECT
editions since). 8. . The Origin of Species (1859). 108300 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 3: WORKING OF THE MIND: Chapter 19: THE 'UNCONSCIOUS' AS A LITERARY REVOLT AGAINST SCIENCE : SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY OF PERTINENT WORKS
of Man. (The Origin of the Species had been published in 1859.) 108818 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 4: POLEMICS AND PERSONAGES: Chapter 22: MARX, ENGELS, AND DARWIN -
the following beliefs: the world, the species, 108826 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 4: POLEMICS AND PERSONAGES: Chapter 22: MARX, ENGELS, AND DARWIN -
Science as a unity, embracing nature, species, 108846 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 4: POLEMICS AND PERSONAGES: Chapter 22: MARX, ENGELS, AND DARWIN -
stated by Marx in 1844. The species evolved a will that is capable independently of abetting the relentless historical process: "108851 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 4: POLEMICS AND PERSONAGES: Chapter 22: MARX, ENGELS, AND DARWIN -
can bring about conditions for new species of life and life itself. 108865 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 4: POLEMICS AND PERSONAGES: Chapter 22: MARX, ENGELS, AND DARWIN -
within the record of the human species. 108873 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 4: POLEMICS AND PERSONAGES: Chapter 22: MARX, ENGELS, AND DARWIN -
promptly upon reading The Origin of Species, 108924 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 4: POLEMICS AND PERSONAGES: Chapter 22: MARX, ENGELS, AND DARWIN -
scientific explanation of the origin of species" will, 109048 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 4: POLEMICS AND PERSONAGES: Chapter 22: MARX, ENGELS, AND DARWIN : BIBLIOGRAPHIC NOTE
Marx complained of the Origin of Species as being "grossly unfolded in the English manner" and Engels of its "crude English method." 109072 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 4: POLEMICS AND PERSONAGES: Chapter 22: MARX, ENGELS, AND DARWIN : POSTSCRIPT: A CAUSE FOR EMBARRASSMENT
one dare not say "creation") of species; 109155 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 4: POLEMICS AND PERSONAGES: Chapter 23: RELIGION AND EDUCATION : I. QUANTAVOLUTION AND CREATION IN ARKANSAS
This would leave thousands of unchanging species hanging around "unnecessarily" for millions of years between quantavolutions. "109170 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 4: POLEMICS AND PERSONAGES: Chapter 23: RELIGION AND EDUCATION : I. QUANTAVOLUTION AND CREATION IN ARKANSAS
continental drift, it is called. Present species, 110382 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 5: COMMUNICATING A SCIENTIFIC MODEL: Chapter 27: A COSMIC DEBATE : EVOLUTIONARY AND REVOLUTIONARY PRINCIPLES
of sudden and extreme adaptation of species to atmospheric, 110693 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 5: COMMUNICATING A SCIENTIFIC MODEL: Chapter 27: A COSMIC DEBATE : V
and even more rapid extinction of species. 110698 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 5: COMMUNICATING A SCIENTIFIC MODEL: Chapter 27: A COSMIC DEBATE : V
the job of killing off the species, 110710 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 5: COMMUNICATING A SCIENTIFIC MODEL: Chapter 27: A COSMIC DEBATE : V
of the ocean deeps. Since the species that inhabit the deeps are rather ordinary and few in number - Jules Verne to the contrary notwithstanding - one may wonder whether some intelligent and well-organized groups of people will one day achieve methods of breeding edible species for the deeps and feeding them in their habitat. 110732 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 5: COMMUNICATING A SCIENTIFIC MODEL: Chapter 27: A COSMIC DEBATE : VI
day achieve methods of breeding edible species for the deeps and feeding them in their habitat. 110735 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 5: COMMUNICATING A SCIENTIFIC MODEL: Chapter 27: A COSMIC DEBATE : VI
igneous patterns; adaptation and extinction of species. 111115 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 5: COMMUNICATING A SCIENTIFIC MODEL: Chapter 28: SYLLABI FOR QUANTAVOLUTION -
ancient excavations. 8. Anthropology: the human species, 111236 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 5: COMMUNICATING A SCIENTIFIC MODEL: Chapter 28: SYLLABI FOR QUANTAVOLUTION -
IV. THE EXTINCTION AND GENESIS OF SPECIES 9. 111240 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 5: COMMUNICATING A SCIENTIFIC MODEL: Chapter 28: SYLLABI FOR QUANTAVOLUTION -
and earlier exterminations. 10. Origin of species in catastrophes. 111246 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 5: COMMUNICATING A SCIENTIFIC MODEL: Chapter 28: SYLLABI FOR QUANTAVOLUTION -
concern for the survival of the species and a fascination for the forces of destruction.111990 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 5: COMMUNICATING A SCIENTIFIC MODEL: Chapter 30: PAST, PRESENT, AND FUTURE : ANXIETY AND CATASTROPHISM
word "evolution" in the Origin of Species? 112069 THE BURNING OF TROY: PART 5: COMMUNICATING A SCIENTIFIC MODEL: Chapter 30: PAST, PRESENT, AND FUTURE : THE POLITICS OF UNIFORMITARIANISM
one thing to explain how various species have either survived, 124423 - A FIRE NOT BLOWN: - - Chapter 19: LIFE -
explain why there should be different species in the first place from which nature can select. 124424 - A FIRE NOT BLOWN: - - Chapter 19: LIFE -
a complex of usages requiring a species that is functioning holistically. 126923 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 2: THE PALAETIOLOGY OF FEAR AND MEMORY -
food, death, and survival of the species. 127033 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 2: THE PALAETIOLOGY OF FEAR AND MEMORY : ANIMAL AND HUMAN FAILURES ALIKE
variations of these themes as our species can enjoy." 127039 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 2: THE PALAETIOLOGY OF FEAR AND MEMORY : ANIMAL AND HUMAN FAILURES ALIKE
disaster were visited upon the human species, 127244 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 2: THE PALAETIOLOGY OF FEAR AND MEMORY : CATASTROPHIC FEAR
in the life of the human species similar to what occurs in the life of the individuals." 127887 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 3: PSYCHOLOGICAL ASPECTS OF THE WORK OF IMMANUEL VELIKOVSKY -
with dreams, that man as a species shows a tendency to produce such archetypes in his art, 129230 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 5: SHAKESPEARE AND VELIKOVSKY : Catastrophic Theory and the Springs of Art
The standard Operating Law when a species is in a bind is to diversify. 132452 RECOLLECTIONS OF A FALLEN SKY - VELIKOVSKY AND CULTURAL AMNESIA : Chapter 7: LIVING WITH VELIKOVSKY: : CATASTROPHISM AS WORLD VIEW
the remarkably rapid annihilation of whole species and genera of animals and the equally remarkable, 134460 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 1: MINDS IN CHAOS - - -
equally remarkable, almost simultaneous proliferation of species in other generic groups bespeak overwhelming catastrophe and wholesale mutation among survivors; 134462 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 1: MINDS IN CHAOS - - -
competition can give rise to new species. 135216 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 1: MINDS IN CHAOS - - -
the publication of The Origin of Species, 135217 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 1: MINDS IN CHAOS - - -
the mechanism of the origin of species, 135221 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 1: MINDS IN CHAOS - - -
that can cause the origin of species exists in nature. 135224 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 1: MINDS IN CHAOS - - -
of individuals and the perpetuation of species' 33 , 136855 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 3: THE INCONSTANT HEAVENS - - -
imparted to the terrestrial globe; entire species would be annihilated; 136885 THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR: PART 3: THE INCONSTANT HEAVENS - - -