The Living Plant


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Excerpt from Th Living Plant: A Description and Interpretation of Its Functions and Structure The very first words I would write in this book are addressed to my botanical colleagues, whom I wish to inform that the work is not intended for them. In this statement I am by no means invoking immunity from scientific criticism, but emphasizing the aim of the book. It is not designed as a digest of our present scientific knowledge of plant physiology for the use of experts in that subject, but, in conformity with the aim of the series of which it is a part, it seeks to present to all who have interest to learn an accurate and vivid conception of the principal things in plant life. I was once myself such a learner, and I have tried to write such a book as I would then have delighted to read. It is, in a word, an attempt at that literature of interpretation which was foreshadowed by Francis Bacon in the fine passage that stands on its dedicatory page. This aim will explain peculiarities of the work not otherwise obvious. Thus, I have been at more pains to be clear than to be brief, assuming on the part of my reader no great knowledge of the subject, but a large willingness to take trouble to learn; and as I have tried to discuss every process with fulness enough to elucidate its nature, my book has wandered through a leisurely course to a length quite shockingly great. But I comfort myself with the reflection that the plan and the subject hardly permit other treatment; for a royal road to a real understanding of plant phenomena does neither exist nor can it be built.




The Living Plant; a Description and Interpretation of Its Functions and Structure...


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LIVING PLANT A DESCRIPTION & I


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TH LIVING PLANT


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Th Living Plant


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Excerpt from Th Living Plant: A Description and Interpretation of Its Functions and Structure As to the method of treatment in particular, I have sought especially to interpret those phenomena of plant life which come within ordinary observation and experience, penetrating just deeply enough into each to make clear the principle of its opera tion, - the theory of the thing in popular phrase; - and some times that has taken me far and sometimes it has not. Thus is explained the absence of some matters of high technical interest, which lie, however, outside the experience of the general observer. Where explanations are concerned, I have given the known ones when there are any, and when these are lacking I have not hesitated to supply suggestions of my own, though in a way designed to show their hypothetical character. As to statements of fact, I have meant to present only those which have acquired the impersonal validity of science, for which reason I have omitted a good many of the newest ideas, even at the risk of seeming not to know them; for I have noticed that he who is too closely up to date in science has later a good deal to unlearn. About the Publisher Forgotten Books publishes hundreds of thousands of rare and classic books. Find more at www.forgottenbooks.com This book is a reproduction of an important historical work. Forgotten Books uses state-of-the-art technology to digitally reconstruct the work, preserving the original format whilst repairing imperfections present in the aged copy. In rare cases, an imperfection in the original, such as a blemish or missing page, may be replicated in our edition. We do, however, repair the vast majority of imperfections successfully; any imperfections that remain are intentionally left to preserve the state of such historical works.







The Yale Review


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