Đồng nhất luận (Vietnamese Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Đồng nhất luận" in Vietnamese language version.

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americanscientist.org

  • Keith Stewart Thomson (May–June 2001). “Vestiges of James Hutton”. American Scientist. 89 (3): 212. doi:10.1511/2001.3.212. Bản gốc lưu trữ ngày 11 tháng 6 năm 2011. It is ironic that Hutton, the man whose prose style is usually dismissed as unreadable, should have coined one of the most memorable, and indeed lyrical, sentences in all science: "(in geology) we find no vestige of a beginning,—no prospect of an end". In those simple words, Hutton framed a concept that no one had previously contemplated, that the rocks making up the earth today have not, after all, been here since Creation.

archive.org

archive.today

bartleby.com

doi.org

  • Scott, G. H. (1963). “Uniformitarianism, the uniformity of nature, and paleoecology”. New Zealand Journal of Geology and Geophysics (bằng tiếng Anh). 6 (4): 510–527. doi:10.1080/00288306.1963.10420063. ISSN 0028-8306.
  • Gould 1965, tr. 223–228, "The assumption of spatial and temporal invariance of natural laws is by no means unique to geology since it amounts to a warrant for inductive inference which, as Bacon showed nearly four hundred years ago, is the basic mode of reasoning in empirical science. Without assuming this spatial and temporal invariance, we have no basis for extrapolating from the known to the unknown and, therefore, no way of reaching general conclusions from a finite number of observations." Gould, S. J. (1965). “Is uniformitarianism necessary?”. American Journal of Science. 263 (3): 223–228. Bibcode:1965AmJS..263..223G. doi:10.2475/ajs.263.3.223.
  • Ulanowicz, R. E.; Wilfried F. Wolff (1992). “Nature is Not Uniform”. Mathematical Biosciences. 112 (1): 185. doi:10.1016/0025-5564(92)90093-C. PMID 1421773.
  • Keith Stewart Thomson (May–June 2001). “Vestiges of James Hutton”. American Scientist. 89 (3): 212. doi:10.1511/2001.3.212. Bản gốc lưu trữ ngày 11 tháng 6 năm 2011. It is ironic that Hutton, the man whose prose style is usually dismissed as unreadable, should have coined one of the most memorable, and indeed lyrical, sentences in all science: "(in geology) we find no vestige of a beginning,—no prospect of an end". In those simple words, Hutton framed a concept that no one had previously contemplated, that the rocks making up the earth today have not, after all, been here since Creation.
  • Gould, S. J. (1965). “Is uniformitarianism necessary?”. American Journal of Science. 263 (3): 223–228. Bibcode:1965AmJS..263..223G. doi:10.2475/ajs.263.3.223.

enotes.com

findarticles.com

  • Robert Macfarlane (ngày 13 tháng 9 năm 2003). “Glimpses into the abyss of time”. The Spectator. Review of Repcheck's The Man Who Found Time. Bản gốc lưu trữ ngày 1 tháng 11 năm 2007. Hutton possessed an instinctive ability to reverse physical processes – to read landscapes backwards, as it were. Fingering the white quartz which seamed the grey granite boulders in a Scottish glen, for instance, he understood the confrontation that had once occurred between the two types of rock, and he perceived how, under fantastic pressure, the molten quartz had forced its way into the weaknesses in the mother granite.
  • John Playfair (1999). “Hutton's Unconformity”. Transactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh, vol. V, pt. III, 1805, quoted in Natural History, June 1999. Bản gốc lưu trữ ngày 7 tháng 1 năm 2005.

harvard.edu

ui.adsabs.harvard.edu

  • Gould 1965, tr. 223–228, "The assumption of spatial and temporal invariance of natural laws is by no means unique to geology since it amounts to a warrant for inductive inference which, as Bacon showed nearly four hundred years ago, is the basic mode of reasoning in empirical science. Without assuming this spatial and temporal invariance, we have no basis for extrapolating from the known to the unknown and, therefore, no way of reaching general conclusions from a finite number of observations." Gould, S. J. (1965). “Is uniformitarianism necessary?”. American Journal of Science. 263 (3): 223–228. Bibcode:1965AmJS..263..223G. doi:10.2475/ajs.263.3.223.
  • Gould, S. J. (1965). “Is uniformitarianism necessary?”. American Journal of Science. 263 (3): 223–228. Bibcode:1965AmJS..263..223G. doi:10.2475/ajs.263.3.223.

jedburgh-online.org.uk

  • “Jedburgh: Hutton's Unconformity”. Jedburgh online. Bản gốc lưu trữ ngày 29 tháng 7 năm 2009. Whilst visiting Allar's Mill on the Jed Water, Hutton was delighted to see horizontal bands of red sandstone lying 'unconformably' on top of near vertical and folded bands of rock.

nih.gov

pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov

play.google.com

researchgate.net

  • FARIA, Felipe. Actualismo,Catastrofismo y Uniformitarismo. In: Pérez, María Luisa Bacarlett & Caponi, Gustavo. Pensar la vida: Filosofía, naturaleza y evolución. Toluca: Universidad Autónoma del Estado de México, p. 55-80, 2015.[1]

scottishgeology.com

snh.org.uk

uwc.edu

uwmc.uwc.edu

  • Hutton, J. (1785). “Abstract, The System of the Earth, Its Duration and Stability”. Bản gốc lưu trữ ngày 7 tháng 9 năm 2008. As it is not in human record, but in natural history, that we are to look for the means of ascertaining what has already been, it is here proposed to examine the appearances of the earth, in order to be informed of operations which have been transacted in time past. It is thus that, from principles of natural philosophy, we may arrive at some knowledge of order and system in the economy of this globe, and may form a rational opinion with regard to the course of nature, or to events which are in time to happen.
  • Concerning the System of the Earth Lưu trữ 2008-09-07 tại Wayback Machine abstract, as read by James Hutton at a meeting of the Royal Society of Edinburgh on ngày 4 tháng 7 năm 1785, printed and circulated privately.

web.archive.org

  • “Uniformitarianism: World of Earth Science”. Bản gốc lưu trữ ngày 25 tháng 10 năm 2011. Truy cập ngày 15 tháng 6 năm 2020.
  • Hutton, J. (1785). “Abstract, The System of the Earth, Its Duration and Stability”. Bản gốc lưu trữ ngày 7 tháng 9 năm 2008. As it is not in human record, but in natural history, that we are to look for the means of ascertaining what has already been, it is here proposed to examine the appearances of the earth, in order to be informed of operations which have been transacted in time past. It is thus that, from principles of natural philosophy, we may arrive at some knowledge of order and system in the economy of this globe, and may form a rational opinion with regard to the course of nature, or to events which are in time to happen.
  • Concerning the System of the Earth Lưu trữ 2008-09-07 tại Wayback Machine abstract, as read by James Hutton at a meeting of the Royal Society of Edinburgh on ngày 4 tháng 7 năm 1785, printed and circulated privately.
  • Robert Macfarlane (ngày 13 tháng 9 năm 2003). “Glimpses into the abyss of time”. The Spectator. Review of Repcheck's The Man Who Found Time. Bản gốc lưu trữ ngày 1 tháng 11 năm 2007. Hutton possessed an instinctive ability to reverse physical processes – to read landscapes backwards, as it were. Fingering the white quartz which seamed the grey granite boulders in a Scottish glen, for instance, he understood the confrontation that had once occurred between the two types of rock, and he perceived how, under fantastic pressure, the molten quartz had forced its way into the weaknesses in the mother granite.
  • “Jedburgh: Hutton's Unconformity”. Jedburgh online. Bản gốc lưu trữ ngày 29 tháng 7 năm 2009. Whilst visiting Allar's Mill on the Jed Water, Hutton was delighted to see horizontal bands of red sandstone lying 'unconformably' on top of near vertical and folded bands of rock.
  • “Hutton's Unconformity”. Bản gốc lưu trữ ngày 24 tháng 9 năm 2015.
  • John Playfair (1999). “Hutton's Unconformity”. Transactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh, vol. V, pt. III, 1805, quoted in Natural History, June 1999. Bản gốc lưu trữ ngày 7 tháng 1 năm 2005.
  • Keith Stewart Thomson (May–June 2001). “Vestiges of James Hutton”. American Scientist. 89 (3): 212. doi:10.1511/2001.3.212. Bản gốc lưu trữ ngày 11 tháng 6 năm 2011. It is ironic that Hutton, the man whose prose style is usually dismissed as unreadable, should have coined one of the most memorable, and indeed lyrical, sentences in all science: "(in geology) we find no vestige of a beginning,—no prospect of an end". In those simple words, Hutton framed a concept that no one had previously contemplated, that the rocks making up the earth today have not, after all, been here since Creation.
  • The Columbia Encyclopedia Sixth Edition, uniformitarianism Lưu trữ 2006-06-24 tại Wayback Machine © 2007 Columbia University Press.

worldcat.org

  • Scott, G. H. (1963). “Uniformitarianism, the uniformity of nature, and paleoecology”. New Zealand Journal of Geology and Geophysics (bằng tiếng Anh). 6 (4): 510–527. doi:10.1080/00288306.1963.10420063. ISSN 0028-8306.