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ThalesThales of Miletus (circa 635 BC - 543 BC) was a pre-Socratic Greek philosopher. He is generally considered the first philosopher in the Greek tradition and is considered the father of science as well. He is numbered among the Seven Sages of Greece. Thales is remembered for arguing that water is the essence of all things. This argument is significant because it is the first attempt to explain the physical world without reference to a supernatural power. Prior to Thales all such explanations relied on gods or other mythological forces. Thales lived in the city of Miletus, in Ionia. The Ionians were well-traveled and had many dealings with Egypt and Babylon, and it is possible that Thales had studied in Egypt as a young man. In any event, Thales was almost certainly exposed to Egyptian mythology, astronomy, and mathematics, as well as other traditions alien to the Homeric traditions of Greece. It is perhaps because of this that his inquiries into the nature of things took him beyond traditional mythology. Thales had a profound influence on other Greek thinkers and therefore on Western history. Anaximander is sometimes considered to be a pupil of Thales. And it is reported by early sources that one of Anaximander's more famous pupils, Pythagoras, visited Thales as a young man, and was advised to travel to Egypt to further his philosophical and mathematical studies. Many philosophers followed his lead in searching for explanations in nature rather than in the supernatural; others returned to supernatural explanations, but couched in the language of philosophy, rather than myth or religion. Herodotus reports that in 585 BC Thales was with the Lydians when they fought the Medes, and was able to forecast that a solar eclipse would occur on May 28 which ended the war (see Alyattes II). A famous, though contradictory, anecdote of his life involves a business decision. He is said to have been able to predict the weather, and bought all of the olive presses in Miletus when he knew there would be a good harvest. Another version states that Thales bought the presses because the Milesians wondered why he didn't use his intelligence to make himself wealthy. Other versions say he bought the wine presses, rather than the olive presses.
Thales Group[?] has been the name of the French electronics and defence contractor Thomson-CSF (Compagnie de telegraphie Sans Fil) since 2000. originated the theory. I said I should not look at it, as I had
press. I could not recast my work if, as was most likely, I should
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matter ended with very little said upon either side. I wrote,
Nature which contained the lecture if he could find it, but he was
him what I was doing. He told me I ought to read.html">read Professor Mivart's
two sides to "natural selection." Thinking, as so many people do--
same thing, and having found so many attacks upon evolution.html">evolution produce
a writer could attack Neo-Darwinism without attacking evolution. But
in the presence of arguments different from those I had met with
read only a small part of Professor Mivart's work, and was not fully
paragraph called on me.
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variations whose accumulation was to amount ultimately to specific
no progress in organic development. I got the latest edition of the
Mivart, and found his answers in many respects unsatisfactory. I had
the book for some years. I now set about reading it again, and came
following passage:-
of instincts have been acquired by habit.html">habit.html">habit in one generation and then
clearly shown that the most wonderful instincts with which we are
possibly have been acquired by habit." {23a}
error, and my faith in him, though somewhat shaken, was far too great
importance of whose work I had not yet apprehended. I continued to
indeed have been blundering. The concluding words, "I am surprised
insects against the well-known doctrine of inherited habit as
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