[DOWNLOAD] "An Introduction to Entomology, or Elements of the Natural History of the Insects, Volume III of IV" by William Kirby & William Spence ~ Book PDF Kindle ePub Free
eBook details
- Title: An Introduction to Entomology, or Elements of the Natural History of the Insects, Volume III of IV
- Author : William Kirby & William Spence
- Release Date : January 01, 2012
- Genre: Nature,Books,Science & Nature,
- Pages : * pages
- Size : 3732 KB
Description
What is an insect? This may seem a strange question after such copious details as have been given in my former Letters of their history and economy, in which it appears to have been taken for granted that you can answer this question. Yet in the scientific road which you are now about to enter, to be able to define these creatures technically is an important first step which calls for attention. You know already that a butterfly is an insect—that a fly, a beetle, a grasshopper, a bug, a bee, a louse, and flea, are insects—that a spider also and centipede go under that name; and this knowledge, which every child likewise possesses, was sufficient for comprehending the subjects upon which I have hitherto written. But now that we are about to take a nearer view of them—to investigate their anatomical and physiological characters more closely—these vague and popular ideas are insufficient. In common language, not only the tribes above mentioned, but most small animals—as worms, slugs, leeches, and many similar creatures, are known by the name of insects. Such latitude, however, cannot be admitted in a scientific view of the subject, in which the class of insects is distinguished from these animals just as strictly as beasts from birds, and birds from reptiles and amphibia, and these again from fishes. Not, indeed, that the just limits of the class have always been clearly understood and marked out. Even when our correspondence first commenced, animals were regarded as belonging to it, which since their internal organization has been more fully explained, are properly separated from it. But it is now agreed on all hands, that an earthworm, a leech, or a slug, is not an insect; and a Naturalist seems almost as much inclined to smile at those who confound them, as Captain Cook at the islanders who confessed their entire ignorance of the nature of cows and horses, but gave him to understand that they knew his sheep and goats to be birds.