It cannot be objected that there has not been time sufficient for any amount of organic change; for the lapse of time has been so great as to be utterly inappreciable by the human intellect.
But it is from this very period of exceptional stability that we obtain our only scale for measuring the rate of organic change.
Definite limitations have therefore been imposed upon the period of organic change.
Reproduction involves the actual discharge of the sexual function, which involves the females; but the first visible manifestation of organic changein the male is its desertion of the females.
The amount of organic change, as Pictet has remarked, is not the same in each successive so-called formation.
Independently of our not finding fossil remains of such infinitely numerous connecting links, it may be objected that time cannot have sufficed for so great an amount of organic change, all changes having been effected slowly.
The use of opium in any form produces noorganic change in the system whatever.
A biologist has no means of arriving at any conclusions as to the amount of time which may be needed for a certain quantity of organic change.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "organic change" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.