144 CLASSIFICATION OF THE FORMS OF THE PRINCIPLES. 



cess in all climates and in all countries. Moreover, under the stimulus 

 of intercourse with European civilization, there are evident signs that 

 new and progressive elements will be added to the old ideals till a truly 

 progressive spirit is attained. The remarkable power of accommoda- 

 tion to different climates and health conditions possessed by the race, 

 especially by the branch occupying the southern provinces of China, 

 is such that few races are able to endure free competition with them 

 even when the country and climate are so chosen as to give the best pos- 

 sible chance to their rivals. Members of the Teutonic race, when sub- 

 jected to the climate of India, suffer from tKe effects of the heat ; and 

 their small power of individual adaptive modification in that direction 

 gives them but little prospect of becoming completely adapted through 

 the effects of natural selection; for, if their children remain contin- 

 uously in the country, they have not sufficient energy for the battle of 

 life. On the other hand, the Chinese from Canton, with high powers 

 of accommodation, are fully successful as permanent settlers, both in 

 the cold of Manchuria and in the heat of the Malay Peninsula, Borneo, 

 and the Philippine Islands, and if completer racial adjustment is 

 needed, they are sure to attain to it in the course of generations, through 

 the accumulation of coincident variations. 



In the last chapter of his Problems of Evolution, Headley discussed 

 from a biological point of view some of the problems arising in the 

 intercourse of eastern and western races. 



III. AN UNWARRANTED ASSUMPTION. 



In discussing the influences producing evolution some writers have 

 assumed that all diversity of survival in different groups of individ- 

 uals of the same species is due to diversity in the environments to 

 which the groups are exposed; and as natural selection is defined 

 as the influence of the environment in determining what individuals 

 shall survive, the inference is reached that diversity of natural 

 selection is the only influence producing diversity of survival. A 

 careful study, however, of causes producing diversity of survival in 

 isolated groups shows that this assumption is without foundation. 

 In the first place, it ignores the fact that diversity in sexual selection, 

 and in any one of the other forms of reflexive selection, depends on 

 diversity in the influence of members of the group upon each other, 

 and that these influences may pass through a considerable range of 

 divergence without change in the conditions lying outside of the 

 species. In the case of man the forms of reflexive selection depend 

 chiefly on the form of social organization, which may be subject to 

 great change without reference to change in the environment of the 



