CREATION BY EVOLUTION 



MtJLLER, Fritz. Facts and Arguments for Darwin (English trans=- 



lation). London, I869. 

 Wheeler, William M. Casper Friedrich Wolff and the 'Theoria 



Generationis." Woods Hole Lectures, 1899. 

 Whitman, Charles O. Evolution and Epigenesis. Woods Hole 



Lectures, 1895. Bonnet's Theory of Evolution. Woods Hole 



Lectures, 1895. Palingenesis and the Germ Doctrine of Bonnet. 



Woods Hole Lectures, 1895. 



II. More Recent Works 



CoNKLiN, Edwin G. The Mechanism of Evolution. Scientific 



Monthly, Dec. 1919 — May 1920. Heredity and Environment 



in the Development of Men. Princeton Univ. Press, 5th ed., 



1925. 

 Hertwig, Oscar. The Biological Problem of To-day, etc. English 



translation, London, I896. 

 Hurst, C. H. Biological Theories III. The Recapitulation Theory. 



Natural Science, vol. II, 1893. 

 Morgan, Thomas H. Evolution and Adaptation. Macmillan, 



1903. 

 Romanes, J. G. Darwm and After Darwin. Open Court. Chicago. 

 Scott, William B. The Theory of Evolution. Macmillan, 1917. 

 Wiedersheim, R. The Structure of Man, an Index to His Past 



History. English translation. Macmillan, 1895. 



Among the greatest and most astonishing discoveries in the modern scien- 

 tific world is the fact that the story told by the gradual development of the 

 embryo §ives a summary of the rise and development of its race. A story 

 covering millions of years, if told in a few months or days, must necessarily 

 be very abbreviated, condensed and modified, but the general lines of the 

 two stories agree. 



Another astonishing fact shown by the development of the embryo is that 

 it follows the same line of ascent that is shown by the story told by the fossil 

 rocks, thus doubly confirming the fact that the course of nature is from the 

 simple to the complex, as from amoeba to man; that things in nature have 

 come about by gradual change and development, instead of finished and 

 perfect in the beginning. — Editor. 



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