CREATION BY EVOLUTION 



fore all the more interesting and instructive to the student 

 of human nature. As we learn more of the ways of these 

 creatures, it becomes more apparent to us not only that we 

 are very much like them but that they are very much like us. 



REFERENCES 



Darwin, C. R. The Descent of Man. New York, Appleton, 



1871. The Expression of the Emotions in Man and Animals. 



New York, 1872. 

 HoBHOUSE, L. T. Mind in Evolution. London, Macmillan, 1901. 

 Holmes, S. J. The Evolution of Animal Intelligence. New York, 



Holt, 1911. Studies in Animal Behavior. Boston, Badger, 



1916. 

 KoHLER, W. The Mentality of Apes. New York, Harcourt, Brace, 



1925. 

 Romanes, G. J. Animal Intelligence. New York, Appleton, 



1883. 

 Thorndike, E. L. Animal Intelligence. New York, Macmillan, 



1911. 

 Yerkes, R. M. Almost Human. New York, Appleton, 1925. 

 The Intelligence of Chimpanzees. Baltimore, Williams and 

 Wilkins, 1926. 



Dr. H. de Borlodot, delegate from the Catholic University of Lorraine to 

 the Darwinian Centenary at Cambridge, said: "It is no exaggeration to say 

 that in showing us a creation more grandiose than we had ever suspected 

 it, Charles Darwin completed the work of Isaac Newton; because for all 

 those whose ears are not incapable of hearing, Darwin was the interpreter 

 of the organic world, just as Newton was the voice from heaven come to 

 tell us of the glory of the Creator and to proclaim that the Universe is a 

 work truly worthy of His hand." 



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