314 1 The Process of Evolution 



the processes that led to man and his curious mind will help us to 

 decide whether such questions have any meaning. It is our guess 

 that they will be found meaningless and that when this is widely 

 recognized both science and man will have reached a new level of 

 maturity. 



REFERENCES 



Dobzhansky, T. 1962. Mankind Evolving. Xale Univ. Press, New Haven, 

 Conn. See the discussion of Social Darwinism and Racism, pp. 10-15. 



Du Noiiy, Lecompte. 1947. Hitman Destiny. Longmans, New York. Very 

 little in this volume would be acceptable to a biologist acquainted with 

 evolutionary processes. 



Ehrlich, P. R., and R. W. Holm. 1962. Patterns and populations. Science 

 137: 652-657. This paper expounds the prejudices of the authors of 

 this book and cites other authors with similar views. 



Frank, Philipp. 1957. Philosophy of Science. Prentice-Hall, Englewood 

 Cliffs, N.J. A good discussion of the link between science and philoso- 

 phy as seen by a physicist. 



Hennig, W. 1950. Grundziige einer Theorie der phylogenetischen Sy- 

 stematik. Deutscher Zentralverl., Berlin. This is by far the best account 

 of the concepts and views of the phylogenetic school of taxonomists. 



Sneath, P. H. A., and R. R. Sokal. 1962. Numerical taxonomy. Mature 

 193: 855-858. A fine brief summary of the philosophy, methodology, 

 and literature of this field. 



Sokal, R. R., and P. H. A. Sneath. 1963. Principles of Numerical Taxon- 

 omy. Freeman & Co., San Francisco. A rigorous and scholarly treatment 

 of the scientific aspects of modern taxonomv. 



West, D. A. 1962. Hybridization in grosbeaks {Pheucticus) of the Great 

 Plains. The Auk 79: 399-424. The bibliography of this paper is a guide 

 to the literature on hybridization in birds. 



Whorf, B. L. 1956. Language, Thought and Reality. Wiley, New York. 

 An excellent source of Whorf's ideas on the relationship of language 

 to behavior and Weltanschauung. 



