344 



INDEX 



Body and Mind, distinctiveness of, 

 272. 



Bois-Reymond on world riddles, 

 29. 



Brooks on the fertilised egg, 73. 



Browning, acknowledgment of the 

 Unseen, 67. 



Butler on the Divine administra 

 tion, 314. 



CAIRD, Professor E., on Man s 

 nature, 24. 



Calderwood, VV. L., on transposi 

 tion of eye in flat fishes, 79. 



Carlyle on self-knowledge, 66. 



Causality, Man s, 21. 



Causality, Rational, 130. 



Cause directing the operations of 

 Nature, 21. 



Cell-life, 31 ; reproduction of, 33. 



Cell, structure of, 33 ; contains 

 the living principle in the tissues, 

 34. 



Characteristics of human life, 38 ; 

 studied by the comparative 

 method, 40 ; depend on rational 

 power, 64. 



Cheshire s Bees and Beekeeping, 

 202. 



Chick, quicker than the child, 48. 



Child, the, is slower than the ani 

 mal in use of the senses, 48 ; 

 distinctive relations to parentage, 

 113. 



Christianity, place of, among the 



religions of the world, 325. 

 Clouston, Dr., on effects of alcohol, 



310. 



Consciousness, dawn of, 50 ; as 

 related to organic functions, 134 ; 

 its significance, 267. 



Croll, on the cause or causes which 

 direct the operation of the forces 

 of Nature, 21. 



Cunningham, J. T., on action of 

 light as related to deposit of 

 pigment-cells in flat fishes, 79. 



Cyples on germ-cells, 88 ; on the 

 place of vital organisation in 

 Nature, 73; a life germ, not a 

 miniature, 74 ; on development, 

 102; Nature s plan of develop 

 ment, 102. 



DARWIN, C., general acceptance of 

 his theory, 1 ; assumes life as 

 given, 3 ; deals mainly with 

 organic life, 13 ; his difficulties, 

 15 ; honour due to him, 17 ; on 

 mental faculties, 36 ; primeval 

 man and division of labour, 44 ; 

 mind and brain, 62 ; natural se 

 lection by slight modifications, 

 71 ; heredity, 96 ; mental powers, 

 122; difference between animals 

 and man, 139 ; his object in the 

 Descent of Man, 146 ; restricts 

 animal intelligence to the higher 

 mammalia, 150 ; the ant s brain, 

 157 ; reflection, 172 ; social 

 features in animal life, 177 ; the 

 higher animals have few instincts, 

 179 ; a little dose of judgment, 

 181 ; phenomena of disease, 306 ; 

 origin of life, and of mental 

 powers unknown, 340. 



Death, 220. 



Degeneration in the history of life, 

 298. 



Depravity, general, 300. 



Destiny of man, 333. 



Development of human life, 49. 



