Methods of Ethics. 39 



be made with historical ethics, and an example 

 furnished of its value for moral philosophy. The 

 main object, however, is, assuming the truth of 

 Darwinian science, to make a dispassionate exam 

 ination of its bearing upon morals, as well as to 

 distinguish in Darwin s own moral theory what 

 is fact or science from what is fancy or specula 

 tion. But this presupposes a preliminary survey 

 of Darwinian ethics, and that of Darwinism, to 

 the exposition of which we must now proceed. 



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