418 



EVOLUTION, OLD AND NEW. 



Geoffrey and Lamarck's hypothesis, 

 244-246, 329 



on Buffon, 328 



his position, 329 



Genealogical order, Lamarck on, 

 264 



C. Darwin on, 265 



Generation more remarkable than 

 reason, Hume on, 233 



Generic differences (as well as speci- 

 fic), Buffon on, 164 



Genius, a supreme capacity for 

 taking pains, 76 



Geographical distribution, changed, 

 Buffon on, 145, &c., 164 



Geometrical ratio of increase, Buff- 

 on on, 123 



Lamarck, on, 280 



Patrick Matthew on, 320, 321 



Germ of oak indistinguishable from 

 that of a man, 334 



Germans, Buffon on the, 93 



Glory "comes after labour if she 

 can," &c., 76 



Go away, because their uncles, 

 aunts, 376 



God, embodied in living forms, and 

 dwelling in them, 31 



how far everlasting, invisible, 



imperishable, omnipotent, 

 &c., 32 



the unseen parts of, are as a 



deep-buried history, 33 



Goethe, as an evolutionist, 71 



Gradations infinitely subtle, 87 



Grant Allen, on "Evolution, Old 

 and New, "386-388 



on the decay of criticism, 388 



says that "Evolutionism is an 



almost exclusively English 

 impulse," 393 



Greyhound or racehorse, the well- 

 adapted form of the, 359 



Growth attended at each step by a 

 felicitous tempering of two an- 

 tagonistic principles, 35 



Gueueau de Montbeillard, 172, 173 



HABIT," "Life and. See < ' Life 

 and Habit." 



-; rudimentary organs repeated 

 through mere force of, 38, 



Habit, Buffon on, 148, 159, 160, 

 161, 162 



a second Nature, Lamarck on, 



300 



Habits, or use, and organ, La- 

 marck on the interaction of, 292, 

 311 

 Haeckei, on design, 4, 5 



on Goethe as an evolutionist, 



71 



does not appear to know of 



Buffon as an evolutionist, 

 71, 393 



his surprising statement con- 

 cerning Lamarck, 73 

 his ignorance concerning Eras- 

 mus Darwin, 73, 393 



on Lamarck, 246, 247 



A. R. Wallace's review of his 



"Evolution of Man," 382, 

 384 



Hamlet, the "Origin of Species" 

 like " Hamlet " without Hamlet, 

 363 



Handiest, a man should do what- 

 ever conies handiest, 51, 52 

 Hare, Buffon on the, 123, &c. 

 Hartmann's philosophy of the un- 

 conscious, and "Life and Habit," 

 56, 57 



Hearing, when we once reach ani- 

 mals so low as to have no organ 

 of, we lose this organ for good 

 and all, 379 

 Heredity and habit, Buffon on, 143, 



159, 160, 161, 162 

 only another term for un- 

 known causes, unless the 

 " Life and Habit " theory be 

 adopted, 384 

 Bering, Professor, referred to, 66, 



67 



his theory as given in " Na- 

 ture" by Ray Lankester, 

 193-200 



Herschel, Sir John, compares 

 natural selection to the Laputan 

 method of making books, 10 

 Higgling and haggling of the 



market, 50 



History of the universe, each or- 

 ganism is a, from its own point 

 of view, 31, 



i 



