INDEX. 



425 



Organic strictures and inorganic, 1 

 Buffon on the, 153, &c. 



Organisms, have been developed as 

 man's inventions have, 44, 46, 

 47, 384 



"Origin of Species," the, cannot 

 take permanent rank in 

 the literature of evolution, 

 62 



has no raison d'llre, if natural 



selection is not a cause of 

 variation, 346 



a piece of intellectual sleight 



of hand, 346 



compared to the advice of a 



lawyer who wanted to leave 

 plenty of loopholes, or to a 

 cobbled Act of Parliament, 

 358 



is " Hamlet " with the part of 



Hamlet cut out, 363 



most readers would say that it 



advocated natural selection 

 as the most important cause 

 of variation, 363 



and the "Zoonomia," or the 



Philosophic Zoologique ; the 

 one upholds natural selec- 

 tion, the other, sense of 

 need, 363 



Orthodoxy, scientific, and mysti- 

 fication. Buffon on, 138 



scientific, clamouring for en- 

 dowment, 360 



dangers of, 368 



Overseeing tends to oversight, 197 



PAINS, genius a supreme capa- 

 city for taking, 76 

 Painting, a man should do some- 

 thing, no matter what, 51, 52 

 Paley, quotations from, 12, &c. 

 his argument a juggle, unless 



some one designed man, 



much as man designed the 



watch, 14, 16 

 on ordinary mechanism, as 



showing design, 15 



on the human neck, 16, 17 



on the patella, 18 



on the joints, 19, 20 



as a writer against evolution, 



21 



Palcy on the ligament that binds 

 the tendons of the instep, 

 21, 22 



opposes the view that struc- 

 tures have been formed 

 through appetency, endeav- 

 our or effort, 22, 45 



we turn on him and say, 



Show us your designer, 29 



asks, How will our philoso- 

 pher get an eye ? 46 



his "Natural Theology" 



written throughout at the 

 "Zoononiia," 195 



never gives a reference when 



quoting an opponent.195,306 



Pantheism and Rome will in the 

 end be the two sole com- 

 batants, 401 



common ground held by Rome 



and Pantheism, 403-405 



of Paul, 404 



Parents and offspring, oneness of 

 personality between (tee "Per- 

 sonality ") 



Passions, of like passions, men of 

 science are, with other pastors 

 and prophets, 253 



Patella, or knee-pan, Paley on the, 18 



Paul, St., his pantheistic tenden- 

 cies, 404 



we want to accept him liter- 

 ally, 405 



Peace, the, that passeth under- 

 standing, 35 



Perception and sensation, Buffon on 

 the difference between, 129, 130 



Personality, oneness of, between 

 parents and offspring, 37, 

 38, 39 



Buffon on the, 151 



Erasmus Darwin and Professor 



Hering on the, 198-200 



Erasmus Darwin's failure to 



grasp the whole conception, 

 198, 201, 203 



Erasmus Darwin on the, 214, 



215 



Patrick Matthew on the, 322' 



323 



mentioned, 332, 380, 381 



Personification, the, of Nature, 

 comparatively venial, 367 



