INDEX. 



759 



.Brown, John, i. 126. 



Brown, Robert, used the term "cell," i. 



195 ; scientific publications of, 230 ; 



not member of any university, 238 ; 



discovery of the cell nucleus, ii. 264 ; 



333. 

 Brown, Thomas, 'Cause and Effect,' i. 



84 ; ii. 511. 



Browning, maturer thought of, i. 76. 

 Briicke, i. 198 ; protoplasmic theory, ii. 



443 ; language, 538. 

 Bruhns, 'Life of A. von Humboldt,' 



i. 238, ii. 225, 253, 475. 

 Bruno, animation of all matter, ii. 



369. 



Brunswick, history of, ii. 280. 

 Bryan, Prof., second law of thermo- 

 dynamics, ii. 176 ; 595. 

 Bryce, James, quoted on German uni- 

 versities, i. 159. 

 .Buache, geography at the Ecole nor- 



male, i. 112 ; 113. 

 Buch, von, on descent, ii. 330. 

 Biichner, L., materialism, i. 60 ; 'Kraft 



und Stoff,' ii. 320 ; 323. 

 Buckland, Wm. , i. 106 ; palaeontologi- 



cal work of, 139 ; ii. 325. 

 Buckle quoted, i. 114; statistical 



method, 124 ; philosophy of, ii. 346 ; 



statistics, 584, 599 ; 607, 608. 

 Buee on imaginaries, ii. 653. 

 Butfon, importance in French literature 



of, i. 105 ; 283 ; influence of, on the 



study of nature, 106 ; at the Jardin 

 , des Plantes, 107 ; philosophical in- 

 fluence of, 111 ; 113 ; discouraged 



views of Linnaeus in France, 117 ; 



119, 131 ; natural history of, 126 ; 



137, 142; 'Theorie de la Terre,' 



144 ; 288 ; against Clairault's attempt 



to correct gravitation formula, 334; 



classification of natural objects, ii. 



22,1 ; 232 ; analogies of nature, 255 ; 



'Epoques de la Nature,' 277, 309; 



322; "organic molecules,' 454, 610; 



455 ; influences Herder, 532 ; 613. 

 Bunge, ' Physiological Chemistry ' 



quoted, ii. 378, 425, 426, 434. 

 Bunsen, Baron von, relative merits of 



Young and Champollion, i. 244 ; 



' Egypt's Place in Universal History,' 



245. 

 Bunsen, R. W. von, i. 412 ; caesium 



and rubidium, ii. 49 ; spectrum 



analysis, 57. 

 Burali Forti, ii. 656. 

 Burbury, ii. 595. 

 Burckhardt, J. K., calculates orbit of 



Ceres, i. 182 ; lunar theory, 329. 



Burkhardt, H., on Ruffini, ii. 688 ; on 



Riemann, 698, 700. 

 Burnet, Thomas, i. 283. 

 Burnett, James. See Lord Monboddo. 

 Burns, healthy spirit of, i. 78 ; 212, 



285. 

 Burnside, his 'Theory of Groups,' ii. 



691. 



Butler, philosophy in English universi- 

 ties represented by, i. 254 ; apologetic 



writings of, ii. 325. 

 Blitschli, on fertilisation, ii. 227 ; foam 



theory, 427 ; ' Mechanismus und 



Vitalismus,' 463. 

 Buys Ballot, and Boscovich's theory, 



i. 359 ; Doppler's principle proved in 



acoustics, ii. 49. 

 Byron, revolutionary spirit of, i. 78. 



Cabanis, alliance with medicine, i. 126 ; 

 127 ; ' Revolutions de la Medecine,' 

 135 ; 152 ; ' Rapports du Physique 

 et du Moral de 1'Homme,' ii. 469; 

 his simile, 470, 503 ; science of man, 

 471 ; language and grammar, 530 ; 

 532. 



Csesalpinus, arrangement of leaves of 

 plants, ii. 223. 



Caesar, Napoleon compared with, i. 153. 



Caesium found by Kirchhoff and Bun- 

 sen, ii. 49. 



Cailletet, condensation of permanent 

 gases, i. 316. 



Caloric, ii. 154. 



Calvin, direct influence of, on Scotland, 

 i. 253 ; educational work of, 255. 



'Cambridge Mathematical Journal,' i. 

 41. 



Campbell and Garnett, ' Life of Clerk- 

 Maxwell,' ii. 599. 



Campbell, H. J., translation of Hert- 

 wig's 'The Cell,' ii. 265. 



Campe, edition of 'Robinson Crusoe,' 

 i. 256 ; ii. 324. 



Camper, ii. 247 ; collection of fossils, 

 248 ; physiognomy, 477 ; influences 

 Herder, 532. 



Cannizzaro showed the value of Avo- 

 gadro's hypothesis, i. 427, 445. 



Canton, M., nistory of mathematics, ii. 

 632 ; quoted, 633 ; 63 i, 680. 



Cantor, G., on theory of probabilities, 

 i. 122 ; ii. 630 ; a new chapter in 

 mathematics, 634 ; 734 ; on the trans- 

 finite, 735, 737. 



Capillary action, i. 356. 



Carbon tetrahedron, the, i. 450. 



Carlyle, influence of, on English style 

 and language, i. 22 ; first to give 



