THEORY OF EVOLUTION 59 



opment the use of the term "individiiahty", 

 while giving the appearance of profundity, in 

 reahtv often serves merely to cover ignorance 

 and to make a nwstery out of a mechanism. 



The Characters or Wild Animals and 

 Plants Follow the Same Laws of In- 

 heritance AS DO the Characters of 

 Domesticated Animals and Plants. 



Darwin based many of his conclusions con- 

 cerning variation and heredity on the evidence 

 derived from the garden and from the stock 

 farm. Here he was handicapped to some ex- 

 tent, for he liad at times to rely on informa- 

 tion much of which was uncritical, and some of 

 which was worthless. 



Today we are at least better informed on 

 ttco important points; one concerning the 

 kinds of variations that furnish to the cultiva- 

 tor the materials for his selection; the other 

 concerning the modes of inheritance of these 

 variations. We know now that new charac- 

 ters are continually appearing in domesti- 

 cated as well as in wild animals and plants, 

 that these characters are often sharply marked 



