452 



EVOLUTION AND DOGMA. 



Assurbanipal, tablets from Nineveh library 

 of, 13. 



Assyria, cosmology as a study in, 13. 



Assyriology, proofs of paleontology helped 

 by, 179. 



Astronomy, questions of antiquity in, 14 ; 

 new discoveries suggested in, 25 ; ad- 

 vanced by Secchi and others, 53 ; some 

 pioneer ideas on, 391. 



Atavism, facts of known to Aristotle, 27. 



Athanasius, St., view of the Creator by, 

 361 ; on the order of creation, 437. 



Atheism, an outgrowth of science specula- 

 tions, 15 ; Evolution receives welcome 

 from, 209 ; agnosticism only a disguise 

 for, 264. 



Atomic Theory, its revival in monism, 

 236. 



Atoms, chemically and philosophically 

 viewed, 236 ; the chemist's jugglery 

 with, 334. 



Augustine, St., Kant revises teachings of, 

 57 ; on potential creation, 71 ; on the 

 natural forces, 220 ; the theistic Evolu- 

 tion of, 280 ; strictures on anthropo- 

 morphism, 302 ; on the generation of 

 life, 322 ; on the soul's origin, 347. 



Authorities, the author's gratitude to, 

 xxiii ; list of books and, 439. 



A vempace, Arabian ideas on Evolution, 28. 



Babylonia, study of cosmology in, 13 ; 

 species as shown in monuments of, 148. 



Bacon, Francis, a believer in organic Evo- 

 lution, 56 ; satire on natural history by, 

 383 ; on relations of science to the Deity, 

 410. 



Bacteria, Pasteur's valuable studies in, 

 50 ; evidence from further research in, 

 52 ; difficulty in noting species of, too. 

 See also Infusoria. 



Baer, Karl E. von, wonders found in em- 

 bryology by, 115. 



Baird, Spencer F., on species in American 

 birds, 104. 



Balfour, Arthur, J., on science and faith, 

 xxi ; work on foundations of belief by, 

 278. 



Barrande, Joachim, as an anti-evolution- 

 ist, 74 ; studies in Silurian strata by, 



154- 

 Barry, Dr. Alfred, views on creation by, 



368. 



Basil, St., views on generation by, 321. 

 Basilisk, as creature of science-fable, 400. 

 Bastian, H. C., opposition to Pasteur's 



views by, 52 ; term used for abiogenesis 



by, 37- 

 Bateson, Prof., theory of discontinuous 



variations by, 198. 



Bathybius, Huxley and Hseckel on, 346. 

 Bees, a native variety crowded out, 164 ; 



Virgil on the generation of, 320. 

 Bellinck, Father, on faith and Evolution, 



426. 



Beneden, P. J. van, as student of the ani- 

 malculae, 49 ; standing against Evolu- 

 tion, 74. 



Berzelius, conclusions on infusoria by, 49. 



Bible, The Holy, fanciful interpretations 

 f. 35 ; quoted to sustain abiogenesis, 

 47 ; Darwinism scored by friends of, 

 207 ; Dr. McCosh on Evolution and, 

 212 ; is not opposed by true Evolution, 

 388 ; its cosmogony agrees with Evolu- 

 tion. See also Genesis. 



Bichat, M. F. X., definition of life by, 

 324- 



Biology, powerful help to Evolution by, 

 54 ; the question of species in, 315. See 

 also Life. 



Birds, differences and blendings of species 

 in, 104. 



Births, the theory of extraordinary, 197. 



Blanchard, Emile, challenge to evolution- 

 ists by, 141. 



Bohemia, valuable geological facts from, 



154- 



Botany, outcome of recent progress in, 51 ; 

 difficulties regarding species in, 97. 



Brazil, evidence from the cave-birds of, 

 126. 



Brongniart, Adolphe, T., geological inves- 

 tigations by, 38. 



Bruneti^re, Ferdinand, on the " bank- 

 ruptcy of science," 404 ; verdict on sci- 

 ence and religion, 407. 



Bruno, Giordano, Hxckel as an imitator 

 of, 236. 



Buchner, Ludwig, the doctrine of mate- 

 rialism by, 217 ; some atheistic notions 

 of, 221 ; on design in nature, 370. 



Buckle, H. T. , on effects of exclusive stud- 

 ies, 311. 



Buffon, Georges L., wrong views on ani- 

 malcules by, 48 ; notions on environ- 

 ment held by, 194. 



Burnouf, E. H., value of oriental research 

 by, 179. 



Cabanis, Pierre J., views on thought by, 

 238. 



Cairo, plant specimens of at, 150. 



Calmet, Dom, discussion of Noah's ark 

 by, 60. 



Candolle, A, de, position on the species 

 problem, 79 ; a definition of species by, 

 95 ; study of the oak by, 103. 



Caro, Prof., on attitude of Evolution to 

 faith, 210; views on materialism, 216; 

 r6sum of Haeckelism by, 238. 



Carruthers, William, as an anti-evolution- 

 ist, 74 ; lessons from Egyptian botany 

 by, 149. 



Catholicity, its attitude to atheism and 

 materialism, 223 ; question of the miss- 

 ing link in, 344 ; Evolution among noted 

 adherents of, 425. See alto Church, 

 Dogma, Religion. 



