GENERAL INDEX. 



455 



318; man's creation viewed by, 350; 

 now far Catholics may accept, 351 ; 

 Gonzales on the Scripture and, 359 ; a 

 point of harmony with Dogma, 364 ; 

 story of creation viewed by. 367 ; as 

 affected by teleology, 369 ; Asa Gray's 

 summary of, 372 ; corroborated by tele- 

 ology, 371 ; teleology ennobled by, 376; 

 witnesses to the God of Scripture, 377 ; 

 rt'-sume of the history of, 378 ; its future 

 standing, 386 : not inimical to religion, 

 388; attitude ot creationism toward, 398 ; 

 insufficiency for moral man, 402 ; Scrip 

 ture and theology reconcilable with, 

 414; Doctors of the Church on, 416 ; a 

 theory not a doctrine, 417 ; viewed from 

 many standpoints, 423 ; eminent Cath- 

 olic adherents, 425 ; faith need fear 

 nothing from, 428 ; the Creator a nec- 

 essary postulate of, 432 ; an ennobling 

 conception, 435 ; is a witness for the 

 Deity, 437. 



Evolutionists, several schools and classes 

 of, 206 ; variety of theories among, 229. 



Eye, cases of evolutionary development, 

 119 



Falloppio, amusing theory of fossils by, 



Father of Evolution, two Greek claimants 

 as, 28. 



Fathers of the Church, helped to build 

 Evolution theory, 23 : common belief 

 in abiogenesis, 44 ; Evolution and the 

 teachings of, 312. 



Fish-Men, Anaximander's curious theory 

 of, 26. 



Fiske, Prof. John, converted by classifica- 

 tion, 109 ; views on intermediary fossils, 

 174 ; theories resemble occasionalism, 

 301 ; on the origin of life, 327 ; on crea- 

 tion and Evolution, 390. 



Florida, study of coral reefs in, 153. 



Flourens, M. J., definition of species by, 

 95 ; views on Darwin and his work, 208. 



Flowers, curious merging of species in, 

 1 88. 



Fontenelle, eulogy of Bernard Palissy by, 



34* 



Fossils, early notions regarding, 31 ; Agric- 

 ola and other ancients on, 32 ; Bernard 

 Palissy's views on, 34 : the Deluge sup 

 posed to explain, 35 ; fabled giants in 

 relation to, 36 ; true significance appre- 

 hended, 37 ; world's age measured by, 

 38; Huxley on the evidence of, 128 ; 

 generalized types among, 131 ; evidence 

 on vegetable species in, 152 ; process of 

 deposit, 165 ; Darwin on gradations of, 

 167: Romanes on fewness of, 170; low 

 percentage of forms in, 171 : types miss- 

 ing from, 172 ; intercalary forms in, 174 ; 

 reviewing the arguments from, 420. 



Fracostorio, teachings on fossils by, 32. 



France, vast historic literature of, 19. 



Francis of Assisi, St , friendship for the 



birds, 430. 

 French Academy, scientific controversy 



in, 39; Cuvier's classification announced 



to, 86. 

 Froschammer, on the origin of the soul, 



347- 

 Fruits, identity of ancient with modern, 



149. 



Galen, species described by, 144. 



Galileo, world's reception of discoveries 

 by, 302. 



Gastrula, place in the scale of life, 247. 



Gaudry, Albert, studies in paleontology, 

 132 ; views on elastic types, 159 ; stud- 

 ies in fossil forms, 174 ; theory on miss- 

 ing types by, 175 ; as a Catholic evolu- 

 tionist, 425. 



Generation, the scholastic view of, 285. 



Generationism, as a doctrine on the soul's 

 .origin, 347. 



Generelli, right views on creation by, 35. 



Genesis, account of man's creation in, 350 ; 

 scientists on creation narrative, 365 ; 

 lends itself to Evolution, 414 ; contro- 

 versy on six days of, 419. 



Genus, true relation of the term, 317. 



Geography, physical. Evolution sustained 

 by, 51 ; relation of to organic life, 123. 



Geology, first regular investigations in, 

 39 ; Evolution theory aided by, 51 ; 

 Agassiz' argument from. So ; relation of 

 concprdistic theory to, 93 ; distribution of 

 species as witnessed by, 125 ; testimony 

 as to permanence of species from, 154; 

 comparative limit of researches in, 173 ; 

 imperfection of record in, 176 ; Darwin 

 on the value of research in, 181. 



Germ theory, 326. 



Giants, supposed relation of fossils to, 36. 



Gladstone, W. E , on relations of science 

 to Bible, 427, 429. 



Gnostics, views on creation by, 217. 



Goethe, Johann W., vast number of books 

 written on, iq ; anecdote regarding, 39 : 

 scientific rank of, 62. 



Gonzales, Cardinal, on process of creation, 

 358. 



Gore, Canon, on Romanes, 261. 



Grand Eury, as an anti-evolutionist, 74. 



Gray, Asa, views on defining species, 96 ; 

 on species in British flora, 98 ; on 

 triumph of teleology, 378 : on Evolu- 

 tion and theism, 211. 



Greece, science in, 14, 379. 



Gregory of Nyssa, St., believer in one 

 primordial element, 54 ; prophet of 

 nebular hypothesis, 71 ; theistic Evo- 

 lution of, 280. 



Guillemot, Abb, on theory of fixism, 

 417, 419 : on common ancestral types, 



'35- 



Giittler, Dr. C., views on Darwin by, 

 213. 



