GENERAL INDEX. 



457 



Leverrier, U. J., suggesting discovery of 

 Neptune, 25. 



Lewes, G. W., on special creation, 121. 



Liebig, Baron, valuable studies of in- 

 fusoria, 49. 



Life, Greek ideas on origin of, 25 ; the 

 antiquity of, 177; discussion of nature 

 and origin, 320 ; various attempts to de- 



production of, 330 ; the most science can 

 say on, 333 ; Huxley's ''physical basis" 

 of, 334 ; a scientific origin found im- 

 possible, 336 ; collapse of mechanical 

 theory, 337 ; Evolution fails to explain, 

 367. 



Lilly, W. S., work on agnosticism by, 278. 



Linnaeus, Karl von, as a believing scientist, 

 XXVHI ; views on special creation, 59 ; 

 produced a reasonable classification, 86 ; 

 ideas on species, 92 ; his binomial no- 

 menclature, 94 ; on immutability of 

 species, 142. 



Litterateurs, careless use of term nature, 

 225. 



Locke, John, views on continuity of 

 species, 71. 



Logan, Sir W., on the antiquity of life, 



1 77- 



Loligo, eye curiously developed of, 119. 



Lucas, Dr. G. J., work on agnosticism by, 

 278. 



Lucretius, statement on abiogenesis from, 

 43 ; on dabblers in science, 253. 



Lyell, Sir Charles, biology brings convic- 

 tion to, 54. 



McCosh, Dr. James, on Evolution and 

 Scripture, 212. 



Maimonides, on creation of man, 365. 



Maisonneuve, Dr., on rudimentary or- 

 gans, 115. 



Mammalia, type gradations in extinct, 

 130. 



Man, embryonic development of, 116 ; 

 Haeckel's genealogy of, 245 ; Wallace on 

 origin of, 247 ; comparing attributes of, 

 305 ; question of simian origin, 340 ; Vir- 

 chow on descent of, 341 ; Dogma and 

 the animal origin of, 344 ; relation to 

 apes not proven, 351 ; M wart's specula- 

 tions on, 352 ; modified theory of crea- 

 tion, 359 ; extravagant notions on ori- 

 gin, 365 ; question of pedigree reviewed, 

 430 ; headship in created universe, 435. 



Mandeville, Sir John, as a tale-weaving 

 traveler, 401. 



Manicheans, views on creation by, 217 ; 

 ideas on creation of soul, 346. 



Mansel, Dean, an Anglican teacher of 

 agnosticism, 238 ; a variety of atheism 

 by, 259. 



Maoris, curious proverb of the, if 7, 



Mariette, A. ., value of oriental re- 

 searches by, 179. 



Marsh, Prof. G. P. discovery of a missing 

 type, 138 : intermediate fossils found 

 by, 174. 



Marshall, A. M., on organic development, 

 1 19; on the ancestral equine forms, 198. 



Marsupials, place of in Hxckel's life 

 scale, 247. 



Martineau, Rev. James, judgment on 

 specialists, 311 on science and reli- 

 gion, 433. 



Martins, Charles, views on Evolution, 214. 



Maspero, G. C., value of oriental re- 

 searches by, 179. 



Mastiff, as depicted in Babylonian ruins, 

 148. 



Materialism, product ot science discus- 

 sions, 15 ; Evolution hailed by its dis- 

 ciples, 209 ; in contrast with dualism, 

 215; as voiced by Hugo and others, 238; 

 struggle of faith and science with, 427. 



Materia Prima, the scholastic view of, 287. 



Matter, the lonians' view of, 216 ; ideas of 

 the Schoolmen on, 286 ; fails at the 

 brink of life, 338. 



Mattioli, singular theory on fossils, 32. 



Memphis, science of Egyptian priests at, 



M- 



Mercier, Mgr, in review of Balfour's 

 work, 278. 



Mesopotamia, exhumed records of, 13. 



Metaphysics, question solvable only by, 

 308. 



Microbes, multiplicity of species in, 99. 



Microscopy, results of progress in, 52. 



Middle Ages, Evolution in the Schools of, 

 23, 28. 



Mill, J. Stuart, on God and matter, 217. 



Milton, John, poetical record of species, 

 76 ; influence of his views, 318. 



Mind, Darwin's bewilderment on, 310. 



Mir, Padre, on problem of creation, 358. 



Missing link, discussion of, 340: explora- 

 tions in quest of, 351 ; a conceivable 

 theory, 352. 



Mivart, St. George, as disciple of Evolu- 

 tion, 68; on saltatory theory, 198; on 

 our simian ancestry, 344 ; on genesis of 

 man, 352 ; is severely criticised, 353 : 

 views not opposed to theology, 358 ; 

 modified creation theory of, 359 ; on de- 

 sign in nature, 374; on the purpose in 

 creation, 411. 



Mollusca, development of the eye in, 119 ; 

 curious pedigree of planorbis, 129. 



Moneron, Haeckel's theory of the, 246. 



Monism, as outcome of Evolution, 229, 

 230; formulated by Haeckel, 231 : coin- 

 age of the term, 233 ; results of theory, 

 252 ; Agnosticism compared with, 254; 

 abiogenesis necessary to, 329 



Monkeys, long identity of species, 144. 



Monsabr, Father, on creationism, 363. 



Monuments, evidence on species from, 147. 



