• Index. 897 



on the <rra<lual character of yeolofrical changres, 05; on the aire of Niagara 

 Falls, 101 ; his theories as related to the philosophy of evolution, 345. 



Maine, Sir Hexky, on ancient society, 214. 



Malthus, his theory of population reviewed by Herbert Spencer, 21 ; as related 

 to Darwin's work, 21. 



Man, his origin and descent, 40-42, 161-175; his age upon the earth, 103; his 

 mental evolution, 17ii-200 ; his associated life, 203-230 ; his theological devel- 

 opment, 23;j-253; his moral develnpincnt, 257-284; his physical imperfec- 

 tions as related tf) evolution, 174-17.') 2'.i'.t-300. 



Manscl, Dean, his (lipctriiic of tlie Absolute, 249; his philosophv as compared 

 with tli:it of Hfiiu rt S^jiencer, 250 iiotf. 331, 340. 



Marriage, as related to social evolution, 210-214 ; as related to nwral evolution, 

 2f;3-2(i5 ; its earliest form, 2C4 note ; its order of development, 374. 



Mar--h, I'rof. Otliniel C, on fossil remains, 1)8; on the evolution of the hor. c, 

 ys-loo; his discoveries of fossil birds, 305. 



^Marsupials, their place in the order of animal evolution, 101, 304. 



."Martincau, Harriet, 331. 



Materialii-m, as related to the evolution philosophy, 1G9, 350-354; comjjared 

 with spiritualism, 354-.3C(;. 



Matter and spirit, what we know of them, 133. 1(i0 ; their indestructibility, 180- 

 182; their relation to the Unknowable, 133-181, 350-353; their relation to 

 consciousness, 3(i5. 



Maudsley, Dr., on the seat of sensation in the brain, 193; his materialism, 3G6. 



Mechanical inventions ami civilization, .350-359, 3G.5. 



Mental evolution in JNIan, 234 iiofp. 



Merwin, I'rof. Almon (4., on mental evolution, 198. 



^leta-gnosticisin, 225-227. 



Metaniorphn-is, jiroofs of evolution from, 298. 



Metai)li y>i<s, as related to siieiice. r.)7, ID'.t ; as applied to theology, 248-250 ; the 

 met;i]ili> -ical tlieory of morals, 25s-25'.i, 273-27G; as bearing upon the i)hi- 

 losophy of evolution, 344-349. 



Meyer, on cirrelation of forces, .303. 



Mill, .John Stuart, his detinitioii of Matter, 197; his distrust of metai)hysics, 281. 



Miller, Hugh, his atteuijit to recf)ncile the Bible and geology, 104. 



Mimicry, ])r<>ofs of evolution from, .'!i*S. 



Mind, as related to life. V.'A; its correlation with material conditions, 109, 173, 

 174, 182 ; its evolution, 179-200 ; is it a function of matter ? 350-3.54. 



Missing links, 101, 149, 291, 302. 



Monism in philosopliy, 75, 247, 305. 



Montgomcrv, (Icoigc'j^dirar, his jioem on Darwin, 47. 



Morals, Evohition of, 257-2S4, 374. 



Moral science, the nature of, 208, (;t seq. 



Moral sense, the, 312. 



Morchr)use, Kev. D. W., on Christianity and evolution, .339. 



Morphology, ])roofs of evolution Irom, 290. 



Morris, "Wiiliam, his socialistic ideas, 371. 



Mosaic account of creation. 79-8ft, 104, 107. 



Muller, Johannes, his ailhesion to Darwinism, 42. 



Muller, Max, his doctrine of a primitive monotheism, 244. 



Mythology, in theological evolution, 240, 



XicnfLAR HyroTiiicsis. .55. 



Newton, f^ir Isaac, lii>. discovery of gravitation, 321, 345. 



Nichols, Starr Hoyt, on the philosophy of evolution, ;543-3Gl, 300. 



Obligation, the sense of, in evolutionary morals, 258, 205, 207, 272-278. 



Order of geological succession, 97. 



Organic and inorganic life, 118-121, 130. 



Organic rocks, the formation of, 88-93. 



Origin of dutv, 207. 



Origin of Sjn'cies, when ])ublishcd, 12, 29; when commenced, 22; its orderly 

 syinmetrv, 27 ; an epoch-inakiug book, 31 ; its theory explained, 32-39, 128- 

 131; itsc(i'ect,40;im])erfections in its theory, 151,104; the views of critics,. 302. 



Origin of the Fittest, loo note. 



Origin of variations, 105-100. 



Over-legislation, S]>encer's opinion of, 5, 14-15. 



Owen, Prof., on the Australian mammalia, 304. 



Pangenesis, Darwin's theory of, 129-131. 

 Pantheism, in theological evolution, 247-2,50. 



