372 



INDEX 



C. 



"Calculating" boys, 141. 

 Carbon theory, Haeckel's 42. 

 Carriere, origin of radishes, 164 ; and 

 heredity of acquired characters, 



183. 



Causality and Finality, 114 ff. 



Cause, primeval. Divine Love, 143. 



Causes, Final, 114 ff. 



Cell-making Bees, 247. 



Cells, Directivity in, 64. 



Chances, epicurean view of, 138. 



Chaos and monsters, 132 ; and Dar- 

 winism, 133. 



Charnock, on the Origin of the 

 World, 34 ff. 



Children, Instinct and Automatism 

 of, 248. 



Chinese, Bussell on mind of, 

 214. 



Christ, Personality of, 269, 270; 

 temptation of, 284 ; as example, 

 270; Ecce Homo on, 284, 303 

 ff. ; the true and only sufficient 

 motive power, 303 ; or Diana, 



325- 



Christianity, Rationalistic misrepre- 

 sentations of, 230, 299 ff., 310 ff. ; 

 and acceptance of, 316. 



Church, Prof. A. H., and Directivity, 



36. 



Common Sense, 238. 



Conscience, a weak, 324, a strong, 

 325; origin of, 319 ; requires be- 

 lief in God, 324. 



Consciousness and Abstractions, 

 213, 283. 



Constitution, basis of Natural Selec- 

 tion, 152-156. 



Creator or Architect, 138. 



Credulity defined, 266-268; in Ritual- 

 ism, 271. 



Criticisms on Rationalistic views of 

 knowledge, 223. 



Croll, on Molecular Motion and Ob- 

 ject in Nature, 75 if. ; illustrations 

 of Directivity, 75 ff. 



Crystals and Adaptationscontrasted, 



63. 



Cuckoo, instinct of, 240. 



Cynips and Galls, 129. 



Darwin, on Evolution and Design, 

 49; mental change to Agnosticism, 

 50; contrast between "definite" 

 and " indefinite " variations, 162 ; 

 letter to Wagner, 162 ; illustra- 

 tion of Natural Selection, as a 

 " Noble Edifice," 175 ; belief in 

 the heredity of acquired charac- 

 ters, 183. 



Darwinism, basis of Monism, 25 ; 

 Romanes, on, 51 ; anticipations of, 

 by Paley, 94 ff. ; and Chaos, 133 ; 

 defined, 145 ; the " True," 145 ; 

 explained, 146, 147 ; in Germany, 

 149 ; summary of false data of, 

 160 ; no Natural Law in, 174 ; 

 abandoned by Schimper and 

 other German botanists, 181. 



Death, not absolute (Rix), 263 ; the 

 Christian view of, 328. 



Definite action, of the environment, 



147 ; Biichner on, 148 ; and Natu- 

 ral Selection, mutually exclusive, 



148 ; Vernon on, 148 ; Darwin's 

 illustrations of, 162 ; Darwin's 

 letter to Wagner on, 162. 



Deity, cumulative evidence for belief 

 in, 35 ; inductive proof of, 57 ; 

 belief in, 252 ff. 



Deluge, Babylonian account of, 216. 



Descent of Man, explained, 209 ff. 



Design and Evolution, 49; aban- 

 doned argument of, 92 ff. ; con- 

 trasted with Evolution, 179. 



Determinism, views of, 282, 323 ; 

 argument for, refuted, 289 ; For- 

 ester on, 289 ; and Huxley, 291. 



Directivity, term inventedby Church, 

 36; described, 46, 53, 57, 69 ff. ; 

 the origin of form and variation, 

 61 ff. ; in cells, 64 ; illustrated by 

 Dolbear, 72 ; by Croll, 75 ff. ; or 

 Logos, 238. 



Distribution, by Natural Selection, 

 147. 



Divine intentions, 255. 



" Doctrine, Religion as a Credible," 

 282 ff. 



Dolbear, on protoplasm, 65 ; on 

 transformation of energy in or- 



