INDEX 



workmanship in Pliocene strata 

 of, 28. 



Portuguese as a Latin language, 85. 



Positivism, the distinction between 

 science and metaphysics drawn by, 

 264 5 and unity of belief, 264. 



Power, Divine, manifestation of, in 

 the universe, 271 ; and right liv- 

 ing, 271 ; asserted by the doc- 

 trine of evolution, 274. 



Prakrit language, 83. 



Priesthood, need of, in early ages of 

 Christianity, 237. 



Priestley, Joseph, as a materialist, 

 250 ; friend of Erasmus Darwin, 

 310. 



Primary period in geology, relative 

 duration of, 3, 4, 7. 



Primates, Eocene, the link between 

 man and horse, 18, 66. 



Progressiveness, human, as aided by 

 prolongation of infancy, 279-289; 

 as achieved by mental plasticity, 

 289291. 



Pronunciation, differences of, 102. 



Protective tariffs, 177. 



Protestantism, True Lesson of, 244- 

 268 ; of early Christianity, 236 ; 

 state of society which preceded 

 its early manifestations, 239, 240; 

 as protest against the church's as- 

 sumption of corporate responsi- 

 bility, 241, 243 ; as assertion of 

 individual rights and responsibility, 

 241, 247 ; and total destruction 

 of religious creeds, 246, 247 ; 

 true lesson of, 266. 



Proven9al, as a Latin language, 85 ; 

 A patois, 143. 



Pumpelly, Raphael, on the cold in 

 Siberia, 62. 



Punjab in the Vedic hymns and 

 Zenda vesta, 71. 



Puppets, a world of, 257. 



Puritanism as a protest against the 

 Pagan corruptions of the church, 

 240, 241. 



Pushtu of Afghanistan, a division of 

 Aryan speech, 83. 



Pyrenees, in Eocene age, 16; in 

 glacial epoch, 30. 



Quartzite implements of the river- 

 drift men, 35. 



Rabbits, Pleistocene, 29 ; Recent, 

 41 ; domesticated, 324. 



Race, community of, 95. 



Races of men, succession of, in Eu- 

 rope, 46, 92. 



Recent period, geographical structure 

 of Europe in, 40 ; mammals in, 

 41 ; man in, 41. 



Reindeer, Pleistocene, 29 ; in south- 

 ern France, 31 ; Recent, 41. 



Relative truth of opinions, Lessing's 

 theory of, 192. 



Religion, and theology, 225 ; essence 

 of true, 236 ; human speculation 

 in regard to, 266, 267 ; no con- 

 flict between science and, 249, 

 276. 



Religions, wherein they agree and 

 differ, 270 ; presence of a Divine 

 Power in all, 271 ; essential truth* 

 of, 271-274. 



Religious belief concerns only the 

 individual, 266. 



Religious unity, the aim of persecu- 

 tion, 244, 261 ; the essence of, 

 225, 263 ; is undesirable, 260. 



Reptiles, earliest, 5 ; of Jurassic 

 epoch, 5, 7. 



Representativeness, 200 ; and self* 

 control, 201. 



Rhine in Pleistocene age, 33. 



Rhinoceros, Miocene, 22 ; Pliocene, 

 27 ; Pleistocene, 29 ; extinct 

 species of, 31. 



Rhinoceros, big-nosed, contemporary 

 of man in Britain, before the 

 Pleistocene age, 34. 



Rhinoceros, woolly, 29 ; contem- 

 porary with the Cave-men, 36 j 

 extinction of, 41. 



Ribeiro, on discovery of traces "of 

 man in Pliocene strata of Portu* 

 gal, 28. 



360 



