INDEX 



381 



mutability, 136; reasoning, 

 329; relative position, 14.0; 

 scale of life, 14-4; transitional 

 forms, 138-9; variation, 133, 

 136-7 ; views, 25, 28, 333 ; vol- 

 umes, 2, 135, 136, 139. 



Bacon, Roger, 113-U, 135; ex- 

 perimental science, 114.; Greek 

 science, 107; investigation of 

 nature, 114. 



Balance, Balancement, 34; Goe- 

 the, 275; loi de b. (Geof- 

 frey), 286. See Economy of 

 Growth. 



Barenbach, volume, 153. 



Bastian, dispute with Tyndall, 

 38. 



Bible, 106, 110, 126; Book of 

 Job, 63; Bruno's opposition, 

 126; Philo's interpretation, 

 105-6, 129. See Genesis. 



Bielschowsky, on Goethe, 267, 

 276; volume, 276. 



Biogenesis. 37; Augustine, 109. 



Biogenetic Law, 49, 307; 

 Meckel, 308, 319; von Baer, 

 36, 308, 319. 



Biology, 46, 236, 349; Aristotle, 

 75 ; derivation of words, 65-6 ; 

 development, 32-6 ; history, 6 ; 

 in ancient Greece, 62-8; La- 

 marck's principles, 233-4; 

 Leibnitz, 142; term defined, 

 (Lamarck) 230, (Trevira- 

 nus) 283, 286. 



Blumenbach, anatomist, 203, 

 269, 284. 



Bonnami, speculations, 160; 

 transformist, 162-3. 



Bonnet, 15, 162, 173-7, 179, 284; 

 catastrophism, 177; echelle 

 des etres, 20, 123, 176, 177, 

 196, 197, 231; emhoUement, 

 36, 160, 168, 173, 207; evolu- 

 tion, 174, 177; influence of 

 Leibnitz, 145, 175-6; internal 

 perfecting principle, 176; par- 

 thenogenesis, 175; predeter- 

 mination, 177; pre-existent 



germs, 352; speculation, 160; 

 volume, 175. 



Botany, 26, 221; Greek studies, 

 44; Lamarck, 226. 



Branching Kv(;lution, 19; I^a- 

 marck, 211, 231, 353; Linnaus, 

 186; modern concej)tion, 20. 



Bridges, J. H., on Descartes, 

 234. 



Brinton, on Bruno, 124. 



Bronn, 282. 



Brooks, W. K., adaptations, 56; 

 translation of Plato, 73; vol- 

 ume, 73. 



Broom, Robert, Owen on evo- 

 lution, 319. 



Brown, botanist, 307; variation, 

 335. 



Brown, Thomas, on E. Darwin, 

 215-17. 



Browning, Darwinism, 63. 



Bruno, 15, 107, 121-7, 267; Aris- 

 totelianism, 124-6; evolution- 

 ist, 29, 107; form, matter, 

 124-5; induction, 123; influ- 

 ences, 122; martyr, 121, 122; 

 method of interpretation, 25; 

 movement, 125; natural phi- 

 losophy, 122-7; perfectibility, 

 142; rationalist, 121, 122; 

 scale of life, 122-3, 125-6, 

 353; studies of man, 353, 356; 

 uniformity, 126; volume, 126. 



Buckley, T. A., translation of 

 ^schylus, 63. 



Buffon, 9, 15, 16, 26, 118, 132, 

 141, 146, 156, 162, 185, 221, 

 222, 224, 230, 232, 233, 245, 

 257, 264, 274, 278, 284, 286, 

 291, 303, 314, 336, 342; adap- 

 tation, 147, 354; ascent of 

 man, 205, 356; cell doctrine, 

 180; change of views, 200; 

 comparison with Kant, 150, 

 with Linnaeus, 190-2; contri- 

 bution to evolution, 199-200; 

 cosmogony, 192, 237; degener- 

 ation, 34, 150, {dinaturee) 

 193, 288; design, 192; environ- 



