INDEX 



383 



Cuvier, 279-80, 304-5; on 

 Darwin, 302; on da Vinci, 

 120-1; on Deinocritus, 57; on 

 E. Darwin, 215-17; organs, 

 242-3; palaeontology, geology, 

 115-6, 119, 266; phyletic tree, 

 248; Promethean gift, 64; 

 permanence of species, 302; 

 science vn. theology, 27, 28; 

 Sophocles, 66; Spanish phi- 

 losophers, 116-17; survival of 

 fittest, 198; transformism, 

 165; transitional forms, 138- 

 9; unity of type, 154, 194-5, 

 272; variations, 137; wants of 

 animals, 242. 



Classification, 233; BuflFon, 190; 

 Cuvier, 187; Lamarck, 227; 

 Linnaeus, 186-7, 190; Wallace, 

 322. 



Climate, influence on man, 150. 

 See Environment. 



Colonna, Fabio, palaeontologist, 

 120. 



Coloration, E. Darwin, 208, 210, 

 214; Lamarck, 233. 



Colvin, Sidney, encyclopaedist, 

 120. 



Comparative Anatomy, 26, 221 ; 

 Cuvier, 279; E. Darwin, 208; 

 early Greek, 65; Geoffroy, 

 258; Serres' relation to em- 

 bryology, 309; Sicilian School 

 of Medicine, 67. See Anat- 

 omy, Goethe, Man. 



Compensation of Growth, 71; 

 Aristotle, 72; Treviranus, 

 286. See Balancement. 



Comte, revival of Lamarck, 228, 

 253. 



Continuity, Goethe, 145; Leib- 

 nitz, 142, 144, 173, 175; Ro- 

 binet, 179. 



Cooper, William A., translator, 

 267. 



Cope, archaesthetism, 212, 238, 

 356; volume, 212. 



Cosmic Evolution, Chambers, 

 313; Kant, 151-2. 



Cosmogony, 30, 46 ; Goethe, 268. 

 See Creation. 



Cottcrill, on Augustine, 110, 

 111; volume, 109. 



Creation, Cuvier, 280-1 ; Goethe, 

 271; Gregory of Nyssa, 108; 

 Leibnitz, 175; Spencer, 22, 

 311. See Special Creation, 

 Successive Creations. 



Cuvier, 13, 26, 155, 191, 245, 264, 

 269, 278-83, 286, 289, 316; ap- 

 preciation of Goethe, 268; 

 catastrophism, 279, 304-5; 

 change of views, 279; classifi- 

 cation, 187; creation, 280-1; 

 defense of emboitement, 36; 

 definition of species, 278; dis- 

 cussion with St. Hilaire, 257, 

 263-6, 276-7; estimate of De- 

 mocritus, 58; founder of pa- 

 laeontology, 278, 284; fixity, 

 221, 278, 281; nomenclature, 

 191 ; opposition to Lamarck, 

 228, 253; prestige, 282; rea- 

 soning, 263; status as evolu- 

 tionist, 257, 278; supporter of 

 Bonnet, 174; school of facts, 

 185, 279, 281-3, 295; theories, 

 279-80; volume, 279, 304. 



D'Archiac, disciple of Cuvier, 

 281. 



Darwin, Charles, 7, 16, 17, 46, 

 82, 156, 168, 196, 201, 202, 212, 

 215, 228, 304, 305, 327-48, 350; 

 anticipation, 5, 72, 204; causa- 

 tion, 86; chance, 337-8, 339; 

 change of views, 341-2, 344- 

 5; contrast with Lamarck, 

 337; descent theory, 180; de- 

 sign, 339; environment, 342-3; 

 fixity, 304; heredity problems, 

 343; historic position, 8-9; 

 indebtedness to predecessors, 

 4, 327; induction, 327; influ- 

 ences, 325, 328, 330, 332, 335, 

 C40, 341, 342, 343; interpreta- 

 tion of Naudin, 299; Kant's 

 Newton, 149; modification. 



