392 



INDEX 



Morgan, Lloyd, emergent evo- 

 lution, 61. 



Morley, volume, 172. 



Morphology, Goethe's theories, 

 275-6. See Structure. 



Morse, letter from Darwin, 343. 



Movement, Anaximander, 100; 

 Aristotle, 79-80, 89; Bruno, 

 125; essence of mutability, 

 100; Heraclitus, 350. See En- 

 telechy. Mutability. 



Miiller, volume, 271. 



Mutability, 26, 131, 133, 278; 

 anticipation, 307; Bacon's 

 perception, 136; Buffon, 150, 

 188, 189, 192-3, 223; Darwin, 

 323-4, 332-3; E. Darwin, 209; 

 early trend, 139 ; Greek ideas, 

 100-1; Lamarck, 222-3, 227, 

 245; Leibnitz, 143; Linnaeus, 

 188; St. Hilaire, 294-5. 



Mutation, 65; de Vries, 261; 

 Geoff roy, 261. See Fortuity. 



Mutilation, artificial, 208; inher- 

 ited, 75. 



Mythology, conception of Na- 

 ture, 43; Greek phase, 44; 

 suppressed by Lucretius, 94-5. 



Nageli, 307; internal perfecting 

 principle, 338. 



Natural Causation, 29, 30, 88; 

 Anaximander, 47 ; Anaxim- 

 enes, 49-50; Aristotle, 74; 

 Augustine, 110; Descartes, 

 141; E. Darwin, 211, 212; 

 Greek perception, 30, 44; 

 Kant, 147; Lyell, 325; nat- 

 ural philosophers, 134^5 ; Spi- 

 noza, 145; Thales, 46. 



Natural Philosophy, 9, 15, 27- 

 31, 132-56; Bacon, 135-40; 

 contribution to evolution, 29, 

 132-5; Descartes, 140-2; Her- 

 der, 153—4.; indebtedness to 

 Greek science, 134; interpre- 

 tation of Nature, 15, 16, 24-7; 

 Kant, 30, 146-52, 154; Kiel- 

 meyer, 155, 263; Lamarck, 



234; Leibnitz, 142-6; Lessing, 

 153; Oken, 154, 180-4. 



Natural Selection, 16, 23, 172; 

 Darwin, 327, 328, 336, 34], 

 343; Empedocles, 54r-5; Geof- 

 froy, 260; history of idea, 

 340; Matthew, 306, 322; Nau- 

 din, 298-9, 306; Wells, 306, 

 320-1. See Selection. 



Naturalism, conception of Na- 

 ture, 43; Greek phase, 44, 62; 

 Strato, 89. 



Naturalists, The Great, 185- 

 218; contribution to evolu- 

 tion, 132, 159. 



Nature, anticipation and inter- 

 pretation, 1-38; design in, 

 84 ; duality, 86 ; Linnaean clas- 

 sification, see Linnaeus : philos- 

 ophy, see Natural Philosophy ; 

 operation, 84-5. See Natural 

 Causation, Order. 



Naudin, 15, 16, 296-300, 303, 340; 

 atavism, 297, 298; expedition, 

 292; filiation, 297; 'finality,' 

 297-8; fixation of characters, 

 293; natural selection, 306; 

 origin of species, 198-9, 296; 

 'plasticity,' 297; transmuta- 

 tion, 296; type succession, 

 298-9; unity of type, 296-7. 



Newton, 147, 149; uniformity, 

 146. 



Nicholas of Cusa, Bruno's phi- 

 losophy, 123. 



Nomenclature, Cuvier, 191; 

 Linnaeus, 186. 



Norris, Cardinal, 130. 



Oken, 15, 50, 154, 180-5; cell 

 doctrine, 162, 181; descent 

 theory, 180; generation, 183, 

 252; interpretation of Na- 

 ture, 182; origin of life, 182, 



183, 184, 352, 353, of man, 



184, of species, 159, 160; rela- 

 tive rank, 6, 181-2; skull 

 structure, 267, 316; transcen- 



