Index. 397 



on the gradual character of geological changes, 95 ; on the age of Niagara 

 Falls, 101 ; his theories as related to the philosophy of evolution, 345. 



Maine, Sir Henry, on ancient society, 214. 



Mai thus, his theory of population reviewed by Herbert Spencer, 21 ; as related 

 to Darwin's work, 21. 



Man, his origin and descent, 40-42, 161-175; his age upon the earth, 1G3; his 

 mental evolution, 179-200 ; his associated lite, 203-230 ; his theological devel- 

 opment, 233-253; his moral development, 257-284; his physical imperfec- 

 tions as related to evolution, 174-175 299-300. 



Mansel, Dean, his doctrine of the Absolute, 249; his philosophv as compared 

 with that of Herbert Spencer, 250 note, 331 , 340. 



Marriage, as related to social evolution, 210-214; as related to moral evolution. 

 263-265 ; its earliest form, 264 note ; its order of development, 374. 



Marsh, Prof. Othniel C, on fossil remains, 98; on the evolution of the hor:c, 

 98-100 ; his discoveries of fossil birds, 305. 



Marsupials, their place in the order of animal evolution, 161, 304. 



Martineau, Harriet, 331. 



Materialism, as related to the evolution philosophy, 169, 350-354; compared 

 with spiritualism, 354-366. 



Matter and spirit, what we know of them, 133, 169 ; their indestructibility, 180- 

 182; their relation to the Unknowable, 133-181, 350-353; their relation to 

 consciousness, 365. 



Maudsley, Dr., on the seat of sensation in the brain, 193; his materialism, 366. 



Mechanical inventions and civilization, 350-359, 365. 



Mental evolution in Man, 234 note. 



Merwin, Prof. Almon G., on mental evolution, 198. 



Meta-gnosticism, 225-227. 



Metamorphosis, proofs of evolution from, 298. 



Metaphvsics, as related to science, 197, 199 ; as applied to theology, 248-250 ; the 

 metaphysical theory of morals, 258-259, 273-276; as bearing upon the phi- 

 losophy of evolution, 344-349. 



Mever, on correlation of forces, 363. 



Mill, John Stuart, his definition of Matter, 197 ; his distrust of metaphysics, 281. 



Miller, Hugh, his attempt to reconcile the Bible and geology, 104. 



Mimicry, proofs of evolution from, 308. 



Mind, as related to life, 134; its correlation with material conditions, 169, 173, 

 174, 182 ; its evolution, 179-200; is it a function of matter ? 350-354. 



Missing links, 101, 149, 291, 302. 



Monism in philosophy, 75, 247, 365. 



Montgomerv, George'Edgar, his poem on Darwin, 47. 



Morals, Evolution of, 257-284, 374. 



Moral science, the nature of, 268, ct seq. 



Moral sense, the, 312. 



Morehouse, Kev.D. W., on Christianity and evolution, 339. 



Morphology, proofs of evolution lrom, 296. 



Morris, William, his socialistic ideas, 371. 



Mosaic account of creation, 79-80, 104, 107. 



Muller, Johannes, his adhesion to Darwinism, 42. 



Muller, Max, his doctrine of a primitive monotheism, 244. 



Mythology, in theological evolution, 240, 



Nebular Hypothesis, 55. 



Newton, Sir Isaac, his discoverv of gravitation, 321, 345. 



Nichols, Starr Hoyt, on the philosophy of evolution, 343-361, 366. 



Obligation, the sense of, in evolutionary morals, 258, 265, 267, 272-278. 



Order of geological succession, 97. 



Organic and inorganic life, 118-121, 136. 



Organic rocks, the formation of, 88-'j3. 



Origin of dutv, 267. 



Origin of Species, when published, 12, 29; when commenced, 22; its orderly 

 symmetrv, 27 ; an enoch-making book, 31 ; its theory explained, 32-39, 128- 

 131 ; its effect, 40 ; imperfections in its theory, 151, 164 ; the views of critics, 302. 



Origin of the Fittest, 100 vote. 



Origin of variations, 165-166. 



Over-legislation, Spencer's opinion of, 5, 14-15. 



Owen, Prof., on the Australian mammalia, 304. 



Pangenesis, Darwin's theory of, 129-131. 

 Pantheism, in theological evolution, 247-250. 



