EVOLUTION THEORIES 215 



nf'n "flip* "frrnQYiffht QI POTIr 

 Wl^h tfof; viptnripg fl.fl^l 



Q_f Pma.sia...jJie renewed claims of 



r^ry ^lg<^ flTldi above 3,11. With lljfi 



doctrine of rn,rf\ 



Qwnl r>QTTLKinarl The intermediate step be- 

 tween this ruling Prussian world of action 

 and \^gismann's ascendancy in speculative 

 bioIpgY. is indicated by the widely diffused 

 doctrine of Count Gobineau, consciously and 

 avowedly bio-social as this has been. All 

 these movements alike have now found 

 eloquent, though hardly scientific, expres- 

 sion in Houston Stewart Chamberlain, whose 

 contemporary vogue in Germany is thus 

 earned and explained. 



LIMITATIONS YET ADVANTAGES OF SOCIAL 

 OUTLOOK. But the reader may ere now be 

 savinsf * J I this be "fvrnfv 17 r^^^vQifliif^^' ^roctrir*^^ 



projections of 



HillIP they 



fl.aTfpH. tn grant ? 



Is your science merely a new anthropomor- 

 phism? and if so how does it differ from the 

 mythological accounts of Nature it claims 

 to displace? 



The answer is not so difficult as it seems, 

 the result not so unsatisfactory after all. 

 pf tjhe doctrines of any 



