142 Miscellaneous Bibliography. 
The two volumes whose title pages are here a are popular and 
practical works on the subjects of which they treat. The 
what into the history and esthetics of the art, as wall as its science. 
figu 
3. phitidena die Verschiedenheit é in der Schadelbildung des Gorilla, Chim- 
par und Orang-Outang, vorziiglich nach Geschlecht und Alter, nebst 
emer Bemerkung tiber die Darwinsche Theorie; von Dr. Tu. L. BiscuorFF, 
Professor der Anatomie und Physiologie in Miinchen. Mit 22 lithograph- 
irten Tafeln. Miinchen.—This work will Vaasa to those ry 
ies part of the work which possesses most general interest, is of course 
e appended note on the Darwinian Theory? Some of the points are 
essere i, 
evidence; moreover it is even contrary to the Darwinian cueory rightly 
understo od, for the extinction of = parent form is the direct consequence 
of the development of an improved form. The great problem of organl¢ 
nature is twofo e we St of the simplest original forms; 2. The 
c and the mode of their operation, by which more perfect forms 
baiktingh wit is a contradiction in terms. Darwin’s treatment 
the second alt a of the second question is more successful. Natural 8 
he 
ciples in any theory of development. Since no gene = 
either te the origin of life or for the coviinienoement of variation, 3 
