PEINCIPLE8 AND PRACTICE OF CLASSIFICATION. 69 



not only common to the members of tho group, but distinguish it from all others ; and the 

 statement of these constitutes the definition of the group. 



" Thus, among animals with vertebrje, the class Mammalia is definable as those which 

 have two occipital condyles, with a well ossified basi-ocoipital ; which have each ramus of the 

 mandible composed of a single piece of bone and articulated with the squamosal element of the 

 skull ; and which possess mammae and non-nucleated red blood-cfjrpuscles. 



" But this statement of the characters of the class Mammalia is something uKjro than an 

 arbitrary definition. It does not merely mean that naturalists agree to call such and such 

 animals Mammalia : but it expresses, firstly, a generalization based upon, and constantly 

 verified by, very wide experience ; and, sec(jndly, a belief arising out of that generalization. 

 The generalization is that, in nature, the structures mentioned are always found ass(jciated 

 together ; the belief is that they always have been, and always will be, found so associated. 

 In other words, the definition of the class Mammalia is a statement of a law of correlation, or 

 coexistence, of animal structures, from which the most impcn-tant conclusions are deducible." 

 (Introd. to Classif. of Animals, 8vo, London, 1869, pp. 2, 3.) 



But broad as such laws of correlation of structure are, and important as are the conclusions 

 deducible, we must constantly be on our guard agaiust presuming upou tlie infallibiUty either 

 of the data or of the deduction, as the author just quoted goes on to show. Such caution is 

 specially required where there is no obvious reason fjr the particular combination that may be 

 found to exist. In the case of the ostrich-like birds (EatitcF), for example, we can understand 

 how a flat, unkeeled breast-bone, a particular arrangement of the shoulder-bones, and a rudi- 

 mentary state of tlie wing-bones, are found in combination, because all these modifications of 

 structure are evidently related to loss of the power of flight ; and, in point of fact, no exception 

 is known to the generahzation, that sucli conditions (jf the sternal, eoraco-scapular, and 

 humeral bones always coexist. But in all known struthious (ratite) birds, this state of the 

 bones in mention coexists also with a peculiar modification of the bones of the palate, and no 

 necessary connection between these two sets of diverse characters is conceivalde. Now, if we 

 only knew struthious birds, and found the combinati(jn in mention to hold with them all, we 

 slniuld doubtless declare our belief, that any bird having such palatal characters would also be 

 fdund to possess such imperfect wing-apparatus. But this would be going too far : in fact, 

 we liuow that the tinamous {Promceognatlue) have such a palate, yet have a keeled sternum 

 and functionally developed wings. The real use aud proper applicatiou of such generalizations 

 is to teach the lesson, that creatures exhibiting such modified combinations of characters are 

 genetically related to each other just in tlie degree to which they possess cliaracters in common, 

 aiid are genetically rein(5te from each other in the degree to which they do not possess characters 

 in common : i. e., that their similarities and distinctions of structure are sure indexes of their nat- 

 ural affinities. To take anotlier case, derived from consideration of a large number of existing 

 birds : it is an observed fact, that a particular arrangement of tlie plates upon the back of the 

 tarsus, a peculiar modification of the lower larynx or voice organ, and an undevehjped or abortive 

 condition of the first large feather on the hand, are found associated in a vast series of birds, 

 constituting the group of Passeres called Oscines. What possible connection there can be 

 between these three separate and apparently independent mi idifications we cannot even sur- 

 mise ; but that they have some natural and necessary connecti<jn we cannot doubt, and that 

 the connection is causal, not fortuitous, is a logical inference from the observed fact, that 

 birds which present this particular combination are also closely related in other structural 

 characters ; that is, that they have all been subjected to operative influences which have 

 conspired to produce the modifications (ibserved. Given, then, a bird with a known oscine 

 larynx, but unknown as to its feet and wings, it would be a reasonable inference that 

 these members, when discovered, would present the characters observed to occur in like 

 cases. But the first lark {Alaudida:) examined would show the inference to be fallible ; 



