A STANDARD EVOLUTION LIBRARY. 



flinching Darwinian. His contributions to the discussion are varied and 

 valuable, and as collected in the present volume they will be seen to estab- 

 lish a claim upon the thinking world, which will be exteneively felt and 

 cordially acknowledged. These papers not only illustrate the history of 

 the controversy, and the progress of the disoussioiij but they form perhaps 

 the fullest and most trustworthy exposition of what is to be properly under- 

 stood by ' Darwinism ' that is to be found in our language. To all those 

 timid souls who are worried about the progress of science, and the danger 

 that it will subvert the foundations of their faith, we recommend the dis- 

 passionats perusal of tliis volume." — The I^ular Seienee Monthly. 



TI. 

 Heredity : A Psychological Study of its Phenomena, Laws, Causes, and 



Consequences. From the French of Th. Ribot. 12mo, Cloth, $2.00. 



" Heredity is that biologi.cal law by which all beings endowed with life 

 tend to repeat themselves in their descendant : it is for the species what 



Eersonal identityis forthe individual. The physiological side ofthis subject 

 as been diligently studied, but not so its psychological side. We propose 

 to supply this deficiency in the present work."— .JS-oot the Introduction. 



TIL 

 Hereditary Genius: An Inquiry into its Laws and Consequences. 



By Fkancis Gauon, F. B. S., etc. New and revised edition, with an 



American Preface. 12mo. Cloth, |2.00. 

 " The following pages embody the result of the first vigorous and me- 

 thodical efibrt to treat the question in the true scientific spirit, and place 

 it upon the proper inductive basis. Mr. Galton proves, by overwhelming 

 evidence, that genius, talent, or whatever we term great mental capacity, 

 follows the law of organic transmission — runs in families, and is an ajffair or 

 blood and breed ; and that a sphere of phenomena hitherto deemed capri- 

 cious and defiant of rule is, nevertheless, within the operation of ascertain- 

 able law." — M-om the American Preface. 



VIII. 

 The ETOlutioil of Man. A Popular Exposition of the Principal 

 Points of Human Ontogeny and Phylogeny. From the German of 

 Ebnst Haeckel, Professor in the University of Jena. With numer- 

 ous Hlustrations. 2 vols., 12mo. Cloth, $B.00. 

 " In this excellent translation of Professor Haeokel's work, the English 

 reader has access to the latest doctrines of the Continental school of evolu- 

 tion, in its application to the history of man." 



IX. 



The History of Creation ; or, the Development of the Earth and its 

 Inhabitants by the Action of Natural Causes. A Popular Exposition 

 of the Doctrine of Evolution in General, and of that of Darwin, Goe- 

 the, and Lamarck in Particular. By Ernst Haeckel, Professor in 

 the ITniversity of Jena. The translation revised by Professor E. Ray 

 Lankestek. Illustrated with Lithographic Plates, 2 vols., 12mo. 

 Cloth, $5.00. 



" The book has been translated into several languages. I hope that it 

 may also find sympathy in the fatherland of Darwin, the more so since it 

 contains special morphological evidence in favor of many of the most impor- 

 tant doctrines with which this greatest naturalist of our century has enriched 

 eeience." — From the Preface. 



