4t6 



EVOLUTION, OLD AND NEW. 



Dog, Buffon on the, 120 



Lamarck on the various breeds 



of the, 297 



Domestication, a single ease of a 

 species formed under domes- 

 tication sufficient to rcmore 

 the A priori diificnlty from 

 a comprehensive theory of 

 evolution, 90, 91, 311 



plants under, Buffon on, 167, 



&c. 



Buffon on animals under, 103, 



120, kc, 148, &c., 159, &c., 

 276 



animals under. Dr. Erasmus 



Darwin on, 223 

 animals under, Buffon on, 



121, &c., 148, 276 

 0. Darwin on, 276 



animals and plants under, 



Lamarck on, 275, 293, 296, 



297, 300 

 animals and plants under, 



Mr. Patrick Matthew on, 



324 

 Door, the doing anything well will 



open the door for doing 



something else, 51 

 Ducks, our domesticated, why 



they cannot fly like wild 



ones, 296, 309 



EARN, "you are but doing your 

 best to earn an honest living,' 

 29 

 Ears are never found in a rudimen- 

 tary condition, 379 

 Eat, or be eaten, 177 

 Effort, Paley's argument that struc- 

 tures have not been de- 

 veloped through, 22, 45 

 — — too much, as vicious as indo- 

 lence, 35 



"neither too much nor too 



little," 60 



Herculean, condemned, 197 



Egyptian mummies, Lamarck on, 



274, 275 

 Embryology, the light it throws 

 upon the mode in which organ- 

 isms have been designed, 25 

 Embryonic metamorplioses, Eras- 

 mus Darwin on, 280, 231 



Embryonic development, Lamarck 



on, 289 

 Encyclical, the Pope's, on St. 



Thomas Aquinas, 402, ke. 

 Endeavour, Paley's argument 

 against the view that structures 

 have been developed through, 

 22, 45 

 Endowment, the new orthodoxy, 



which is clamouring for, 360 

 English wines. Dr. Erasmus Dar- 

 win's preference for, 175 

 Enviionment. See Conditions of 



Existence 

 Equilibrium, the, of Nature, Buffon 



on the, 125 

 Err, the power to, rated highly, 29 



" it is on this margin that we 



may err or wander," 50 



virtue ever errs on the side of 



excess, 35 

 Error, importance of, dependent on 

 tlie distance, rather than the 

 direction, 50 

 'Especially" the same, 92, 96 

 Ethiopian, the, can 'change his 

 skin, if it becomes worth his 

 while to ti'y long enough, 40 

 Eveque and bishop, common de- 

 rivation of, 355 

 Everlasting, God, how far, 32 

 Evolution,, commonly held incom- 

 patible with design, 9 

 Paley, its first serious op- 

 ponent in England, 21 



Sir "Walter Ealeigh on, 21, 70 



must stand or fall according 



as it rests on a purposive 

 foundation or no, 60 



brief summary of its six 



principal stages, 62, &c. 



Bacon on, 69 



the theory of, as apart from 



the evidence in support of 

 it, 332 



C. Darwin and Lamarck are 



equally intent upon estab- 

 lishing the same theory of 

 evolution, 335-337 



and Darwinism, not to be 



confounded, 360, 361 



Rome and Pantheism meet in, 



403 



