4i8 



EVOLUTION, OLD AND NEW. 



Geoffrey and Lamarck's hypothesis, 

 244-246, 329 



on Buffon, 328 



his position, 329 



Genealogical order, Lamarck on, 

 264 



C. Darwin on, 265 



Generation more remarkable than 

 reason, Hume on, 233 



Generic differences (as well as speci- 

 fic), Buffon on, 164 



Genius, a supreme capacity for 

 taking pains, 76 



Geographical distribution, changed, 

 Buffon on, 145, &c,, 164 



Geometrical ratio of increase, Buff- 

 on on, 123 



Lamarck, on, 280 



Patrick Matthew on, 320, 321 



Germ of oak indistinguishable from 

 that of a man, 334 



Germans, Buffon on the, 93 



Glory "comes after labour if she 

 can," &e., 76 



Go away, because their uncles, 

 aunts, 376 



God, embodied in living forms, and 

 dwelling in them, 31 



how far everlasting, invisible, 



imperishable, omnipotent, 

 &o., 32 



the unseen parts of, are as a, 



deep-buried history, 33 



Goethe, as an evolutionist, 71 



Gradations infinitely subtle, 87 



Grant Allen, on "Evolution, Old 

 and New," 386-388 



on the decay of criticism, 388 



says that "Evolutionism is an 



almost exclusively English 

 impulse," 393 



Greyhound or racehorse, the well- 

 adapted form of the, 359 



Growth attended at each step by a 

 felicitous tempering of two an- 

 tagonistic principles, 35 



Gueneau de Montbeillard, 172, 173 



HABIT," ' ' Life and. 8u ' ' Life 

 and Habit." 



' rudimentary organs repeated 



through mere force of, 38, 

 39 



Habit, Buffon on, 148, 159, 160, 

 161, 162 



a second Nature, Lamarck on, 



300 

 Habits, or use, and organ, La- 

 marck on the interaction of, 292, 

 311 

 Haeckei, on design, 4, 5 



on Goethe as an evolutionist, 



71 



does not appear to know of 



Buffon as au evolutionist, 

 71, 393 

 his surprising statement con- 

 cerning Lamarck, 73 

 his ignorance concerning Eras- 

 mus Darwin, 73, 393 



on Lamarck, 246, 247 



A. R. Wallace's review of his 



"Evolution of Man," 382, 

 384 

 Hamlet, the "Origin of Species" 

 like " Hamlet " without Hamlet, 

 363 

 Handiest, a man should do what- 

 ' ever comes handiest, 51, 52 

 Hare, Buffon on the, 12S, &c. 

 Hartmann's philosophy of the un- 

 conscious, and ' ' Life and Habit," 

 56, 57 

 Hearing, when we once reach ani- 

 mals so low as to have no organ 

 of, we lose this organ for good 

 and all, 379 

 Heredity and habit, Buffon on, 148, 



159, 160, 161, 162 

 - — - only another term for un- 

 known causes, unless the 

 " Life and Habit " theory be 

 adopted, 384 

 Hering, Professor, referred to, 66, 



67 

 his theory as given in " Na- 

 ture" by Ray Lankester, 

 198-200 

 Hersohel, Sir John, compares 

 natural selection to the Laputan 

 method of making books, 10 

 Higgling and haggling of the 



market, 50 

 History of the universe, each or- 

 ganism is a, from its own point 

 of view, 31 



