420 



EVOLUTION, OLD AND NEW. 



Intermediate forms, Lamarck on, 

 283, 286 



0. Darwin, 284, 285 



Inventions, small successive im- 

 provements in man's, and de- 

 velopment of, analogous to that 

 of organism,44, 46, 47, 54, 55, 384 

 Irony, good-natured and the re- 

 verse, 91 

 an apology for, and explana- 

 tion how far it is legitimate, 

 111, 112 



Buflfon's, 78, &c., 91, 92, 93, 



155, 167, 163, 164 



JARDINE, Sir W., on Buffon'a 

 character, 82 

 Johnson, Dr., and Erasmus Darwin, 



184, 185 

 Joints, Paley on the human, 19, 20 

 Juggle, Paley's argument a juggle, 

 unless man has had a 'bona fde 

 personal, and therefore organic 

 designer, 14, 16 



KNEE-PAN,Paley on the human, 

 18 

 Knowledge, nomenclature mistaken 

 for, 141 



LABOUR, glory comes after, if she 

 can, 76 



Lamarck, had brain upon the brain, 

 36 



never quite recognized design, 



39 



Haeokel's surprising state- 

 ment concerning, 73 



wherein he mainly differs from 



Buffon, 105 



memoir of, 235 



his connection with Buffon, as 



tutor to his son, &c., 237, 258 



his daughters, 242, 253 



his poverty and blindness, 



242, 253 



Isidore Geoffrey on, bad carica- 

 ture of his teaching, 244-246 



Haeckel on, 246, 247 



never seriously discussed, 247 



" the well-known doctrine of," 



C. Darwin's reference to, 249, 

 260, 261, 298, 314, 376 



Lamarck on the opposition his 

 theory met with, 262 



too old to have begun his un- 

 equal contest, 253 



on the feeling of animals, 254, 



255 



too theory-ridden, 254 



misled by Buffon (query), 255 



took from Buffon without 



sufficient acknowledgment, 

 255, 258, 260, 311 



as compared with Dr. Erasmus 



Darwin, 257 



like Dr. E. Darwin, sees 



struggle and modification 

 turn mainly round three 

 great wants, 257, 279, 300, 

 309 



when and how he came over to 



the side of mutability, 258 



and the French translation of 



the "Loves of the Plant," 

 259 



on comparative anatomy, 266 



on species, 267, &c. 



on conditions of existence 



((!i><!owsi!amces),105, 268, 270, 

 271, 275, 277, 278, 281, 291, 

 292, 294, 295, 298, 299, 



300, &c. 

 on instinct, 274 



on animals and plants under 



domestication, 275, 293, 296, 

 297, 300 



on extinct species, 277 



— anticipated Lyell in rejecting 



catastrophes, 277 



on the geometrical ratio of 



increase and struggle for 

 existence, 280-282 



on embryonic development, 



289 



the main principles which he 



supposes to underlie varia- 

 tions, 292, 299, 338, 339 



his contention that plants 



have neither actions nor 

 habits, 295 



on use and disu3e,294, 296,299, 



301, 302, 304, 305, 307-309 

 on the various breeds of the 



dog, 297 

 habit a second nature, 300 



