326 



INDEX. 



Organism, more important than 

 environment, 124 



and property, 127, &o. 



Organs and tools, 143, &c. 



"Origin of Species," its title mis- 

 leading, 86 



^^ — originally called "Natural 

 Selection," 87 



should be referred to as "Ori- 

 gin of Species," &c., 88 



almost any view can he de- 

 fended from the, 179 , 



concluding paragraph, 179, 



180, 234 



first edition consisted of 4000 



copies, 204 

 first two editions 6000 copies, 



239, 248, 252 

 Orpheus-like, as, to charm, &c., 31 

 Ostentatious unostentatiousness, 



261 



Palet, F. a,, on C. Darwin's book 



on worms, 285 

 Paradox, the non-livingness of the 



living, and the llvingness of the 



non-living, 149 

 Paws, our boots, spare, 13S 

 Pellet, impotent as a, 31 

 Penelope, like, undoing, &c., 117 

 Penny, if a, be dropped, &c., 161 

 Pensions, we have f^iven, 8 



out of the public, 157 



Personality, the common view com- 

 monly most convenient, 24 

 no more lost in generations 



than in seconds, 25 



not lost in death, 313, 314 



Philosophy made for man, 30 

 another world, with another 



language, 167 



the God of, 168 



Plants must have intelligence, 298 

 and animals, embodiments of 



two principles, 115, 301, &c. 

 Plasticity, of organism, 74 

 Porter, beating doormats, 173 

 Power, a, represented by natural 



selection, 99-101 

 Property, and organism, 127, &c. 

 Proselytises, protoplasm instomacb, 



142 

 Protoplasm, great is, 133, &c. 



coextensive with life, 133 



has the ear of life, 134 



turns dead to account, 134 



Protoplasm goes masked behind its 



habits, 135 



will fare as the body, 138 



cannot communicate directly 



with machine, 141 



the life of the world, 146 



God Almighty, 147 



collapsed in 1879, 147 



and vital principle, 148 



and the mechanical theory of 



the universe, 161 

 Protoplasmic parts of body more 



living than non- protoplasmic, 146 

 Psalmist, the, aiming at modem 



conceptions, 152 

 Pure, we want to get things, 155 

 Purse and stomach, 128, 



Race, formerly seen as many, and 



individual as one, 23 

 while realising, our minds ex- 

 cluded experience, 33 



the, not to the swift, 73 



Heason, founded on faith, 132 

 Keflex action, departmental, 315 

 Religion and science, antagonism 



of, and reconciling, 258 

 Reproduction and nutrition, 142 

 Mes, non sibi, &o., 105 

 Rhythms, reinforce pre-existing, 76 

 Romanes, G. J., his review of " Un- 

 conscious Memory," 37 



letter to Athenceutn, 39 



on " Erewhon " and " Life and 



Habit," 40 

 has adopted Heringian view, 



49, 5°, 54 



on the origin of development 



of instincts, 51 



dropped natural selection in 



connection with instinct, 51, 52 



■ and Mr. Darwin's mantle, 54, 



61, 6s 

 calls consciousness an adjunct, 



S6 



his definition of instinct, 59 



heredity working up a faculty, 



60 



theory of physiological selec- 

 tion, 65, &c. 



does not see there are two 



natural selections, &j 



on Huxley's automatism, 158 



Rosmini, on property, 127, &c. 

 Rudimentary organs, Paley and 

 C. Darwin on, 7 



