THE PRESENT EVOLUTION OF MAN 



PRESS OPINIONS— cofltfnuerf. 



cussion is a valuable one." — Professor T. D. A. Cockerell in 



Science. 



"A product of sustained thought and research." — The 

 Zoologist. 



" A book more than worth a reading." — Saturday Review. 



" Leads the reader into fruitful but little frequented fields of 

 enquiry. Conclusions are arrived at that are deeply interesting." 

 — Sheffield Daily Telegraph. 



" Very acute and highly interesting." — St fames' Gazette. 



" Full of original ideas and acute reasoning . . . exceedingly 

 well done. . . . This argument has not, within my knowledge, 

 been so clearly and forcibly set forth by any other writer. . . . 

 This very interesting and well-written volume ... a book that is 

 both original and suggestive." — Mr Alfred Russel Wallace 

 in Nature. 



" A startling work." — Bombay East Indian. 



" A thunderbolt of a book." — Portsmouth Evening News. 



"The ability and knowledge with which this noteworthy book 

 is written would commend it to persons interested in theoretical 

 questions of biology, even if the practical issues which it discusses 

 with sincerity and courage were not of extreme interest to the 

 general public." — Manchester Guardian. 



" Emphatically a book to be read." — Pall Mall Gazette. 



" There is abundant evidence that this book, which deals with 

 the evolution thesis in its bearings on contemporary human life, is 

 the work of a thoughtful man, and it contains a good deal of 

 suggestive matter." — Tablet. 



" A very fresh and original study of the influence of drugs 

 and diseases on the human race." — Free Review. 



"Unquestionably the most important contribution to the 

 evolution theory since Weismann's work on ' The Continuity of 

 the Germ Plasma.' . . . This remarkable book . . . throws light 

 on all dark places of human \i\%\.ovj."— Japan Weekly Mail. 



