D. APPLETON & @0,’8 PUBLICATIONS, 
ERNST HAECKEL’S WORKS. 
THE HISTORY OF CREATION; OR, THE DEVELOP. 
MENT OF THE EARTH AND ITS INHABITANTS BY THE 
ACTION OF NATURAL CAUSES. A Popular Exposition of the 
Doctrine of Evolution in general, and of that of Darwin, Goethe, 
and Lamarck in particular. From the German of Ernst Ha£cxEL, 
Professor in the University of Jena. The translation revised by 
Professor E. Ray Lankester, M. A., F. R.S., Fellow of Exeter Col- 
lege, Oxford. Illustrated with Lithographic Plates. In two vols., 
12mo. Cloth, $5.00. 
THE EVOLUTION OF MAN. A Popular Exposition of the 
Principal Points of Human Ontogeny and Phylogeny. From the 
German of Ernst Haxzcket, Professor in the University of Jena, 
author of ‘The History of Creation,” etc. With numerous Illus- 
trations. In two vols.,12mo. Cloth. Price, $5.00. 
“In this excellent translation of Professor Haeckel’s work, the Eng- 
lish reader has access to the latest doctrines of the Continental school of 
evolution, in its application to the history of man. It is in Germany, be- 
yond any other European country, that the impulse given by Darwin 
twenty years ago to the theory of evolution has influenced the whole 
tenor of philosophical opinion. There may be, and are, differences in 
the degree to which the doctrine may be held capable of extension into 
the domain of mind and morals; but there is no denying, in scientific 
circles at least, that as regards the physical history of organic nature 
uch has been done toward making not a continuous scheme of being.” 
—London Saturday Review. 
FREEDOM IN SCIENCE AND TEACHING. From the 
German of Ernst Harcken. With a Prefatory Note by T. H. 
Hoxuey, F.R.S. 12mo. $1.00. 
New York: D. APPLETON & CO., 1, 3, & 5 Bond Street. 
