CONTENTS. 



CHAPTER I. 



Darwin's Theory . . 9 



CHAPTER II. 

 Darwin's Ignorance of the Law of Variations ; and his 

 False Assumption of no Limit to Improvements . 35 



CHAPTER III. 



The Variations, or Improvements, in each Species, Limited 

 in Number and Kind to the Number and Kind of the 

 Characters previously Lost by such Species, under 

 Nature : or, the Law of Reversion . . .48 



CHAPTER IV. 

 Reversion not a Law, Sui Generis ; but a Derivative Law, 

 Assimilable to other Well Known Laws . 106 



CHAPTER V. 



The Fallacies of Darwin's Argument from Natural Se- 

 lection . 133 



CHAPTER VI. 

 The Several Processes of Formation of Varieties . 170 



CHAPTER VII. 

 Evils caused by a Departure from the Original Type of 

 a Species ; and Good occasioned by a Return to such 

 Original Type: or, Crossing and Close-Interbreeding 194 



