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ogie 
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DE 
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RECENT LITERATURE. 
Eimer on Evolution.'—This work reaches the scientific men of 
English-speaking countries at a time when the views of Weismann are 
being read, and it serves as a source of evidence on the opposite side 
of the interesting question which they discuss. Professor Eimer has 
taken a broader view of the field than is done by that large class of 
biologists whose knowledge is limited by the use of the microscope, 
and he is therefore in possession of a class of facts which are apt to 
1 Organic Evolution as the Result of the Inheritance of Acquired Characters, Accord- 
ing to the Law of Organic Growth, by G. H. Theodor Eimer, Professor of Zoology and 
tive Anatomy at the University of Tübingen. Translated by I. H. Cunning- 
iuis, MA: F.RS.E. London: MacMillan & Co., ‘and New York, 1890. 8vo, pp. 435- 
