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VOL. XVI. 
T he Credibility of the Supernatural. (Annual Address.) By (the late) Lord O’N bill. 
Supposed Palaeolithic Tools of the Valley of the Axe. By N. Whitley. Esq. (Engravings.) 
An Examination of the Philosophy of Mr. Herbert Spencer. By the Bev. W. D. Ground. 
On Herbert Spencer’s Theory of the Will. By Bev. W. 1). Ground; with Communication. 
Biblical Proper Names, personal and local, illustrated from sources external to Holy Scripture. 
By Bev. H. G. Tomkins. Comments by Professor Maspero, Mr. Rassam, and others. 
Breaks in the Continuity of Mammalian Life at certain Geological Periods, fatal to the 
Darwinian Theory of Evolution. By (the late) T. K. Callard, Esq., E.G.S., with 
Comments by several Geologists. 
The New Materialism Unscientific ; or, Dictatorial Scientific Utterances and the Decline of 
Thought. By Professor Lionel 8. Beale, M.D., P.B.S. 
On the Living and the Non-Living. By the same. On the New Materialism. By the same. 
The Theory of Evolution taught by Haeckel, and held by his followers. By J. Hassell, Esq. 
The Supernatural in Nature. By (the late) J. E. Howard, Esq., F.B.S. 
Materialism. By Judge C. W. Richmond. 
VOL. XVII. 
f The Recent Survey of Western Palestine, and its Bearing upon the Bible. By Trelawney 
Saunders. Esq. 
Remarks on Climate in relation to Organic Nature. By Surgeon-General C. A. Gordon, 
M.D., O.B. Speeches by Sir J. Risdon Bennett, V.P.R.S. ; Sir Joseph Fayker, 
K.C.S.L, M.D., F.R.S. ; and others. 
J On the Argument from Design in Nature, with some Illustrations from Plants. By (the 
| late) W. P. James, Esq., M.A. 
Considerations on the Unknown and Unknowable of Modern Thought; or, Is it possible to 
know God? By the Rev. J. J. Lias, M.A. (then Hulsean Lecturer). Comments by 
(the late) Lord O’Neill and others. 
On certain Theories of Life. By Surg.-Gen. C. A. Gordon, C.B., M.D., Hon. Phys. to 
the Queen. 
'On Certain Definitions of Matter. By (the late) J. E. Howard, Esq., F.R.S. 
On the Absence of Real Opposition between Science and Revelation. By Professor G. G. 
, Stokes, P.R.S. Comments by several leading scientific men. 
I Babylonian Cities. By Hormuzd Rassam; with Remarks by Professor Delitzsch, &c. 
The Origin of Man. By Archdeacon Bardsley. 
(Did the World Evolve Itself? By Sir E. Beckett, Bart, (now Lord Grimthorpe). 
VOL. XVIII. 
On Misrepresentations of Christianity. By Lord O’Neill (the late). 
Science not opposed to Revelation. By J. L. Porter, D.D., D.C.L. (the late). 
Recent Egyptological Research in its Biblical Relation. By the Rev. H. G. Tomkins. 
Cuneiform inscriptions as illustrative of the times of the Jewish Captivity. By W. St. 
Chad Boscawen, F.R.Hist.Soe. 
Nebuchadnezzar, King of Babylon — On Recently Discovered Inscriptions of this King. By 
E. A. Budge. M. a., M.R.A.S. 
Buddhism. By Rev. R. Collins. Remarks by Dr. Leitner (Lahore), Professor Rhys 
Davids, Mr. Rassam, Rev. S. Coles (Ceylon), &c. Also a full Note on Krishna. 
Pessimism. By (the late) W. P. James, Esq. 
On the Prehistoric Factory of Flints at Spiennes. By Rev. J. Magens Mello, F.G.S. 
The Evolution of the Pearly Nautilus. By S. R. Pattison, Esq., F.G.S. 
“ On Prehistoric Man in Egypt and the Lebanon.” By Sir J. W. Dawson, C.M.G., 
F. R.S., McGill University, Montreal. Remarks by Professors W. Warington Smyth, 
F.R.S., W. Boyd-Dawkins, F.R.S., T. Rupert Jones, F.R.S., T. Wiltshire, F.G.S., 
ColonefHERSCHEL, F.R.S., Dr. Rae, F.R.S. 
VOL. XIX. 
fOn the Inductive Logic. By Prof. R. L. Dabney, D.D. , LL.D. Speeches by Sir H. 
Barkly, G.C.M.G., K.C.B., F.R.S., Sir J. Leeroy, K.C.M.G., F.R.S., &c. 
| On Evolution by Natural Selection. By J. Hassell, Esq. 
■{ Remarks on Evolution. By Professor Virchow. 
On the Recency of the Close of the Glacial Epoch. By D. Mackintosh, Esq., F.G.S. 
Communications from Prof. T. Rupert Jones, F.R.S., and others. 
L On the recession of Niagara (with the United States Government Survey Diagrams). 
