Show results per page.
Search Help New search
Sort by
Results 51-100 of 483 for « +(+text:review +text:of +text:on +text:the +text:origin +text:of +text:species) »
    Page 2 of 10. Go to page:     NEXT
25%
F4058    Periodical contribution:     Darwin, C. R. 1951. [Letters to Jeffries Wyman, 1860-66]. In A. H. Dupree, Some letters from Charles Darwin to Jeffries Wyman. Isis 42: 104-10.   Text
high in church state. I declare I believe from some conversations with him that at the bottom of his heart he goes a long way with me on the origin of species, though he has attacked me so severely not very ingenuously in the Edinburgh Review.— No one other person understands me so thoroughly as Asa Gray. If ever I doubt what I mean myself, I think I shall ask him! His generosity in getting my views a fair hearing, not caring himself for unpopularity has been most unselfish,—I would say noble
24%
F3375    Book contribution:     Darwin, C. R. 1892. [Letters to H. W. Bates, 1860-1863]. In Clodd, E. C., Memoir on H. W. Bates, naturalist on the River Amazons. London, pp. xxx-lxii.   Text
separate figure; no doubt this would have put the engraver into fits, as it would have destroyed beauty of plate. I am not at all surprised at such a paper having consumed much time. I rejoice that I passed over the whole subject in the Origin, for I should have made a precious mess of it. You have most clearly stated and solved a wonderful problem. No doubt, with most people, this will be the cream of the paper; but I am not sure that all your facts and reasoning on varieties and the segregation of
34%
A512    Review:     [Church, W. R.] 1860. [Review of] On the origin of species. Guardian (London) (8 February): 134-135.   Text   Image   PDF
[Church, W. R.] 1860. [Review of] On the origin of species. Guardian (London) (8 February): 134-135. [page] 134 Reviews. On the Origin of Species by means of Natural Selection; or, the Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life. By CHARLES DARWIN, M.A., F.R.S., F.G.S., F.L.S., c. Murray. There are forms of speculation so wild and improbable, or, at any rate, so alien to our ordinary habits of thought, that they can only obtain a fair consideration under the protection of some
18%
A512    Review:     [Church, W. R.] 1860. [Review of] On the origin of species. Guardian (London) (8 February): 134-135.   Text   Image   PDF
one half of the book is devoted to their consideration. The mere mention of such topics as Instinct, Hybridism, the Geological Record, Geographical Distribution, will suggest at once a multitude of objections. Why, if species are but variations of a common type, are their hybrid offspring barren? What imaginable process of selection can have produced the migratory instinct of the swallow, the cell-building instinct of the bee, or the curious habit of some races of ants, which carry on their
41%
A50    Review:     [Gray, Asa]. 1860. Review of Darwin's theory on the origin of species by means of natural selection. American Journal of Science and Arts. (Ser. 2) 29 (March): 153-184. [Silliman's Journal]   Text   Image   PDF
[Gray, A.] 1860. Review of Darwin's theory on the origin of species by means of natural selection. American Journal of Science and Arts (Ser. 2) 29 (March): 153-184. [title page] VOL. XXIX. MARCH, 1860. No. 86. Published the first day of every second month, price $5 per year. THE AMERICAN JOURNAL OF SCIENCE AND ARTS. CONDUCTED BY PROFESSORS B. SILLIMAN, B. SILLIMAN, JR., AND JAMES D. DANA, IN CONNECTION WITH PROF. ASA GRAY, OF CAMBRIDGE, PROF. LOUIS AGASSIZ, OF CAMBRIDGE, DR. WOLCOTT GIBBS, OF
37%
A50    Review:     [Gray, Asa]. 1860. Review of Darwin's theory on the origin of species by means of natural selection. American Journal of Science and Arts. (Ser. 2) 29 (March): 153-184. [Silliman's Journal]   Text   Image   PDF
THE AMERICAN JOURNAL OF SCIENCE AND ARTS. [SECOND SERIES.] ART. XV. Review of Darwin's Theory on the Origin of Species by means of Natural Selection.* FULLY to understand the foregoing Essay of Dr. Hooker, it should be read in the light of Mr. Darwin's book. The Essay is a trial of the Theory, an attempt by one inclined in its favor to see how the theory will work, when applied to the flora of a large and most peculiar province of the world. This book is already exciting much attention. Two
33%
A50    Review:     [Gray, Asa]. 1860. Review of Darwin's theory on the origin of species by means of natural selection. American Journal of Science and Arts. (Ser. 2) 29 (March): 153-184. [Silliman's Journal]   Text   Image   PDF
The next No. of this Journal will be published on the first of May. CONTENTS. Page. ART. XV. Review of Darwin's Theory on the Origin of Species by means of Natural Selection, 152 XVI. Forces; by THEODORE LYMAN, 185 XVII. On the causes of deviation in Elongated Projectiles; by Maj. J. G. BARNARD, U. S. A., 191 XVIII. Gulf Stream Explorations Third Memoir. Distribution of Temperature in the Water of the Florida Channel and Straits; by A. D. BACHE, Sup't U. S. Coast Survey. With Diagrams, 199 XIX
70%
A562    Review:     [Hall]. 1860. [Review of] On the Origin of Species. New York Times 9 (2658) (28 March): 3.   Text   Image   PDF
[Hall]. 1860. [Review of] On the Origin of Species. New York Times 9 (2658) (28 March): 3. [title] The New-York Times. VOL. IX NO. 2658. NEW-YORK, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 28, 1860. PRICE TWO CENTS. WITH A SUPPLEMENT. [page]
43%
A46    Review:     Carpenter, W. B. 1860. The Theory of Development in Nature. British and Foreign Medico-Chirurgical Review 25 (April): 367-404   Text   Image   PDF
Carpenter, W. B. 1860. The Theory of Development in Nature. British and Foreign Medico-Chirurgical Review 25 (April): 367-404. [page] 367 REVIEW V. 1. On the Origin of Species by means of Natural Selection, or the Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life. By CHARLES DARWIN, M.A., F.R.S., F.G.S., F.L.S., c. London, 1859. Post 8vo, pp. 502. 2. On the Tendency of Varieties to Depart indefinitely from the Original Type. By ALFRED RUSSEL WALLACE. From 'Journal of the Proceedings of
34%
A58    Review:     [Bowen, Francis]. 1860. [Review of] On the Origin of Species, by Means of Natural Selection. Charles Darwin. Littell's Living Age. 66, Issue 848, 1 (April): 474-506.   Text   Image   PDF
Anon. 1860. [Review of] On the Origin of Species, by Means of Natural Selection. Charles Darwin. Living Age 66, Issue 848 (1 September): 474-506. [page] 474 ART. IX. On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection, or the Preservation of Favored Races in the Struggle for Life. By CHARLES DARWIN, M. A., Fellow of the Royal, Geological, Linn an, etc. Societies; Author of Journal of Researches during H. M. S. Beagle's Voyage round the World. New York: D. Appleton Co. 1860. 12mo. pp. 432
50%
A49    Review:     [Gray, Asa]. 1860. [Review of Origin]. Darwin on the origin of species. Atlantic Monthly 6 (July-August): 109-116, 229-239.   Text   Image   PDF
[Gray, A.] 1860. [Review of] On the Origin of Species. Atlantic Monthly 6 (July-August): 109-116, 229-239. [front cover] THE ATLANTIC MONTHLY, Devoted to Literature, Art, and Politics. JULY, 1860. BOSTON: TICKNOR AND FIELDS, 135 WASHINGTON, CORNER OF SCHOOL STREET. NEW YORK: H. DEXTER AND COMPANY, AND ROSS AND TOUSEY. PHILADELPHIA: A. WINCH, and T. B. PETERSON AND BROTHER. LONDON: TR BNER AND COMPANY. [page] 10
34%
A48    Review:     [Duns, John]. 1860. [Review of] On the Origin of species. North British Review. 32 (May): 455-486.   Text   Image   PDF
[Duns, J.] 1860. [Review of] On the Origin of species. North British Review 32 (May): 455-486. [page] 455 ART. VII. On the Origin of Species by means of Natural Selection, or the Preservation of Favoured Races, in the Struggle for Life. BY CHARLES DARWIN, M.A., F.R.S., F.G.S., F.L.S., Author of Journal of Researches during H. M. S. Beagle's Voyage round the World. London: John Murray. 1860. 5th Thousand. IF notoriety be any proof of successful authorship, Mr Darwin has had his reward. Seldom
41%
A45    Review:     Agassiz, J .L. R. 1860. [Review of] On the Origin of species. American Journal of Science and Arts. (Ser. 2) 30 (July): 142-154. [Silliman's Journal]   Text   Image   PDF
Agassiz, J. L. R. 1860. [Review of] On the Origin of species. American Journal of Science and Arts (Ser. 2) 30 (July): 142-154. [page] 142 V. BOOK NOTICES. PROF. AGASSIZ ON THE ORIGIN OF SPECIES. 1. Contributions to the Natural History of the United States; by L. AGASSIZ. The third volume of this work, now in the press, will appear shortly. We copy from the advance sheets the following paragraphs relating to the origin of species, which has lately attracted much attention, in consequence of
46%
A60    Review:     Parsons, Theophilus. 1860. [Review of] On the Origin of species. American Journal of Science and Arts. (Ser. 2) 30 (July): 1-13. [Silliman's Journal]   Text   Image   PDF
Parsons, T. 1860. [Review of] On the Origin of species. American Journal of Science and Arts (Ser. 2) 30 (July): 1-13. [title] Published the first day of every second month, price $5 per year. THE AMERICAN JOURNAL OF SCIENCE AND ARTS. CONDUCTED BY PROFESSORS B. SILLIMAN, B. SILLIMAN, JR., AND JAMES D. DANA, IN CONNECTION WITH PROF. ASA GRAY, OF CAMBRIDGE, PROF. LOUIS AGASSIZ, OF CAMBRIDGE, DR. WOLCOTT GIBBS, OF NEW YORK. VOL. XXX. [WHOLE NUMBER, LXXX.] SECOND SERIES. NO. 88. JULY, 1860. WITH A
27%
A60    Review:     Parsons, Theophilus. 1860. [Review of] On the Origin of species. American Journal of Science and Arts. (Ser. 2) 30 (July): 1-13. [Silliman's Journal]   Text   Image   PDF
of the universe deep in that infinite which no plummet of human imagination ever can sound. To such a mind it will be a new proof, that from God's own nature, there came forth laws of order, in which, through which, and by which, he has ever worked, from a beginning, which when we try to think of it, recedes faster than thought can follow. Cambridge, May, 1860. The next No. of this Journal will be published on the first of Sept. CONTENTS. Page ART.I. On the Origin of Species; by prof. THEOPHILUS
27%
A213    Review:     Gray, A. 1860. [Extract from Proceedings of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences 4 (1860): 411-415] The origin of species. Athenaeum, no. 1710 (4 August.): 161. [CUL-DAR226.1.9].   Text   Image   PDF
less than the creation of existence, the origin of an individual, as well as the origin of a species or a genus, can be explained only by the direct action of an intelligent cause, and all special difficulty in harmonizing a theory of the derivation of species with the doctrine of final causes will vanish. FOREIGN CORRESPONDENCE. Naples, July, 1800. IT will come quite within the range of subjects admitted to the pages of the Athen um, to insert the following judicial decision on certain depraved
25%
A51    Review:     [Gray, Asa]. 1860. Darwin and his reviewers. Atlantic Monthly. 6 (October): 406-425.   Text   Image   PDF
. That it subserves a purpose in keeping species apart, and was so designed, we do not doubt. But the critics fail to perceive that this sterility proves nothing against the derivative origin of the actual species; for it may as well have been intended to keep separate those * Vide article by Mr. C. Wright, in the Mathematical Monthly for May last. Vide Edinburgh Review for January, 1860, article on Acclimatization, etc. * Contributions; Essay on Classification, etc., Vol. i. pp. 60-66. North Amer
25%
A51    Review:     [Gray, Asa]. 1860. Darwin and his reviewers. Atlantic Monthly. 6 (October): 406-425.   Text   Image   PDF
material existence, they can have had no material variation, and no material community of origin. Here the predication is of species in the subjective sense, while the inference is applied to them in the objective sense. Reduced to plain terms, the argument seems to be: Species are ideas; therefore the objects from which the idea is derived cannot vary or blend, cannot have had a genealogical connection. The common view of species is, that, * North American Review, l. c. p. 487, et passim
23%
A51    Review:     [Gray, Asa]. 1860. Darwin and his reviewers. Atlantic Monthly. 6 (October): 406-425.   Text   Image   PDF
first on some occasions, the third on others. Those philosophers who like and expect to settle all mooted questions will take one or the other extreme. The Examiner inclines towards, the North American reviewer fully adopts, the third view, to the logical extent of maintaining that the origin of an individual, as well as the origin of a species or a genus, can be explained only by the direct action of an intelligent creative cause. This is the line for Mr. Darwin to take; for it at once and
22%
A51    Review:     [Gray, Asa]. 1860. Darwin and his reviewers. Atlantic Monthly. 6 (October): 406-425.   Text   Image   PDF
the variations and grades which connect one of these species with another? We might extend the parallel, and get some good illustrations of natural selection from the history of architecture, the probable origin of the different styles, and their adaptation to different climates and conditions. Two qualifying considerations are noticeable. One, that houses do not propagate, so as to produce continuing lines of each sort and variety; but this is of small moment on Agassiz's view, he holding
32%
A55    Review:     [Hutton F. W.] 1860. [Review of] On the origin of species. The Geologist. 3 (December): 464-472.   Text   Image   PDF
Hutton F. W. 1860. [Review of] On the origin of species. Geologist 3 (December): 464-472. [page] 464 REVIEWS. On the Origin of species by Means of Natural Selection; or the Preservation of Favoured Species in the Struggle for Life. By CHARLES DARWIN, M.A. London: John Murray. 1860. We could scarcely let this year away without some notice of a book which at least will make 1860 remarkable in the annals of natural history science. Whatever opinion may be entertained of the speculations on the
37%
F381    Book:     Darwin, C. R. 1861. On the origin of species by means of natural selection, or the preservation of favoured races in the struggle for life. London: John Murray. 3d ed. Seventh thousand.   Text   Image   PDF
321 On the slight modifications which the latest tertiary forms have apparently undergone. 299 323 On the nature of the links between past and present species, which geology has, and has not, revealed. 303 328 On early transitional links. 304 329 Case of fossil footsteps of birds in the United States, added in second edition in place of that of the whale, which is doubtful. 319 346 On the fallacy of great size or strength saving an animal from extinction. 336 363 On the degree of development of
34%
CUL-DAR75.10    Abstract:    [1861--1882.04.00]   [reference incomplete] `Gardeners' Chronicle' 1859-1861   Text   Image
The Complete Work of Charles Darwin Online 10 (7 Gardeners Chron 1859 continued 360 on strong manner in which the Himalayan Rhododendron have adapted thermal to same conditions as England 384 various facts in grafting, 425 do in Garrya 876 on individual animals imposing likeness – poor case 1052 Hookers Review on me. [Hooker, J. D. 1859. [Review of] On the origin of species. Gardeners' Chronicle (31 December): 1052. part 1.] 1860 72. on the new galls on Oaks having checked production of acorns
32%
A567    Pamphlet:     Gray, Asa. 1861. Natural Selection not inconsistent with Natural Theology. A free examination of Darwin's treatise on the Origin of Species, and of its American reviewers. Reprinted from the Atlantic monthly for July, August, and October, 1860. London: Trübner & Co., Boston: Ticknor and Fields.   Text   Image   PDF
everything, and everything is naught. The leading objection of Mr. Agassiz is likewise of a philosophical character. It is, that species exist only as categories of thought, that, having no material existence, they can have had no material variation, and no material community of origin. Here the predication is of species in the subjective sense, the inference in the objective sense. Reduced to plain terms, the argument seems to be: Species are ideas; therefore the objects from which the idea is derived
30%
A54    Review:     Hutton F. W. 1861. Some remarks on Mr. Darwin's theory. The Geologist. 4: 132-136, 183-188.   Text   Image   PDF
of life, for instance to fly through the air; but when this had been effected, and a few species had thus acquired a great advantage over other organisms, a comparatively short time would be necessary to produce many divergent forms, which would be able to spread rapidly and widely throughout the world. It was shown long ago that different fossils came from different formations; and now, acting on this, if forms differ ever so little, or * On the Origin of Species, p. 295. Edinburgh Review
29%
A567    Pamphlet:     Gray, Asa. 1861. Natural Selection not inconsistent with Natural Theology. A free examination of Darwin's treatise on the Origin of Species, and of its American reviewers. Reprinted from the Atlantic monthly for July, August, and October, 1860. London: Trübner & Co., Boston: Ticknor and Fields.   Text   Image   PDF
history of architecture, and the origin of the different styles under different climates and conditions. Two considerations may qualify or limit the comparison. One, that houses do not propagate, so as to produce continuing lines of each sort and variety; but this is of small moment on Agassiz's view, he holding that genealogical connection is not of the essence of species at all. The other, that the formation and development of the ideas upon which human works proceed is gradual; or, as the
26%
A2667    Review:     Henslow, J. S. 1861. [Letter to the editor on his opinion of Darwin's theory]. Macmillan's Magazine, no. 16 (February): 366.   Text   PDF
The Complete Work of Charles Darwin Online [page] 366 LETTER FROM PROFESSOR HENSLOW. HITCHAM, IPSWICH, January, 1861. My dear Sir, The manner in which my name is noticed in a review of Mr. Darwin's work in your number for December, is liable to lead to a misapprehension of my view of Mr. Darwin's Theory on the Origin of Species. Though I have always expressed the greatest respect for my friend's opinions, I have told himself That I cannot assent to his speculations without seeing stronger
22%
F3408    Periodical contribution:     Darwin C, R. 1937. [Letter to Cuthbert Collingwood, 1861]. In Sarton, G. Darwin's conception of the theory of natural selection. Isis 26: 336-40.   Text   PDF
some very different view. I forget what AGASSIZ says on the subject. I quite agree with you that AGASSIZ' Review (6) is not in the least unfair. He misunderstands me a good deal. His (p. 7) categories of thought, prophetic types and his views on classification are to me merely empty sounds. To others they seem full of meaning. I received several months ago and thank you for, a very curious pamphlet on representative form (7) (or some such title) which interested me very much. With (p. 8) the
38%
A1356    Review:     Anon. 1862. [The Rev. W. N. Molesworth on the Origin of species]. The Standard (3 October): 6.   Text   PDF
The Complete Work of Charles Darwin Online [page] 6 The Rev. W. N. Molesworth, M.A., read a paper On the influence of the conditions of existence in modifying the character of species and varieties. It consisted chiefly of a review of Dr. Darwin's work on the Origin of Species, the theory contained in which, he said, was regarded by some persons in the light of a wanton Attack on hopes and feelings which every man, whatever his opinions, ought to respect; but that imputation he believed to be
33%
F800    Book:     Darwin, C. R. 1862. On the various contrivances by which British and foreign orchids are fertilised by insects, and on the good effects of intercrossing. London: John Murray. 1st ed., 1st issue.   Text   Image   PDF
. 24s. CURTIUS' (PROFESSOR) Greek Grammar. Translated from the German. Edited by DR. WM. SMITH. Post 8vo. (In the Press.) DARWIN'S (CHARLES) Journal of Researches into the Natural History and Geology of the Countries visited during a Voyage round the World. Tenth Thousand. Post 8vo. 9s. Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection; or, the Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life. Seventh Thousand. Post 8vo. 14s. Various Contrivances by which British and Foreign Orchids are
24%
A2928    Periodical contribution:     Fawcett, H. 1862. On the Method of Mr. Darwin in his Treatise on the Origin of Species. Report of the 31st meeting of British Association for the Advancement of Science (September 1861): 141-3.   Text   PDF
problem of the origin of species is concerned with an epoch of time associated with geological epochs; therefore experiment could only be made during so short a time, that nothing more could be obtained than an argument resting on a, comparatively speaking, unsatisfactory analogy. Darwin had been able to show that by a system of artificial natural selec- [page] 14
21%
A2097    Review:     Strakhov, Nikolai. 1862. [Review of Origin in Russian] Durnye priznaki [Bad Signs]. Vremia [Time], No. 11 (November): 158-172. Translated by Brendan G. Mooney.   Text   PDF
to us, one can find there the clear features of both the contemporary state of European life and the relation of the natural sciences to it. Recently a great revolution took place in the study of organisms, that is, of plants and animals. This revolution was brought about by Darwin's book On the Origin of Species, whose title, along with the titles of its translations, appears at the beginning of our article. It fundamentally changed the main, most important notions that until now had been held
38%
A282    Book:     Lyell, Charles. 1863. The geological evidences of the antiquity of man with remarks on the origin of species by variation. 3d ed., revised. London: John Murray.   Text   Image
difficulty of the ordinary observer would be to find points of comparison, whereas, with the naturalist, it is all the other way. All the broad differences vanish one by one as we approach the lower confines of the animal and vegetable kingdoms, and no absolute distinction whatever is now known between them.'* The author of an elaborate review of Darwin's 'Origin of Species,' himself an accomplished geologist, declares that if we embrace the doctrine of the 'continuous variation of all organic
34%
A2455    Review:     [Hardwicke, R]. 1863. [Review of Origin and T. H. Huxley's lecture 'On our Knowledge of the Causes of the Phenomena of Organic Nature']. The origin of species. (Mr. Darwin and his commentators.) Popular Science Review, 2: 385-404.   Text   PDF
Review. ) On the Fertilisation of Orchids. By Charles Darwin, author of the Origin of Species. Murray. (No. 5, Popular Science Review. ) [page] 38
33%
A282    Book:     Lyell, Charles. 1863. The geological evidences of the antiquity of man with remarks on the origin of species by variation. 3d ed., revised. London: John Murray.   Text   Image
finitely from the original Type,' did not appear till 1858, a year after Professor Owen's classification of the mammalia, and as Darwin's 'Origin of Species' was not published till another year had elapsed, we cannot accept the explanation above offered to us of the causes which led the founder of the sub-class Archencephala to seek for new points of distinction between the human and simian brains; but the Dutch anatomists may have fallen into this anachronism by having just read, in the paper
25%
A249    Periodical contribution:     Carpenter, William Benjamin. 1863. Dr. Carpenter and his reviewer. Athenæum (4 April): 461.   Text
the fact, that these conclusions had been arrived at by my coadjutors and myself before the publication of Mr. Darwin's 'Origin of Species,' and in utter ignorance of his views; and any one who may take trouble to refer to my Address as President of the Microscopical Society in 1855, and to the first of my memoirs on this group in the Philosophical Transactions for 1856, will see that even at that period I was far on the road to them. The question of the variability of species is one to which
33%
F1729    Periodical contribution:     Darwin, C. R. 1863. The doctrine of heterogeny and modification of species. Athenæum no. 1852 (25 April): 554-555.   Text   Image   PDF
reproduction; in no way different, as Dr. Carpenter remarks, except in the line of descent being longer, from that of the many shells common to the middle Tertiary and existing periods. The view given by me on the origin or derivation of species, whatever its weaknesses may be, connects (as has been candidly admitted by some of its opponents, such as Pictet, Bronn, c.)4 by an intelligible thread of reasoning a multitude of facts: such as the formation of domestic races by man's selection,—the
41%
A63    Review:     [Huxley, T. H.] 1864. Criticisms on "The origin of species." Natural History Review. n.s. 4: 566-580.   Text   Image   PDF
Huxley, T. H. 1864. Criticisms on The origin of species. Natural History Review. n.s. 4: 566-80. [page] 566 LXXI. CRITICISMS ON THE ORIGIN OF SPECIES. 1. UEBER DIE DARWIN'SCHE SCH PFUNGSTHEORIE EIN VORTRAG, von A. K lliker. Leipzig, 1864. 2. EXAMINATION DU LIVRE DE M. DARWIN SUR L'ORIGINE DES ESP ORS. Par P. Flourens. Paris, 1864. IN the course of the present year several foreign commentaries upon Mr. Darwin's great work have made their appearance. Those who have perused that remarkable
24%
F3416    Periodical contribution:     Darwin, C. R. 1974. [Letters to Benjamin D. Walsh, 1864-66]. In Walsten, David M., Darwin's backwoods correspondent: letters between Charles Darwin and Illinois naturalist Benjamin D. Walsh. Field Museum of Natural History Bulletin, 45: 8-9, 12-15.   Text
The Complete Work of Charles Darwin Online [page] 9 Darwin to Walsh: Down Bromley Kent, S.E. October 21 1864 My dear Sir Ill health has prevented me from sooner thanking you for your very kind letter, and several Memoirs. I have been very much pleased to see how boldly and clearly you speak out on the modification of species. I thank you for giving me the pages of reference; but they were superfluous, for I found so many original and profound remarks, that I have carefully looked through all
27%
F1578    Periodical contribution:     Olby, R. C. ed. 1963. Charles Darwin's manuscript of pangenesis. British Journal of the History of Science 1: 251-263.   Text   Image
. 'Darwin and the Origin of Species.' North British Review, 1867, xlvi, 149-171. 3 L. Huxley. Life and Letters of Thomas Henry Huxley, London, 1903, vol. i, p. 387. (This will be referred to as Life of Huxley.) 4 The Life and Letters of Charles Darwin, ed. by Francis Darwin. London, 1887, vol. iii, p. 27. (This will be referred to as Life and Letters.) Sir Gavin de Beer. 'Darwin's Journal.' Bull. B.M. (Nat. Hist.) Historical Series, Lond., 1960, iii, No. 1, p. 16. THE BRITISH JOURNAL FOR THE HISTORY
41%
A564.1    Review:     [DuBois Henry A.] 1865. The origin and antiquity of man: Darwin, Huxley and Lyell [part I]. American Quarterly Church Review, and Ecclesiastical Register 17 (2) (July): 169-197.   Text   Image   PDF
THE AMERICAN QUARTERLY CHURCH REVIEW, AND ECCLESIASTICAL REGISTER. VOL. XVII. JULY, 1865. No. 2. THE ORIGIN AND ANTIQUITY OF MAN: DARWIN, HUXLEY AND LYELL. (1) The Origin of Species by means of Natural Selection, by CHARLES DARWIN, M. A. New York: D. Appleton Co. 1860. (2) Evidence as to Man's Place in Nature, by THOMAS H. HUXLEY. New York: D. Appleton Co. 1863. (3) The Geological Evidence of the Antiquity of Man, with remarks on Origin of Species by Variation, by SIR CHARLES LYELL, F. R. S
38%
A564.1    Review:     [DuBois Henry A.] 1865. The origin and antiquity of man: Darwin, Huxley and Lyell [part I]. American Quarterly Church Review, and Ecclesiastical Register 17 (2) (July): 169-197.   Text   Image   PDF
claim. Preparatory to this task, we desire to give expression to some thoughts in regard to the nature and distinction of Species, as this is the main subject of the first two works we intend to review. The question of Species its origin, nature, and limits, has always been a most vexed subject of dispute, upon which naturalists are now divided, and will probably always differ in their views. We may observe the facts connected with its phenomena, note its distinctions, and speculate on its nature
38%
A564.2    Review:     [DuBois Henry A.] 1865. The origin and antiquity of man: Darwin, Huxley and Lyell, part II. American Quarterly Church Review, and Ecclesiastical Register 17 (3) (October): 337-366.   Text   Image
acquaintance with anatomical science. Throughout his work, he carefully endeavors to bring his subject within the scope of the unlearned, though, at the same time, he affects to discuss it scientifically. He had previously made an effort to influence the minds of the working classes of England, by oral and published Lectures on the Origin of Species, in which he studiously seeks to disseminate the atheistical views embraced in Darwin's hypothesis, which we have already reviewed, in Part I. of this
27%
F385    Book:     Darwin, C. R. 1866. On the origin of species by means of natural selection, or the preservation of favoured races in the struggle for life. London: John Murray. 4th ed. 8th thousand.   Text   Image   PDF
promulgated the theory of natural selection in a passage read before the Zoological Society in February, 1850 ('Transact.' vol. iv. p. 15); for in a letter to the 'London Review' (May 5, 1866, p. 516), commenting on some of the reviewer's criticisms, he says, No naturalist can dissent from the truth of your perception of the essential identity of the passage cited with the basis of that [the so-called Darwinian] theory, the power, viz., of species to accommodate themselves, or bow to the
39%
A564.3    Review:     [DuBois Henry A.] 1866. The origin and antiquity of man: Darwin, Huxley and Lyell, part III. American Quarterly Church Review, and Ecclesiastical Register 17 (4) (January): 505-534.   Text   Image
THE AMERICAN QUARTERLY CHURCH REVIEW, AND ECCLESIASTICAL REGISTER. VOL. XVII. JANUARY, 1866. No. 4. ART. I. THE ORIGIN AND ANTIQUITY OF MAN: DAR- WIN, HUXLEY AND LYELL. PART III. The Geological Evidences of the Antiquity of Man, with Remarks on Theories of the Origin of Species by Variation; by SIR CHARLES LYELL, F. R. S. Philadelphia: 1863. HAVING exposed the fanciful scheme of Mr. Darwin, and the illogical argument of Mr. Huxley, in the two preceding Parts of this Essay, we now come to the
32%
F3600    Book contribution:     Darwin, C. R. 1968. [Letter to Charles Kingsley, 10 June 1867]. Charles Hamilton Autographs, Inc. Sale no. 24. New York. F3599   Text
The Complete Work of Charles Darwin Online [page] 100 DARWIN, CHARLES English naturalist. [To Charles Kingsley 10 June [1867]] L.S. (incomplete), 9 full pages, 8vo. Down, Bromley, To Charles Kingsley, Long, extremely important scientific letter, penned to Kingsley, the English clergyman and novelist. ... I have looked through my whole large collection of pamphlets on the Origin [of Species] the only thing which I can find at all answering to yr description is that which I send by this post
32%
F3598    Book contribution:     Darwin, C. R. 1968. [Letter to Charles Kingsley, 10 June 1867]. Charles Hamilton Autographs, Inc. Sale no. 24. New York.   Text
The Complete Work of Charles Darwin Online [page] 100 DARWIN, CHARLES English naturalist. [To Charles Kingsley 10 June [1867]] L.S. (incomplete), 9 full pages, 8vo. Down, Bromley, To Charles Kingsley, Long, extremely important scientific letter, penned to Kingsley, the English clergyman and novelist. ... I have looked through my whole large collection of pamphlets on the Origin [of Species] the only thing which I can find at all answering to yr description is that which I send by this post
44%
A272    Review:     [Wallace, Alfred Russel]. 1867. [Review of Origin 4th edn] Mimicry, and other protective resemblances among animals. Westminster and foreign quarterly review 88, no. 173, n.s. 32 No.1 (1 July): 1-43.   Text
Distribution, as illustrated by the Papilionid of the Malayan Region. By ALFRED R. WALLACE. (Transactions of the Linnean Society. Vol. XXV.) 3. On the Disguises of Nature; being an Inquiry into the laws which regulate external form and colour in Plants and Animals. By ANDREW MURRAY, F.R.S.E. (Edinburgh New Philosophical Journal. 1860.) 4. On the Origin of Species by means of Natural Selection, or the Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life. By CHARLES DARWIN, M.A., F.R.S., c. 4th edition
33%
F879.1    Book:     Darwin, C. R. [1868]. The variation of animals and plants under domestication. With a preface by Asa Gray. New York: Orange Judd and Co. vol. 1.   Text   Image   PDF
facts will hereafter be incidentally given. One chief object in the two following chapters is to show how generally almost every character in our cultivated plants has become variable. Before entering on details a few general remarks on the origin of cultivated plants may be introduced. M. Alph. de Candolle1 in an admirable discussion on this subject, in which he displays a wonderful amount of knowledge, gives a list of 157 of the most useful cultivated plants. Of these he believes that 85 are
30%
A604    Review:     Lewes, George Henry. 1868. Mr. Darwin's hypotheses. Fortnightly Review n.s. 3 (April, June); 353-73, 611-28, 4 (July), (November): 61-80, 492-509.   Text   Image
significance is unascertained; to disregard them would be perilous, yet to give them their due place seems hopeless. Do we not observe in the majority of writers on the Origin of Species a tendency to bring forward the resemblances, undervaluing the differences, or else to bring forward the differences, as if these alone were significant? The immense services which the pursuit of resemblances has in the hands of the transcendental anatomists rendered to Biology, by the disclosure of relationships
    Page 2 of 10. Go to page:     NEXT