Thomas Henry Huxley; A Sketch Of His Life And Work
THOMAS HENRY HUXLEY
Copyright 1900 BY G.P. PUTNAM'S SONS The Knickerbocker Press, New York
This volume is in no sense an intimate or authorised biography of Huxley. It is simply an outline of the external features of his life and an account of his contributions to biology, to educational and social problems, and to philosophy and metaphysics. In preparing it, I have been indebted to his own Autobiography, to the obituary notice written by Sir Michael Foster for the Royal Society of London, to a sketch of him by Professor Howes, his successor at the Royal College of Science, and to his published works. The latter consist of many well-known separate volumes which are familiar to all zoölogists, and of a vast number of memoirs and essays scattered in various scientific and general publications. The general Essays were collected into nine volumes, revised by himself in the later years of his life, and published by Messrs. Macmillan. The Scientific Memoirs, thanks to the generous enterprise of the same publishing firm, with which he was so long associated, and to the pious labours of Sir Michael Foster and Professor Ray Lankester, are in process of reissue in the form of four volumes, two of which have now appeared. These will contain all his important contributions to science, with the exception of a large separate treatise on the Oceanic Hydrozoa published by the Ray Society in 1859. There is also announced a formal Biography, prepared by his son, so that future admirers or students of Huxley's work will be in an exceptionally favourable position.
London, 1900. P. CHALMERS MITCHELL.
PAGE
Birth—Parentage—School-days—Choice of Medical Profession—Charing Cross Hospital—End of Medical Studies—Admission to Naval Medical Service.
The Objects of the Voyage—The Route—The Naturalist and the Surgeon—Collecting and Dredging—Stay in Sydney—Adventures with the Natives—Comparison with Darwin's Voyage on the Beagle .
The Nature of Floating Life—Memoir on Medusæ Accepted by the Royal Society—Old and New Ideas of the Animal Kingdom—What Huxley Discovered in Medusæ—His Comparison of them with Vertebrate Embryos
Sir P. Chalmers Mitchell
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Leaders in Science
THOMAS HENRY HUXLEY
A SKETCH OF HIS LIFE AND WORK
G.P. PUTNAM'S SONS
Leaders in Science
ILLUSTRATIONS
LIST OF HUXLEY'S WRITINGS
THOMAS HENRY HUXLEY
FROM SCHOOL TO LIFE-WORK
FOOTNOTES:
THE VOYAGE OF THE "RATTLESNAKE"
FOOTNOTES:
FLOATING CREATURES OF THE SEA
EARLY DAYS IN LONDON
CREATURES OF THE PAST
HUXLEY AND DARWIN
FOOTNOTES:
THE BATTLE FOR EVOLUTION
FOOTNOTES:
VERTEBRATE ANATOMY
MAN AND THE APES
SCIENCE AS A BRANCH OF EDUCATION
GENERAL PROBLEMS OF EDUCATION
CITIZEN, ORATOR, AND ESSAYIST
THE OPPONENT OF MATERIALISM
FREEDOM OF THOUGHT
THE BIBLE AND MIRACLES
ETHICS OF THE COSMOS
CLOSING DAYS AND SUMMARY
The Story of the Nations.
THE STORY OF THE NATIONS.
Heroes of the Nations.
EVELYN ABBOTT, M.A.,
HEROES OF THE NATIONS.