[14] Essai Politique sur la Nouvelle Espagne, vol. ii, p. 79.

[15] Essai sur les Mœurs: Introd., § 2.

[16] There is an idea of adding to the Linnean Society a new section of Anthropology.—See “Letter from E. W. Brayley,” Medical Times and Gazette, p. 491, May 10, 1862.

[17] Alphonse Karr was the first who proposed to substitute the name of “searcher” (chercheur) for that of “learned man” (savant).—Nouvelles Guêpes, February 1859.

[18] See, for example, Pucheran, Considérations Anatomiques sur les Formes de la tête osseuse.—Paris, 1841 (Thesis).

[19] M. de Serres, in his Lectures on Anthropology, at the Jardin des Plantes.

[20] P. J. Proudhon has said, in another arrangement of facts depending on social science, “Revolution is not atheistical; it does not deny the absolute, it removes it altogether” (De la Justice, vol. ii, p. 301). See, for fuller development of our ideas on this subject, the Progrès of the 20th of May, 1859, article on Science et Religion.

[21] Discours sur le Méthode.

[22] Lettres à M. Villemain sur la Méthode, Paris, 1856, p. 3.

[23] See these ideas categorically explained, vol. ii, p. 281.