[13] Intracellulare Pangenesis, s. 55.

[14] I employ the term “particles,” instead of “molecules,” because although Weismann and his followers seem to prefer the latter term, I can scarcely imagine that they intend to use it in its original, or chemical, sense.

[15] This principle will be considered at some length in my next volume.

[16] Galton first published his theory in 1872 (Proc. R. S., No. 136), but presented it in a more complete form three years later (Contemporary Review, Dec. 1875, and Journl. Anthropol. Inst., 1875).

[17] Journ. Anthropol. Inst. 1875, p. 346.

[18] Essays, &c., 2nd ed., p. 105.

[19] Essays, &c., 2nd ed., p. 100.

[20] See for example, Essays, p. 229.

[21] On previous occasions, when inconsistencies have been brought to the notice of Professor Weismann by his critics, he has complained that sufficient allowance was not made for the fact of his having published his sundry essays at different times. This, of course, is a satisfactory answer in cases where criticism refers to a growing theory, the later additions to which supersede certain parts of the earlier construction. But clearly the answer is not available in cases where one set of statements, touching fundamental principles of the theory, are directly opposed to others. A logical contradiction is not affected by dates of publication, and where the contradictory statements have reference to the vital essence of a theory, it is equally impossible for the theory to comprise them whether they be presented simultaneously or successively.

[22] The possibility of any spermatozoa of the first impregnation surviving to take part in the second is excluded by the fact that the phenomenon occurs in mammals, and, apparently, may extend over two or three litters.