CONTENTS.
- PART
I.—THE UNKNOWABLE.
- 1. Religion and Science.
- 2. Ultimate Religious Ideas.
- 3. Ultimate Scientific Ideas.
- 4. The Relativity of All Knowledge.
- 5. The Reconciliation.
- PART
II.—THE KNOWABLE.
- 1. Philosophy Defined
- 2. The Data of Philosophy.
- 3. Space, Time, Matter, Motion, and Force.
- 4. The Indestructibility of Matter.
- 5. The Continuity of Motion.
- 6. The Persistence of Force.
- 7. The Persistence of Relations among Forces.
- 8. The Transformation and Equivalence of Forces.
- 9. The Direction of Motion.
- 10. The Rhythm of Motion.
- 11. Recapitulation, Criticism, and Recommencement.
- 12. Evolution and Dissolution.
- 13. Simple and Compound Evolution.
- 14. The Law of Evolution.
- 15. The Law of Evolution, continued.
- 16. The Law of Evolution, continued.
- 17. The Law of Evolution, concluded.
- 18. The Interpretation of Evolution.
- 19. The Instability of the Homogeneous.
- 20. The Multiplication of Effects.
- 21. Segregation.
- 22. Equilibration.
- 23. Dissolution.
- 24. Summary and Conclusion.
4th Thousand.
In two vols. 8vo, cloth, price 34s.
THE PRINCIPLES OF BIOLOGY.
CONTENTS OF VOL. I.
- PART
I.—THE
DATA
OF
BIOLOGY.
- 1. Organic Matter.
- 2. The Actions of Forces on Organic Matter.
- 3. The Re-actions of Organic Matter on Forces.
- 4. Proximate Definition of Life.
- 5. The Correspondence between Life and its Circumstances.
- 6. The Degree of Life varies as the Degree of Correspondence.
- 7. The Scope of Biology.
- PART
II.—THE INDUCTIONS OF
BIOLOGY.
- 1. Growth.
- 2. Development.
- 3. Function.
- 4. Waste and Repair.
- 5. Adaptation.
- 6. Individuality.
- 7. Genesis.
- 8. Heredity.
- 9. Variation.
- 10. Genesis, Heredity, and Variation.
- 11. Classification.
- 12. Distribution.
- PART
III.—THE EVOLUTION OF
LIFE.
- 1. Preliminary.
- 2. General Aspects of the Special-Creation-Hypothesis.
- 3. General Aspects of the Evolution-Hypothesis.
- 4. The Arguments from Classification.
- 5. The Arguments from Embryology.
- 6. The Arguments from Morphology.
- 7. The Arguments from Distribution.
- 8. How is Organic Evolution caused?
- 9. External Factors.
- 10. Internal Factors.
- 11. Direct Equilibration.
- 12. Indirect Equilibration.
- 13. The Co-operation of the Factors.
- 14. The Convergence of the Evidences.
- APPENDIX.
- The Spontaneous-Generation Question.
CONTENTS OF VOL. II.
- PART IV.—MORPHOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENT.
- 1. The Problems of Morphology.
- 2. The Morphological Composition of Plants.
- 3. The Morphological Composition of Plants, continued.
- 4. The Morphological Composition of Animals.
- 5. The Morphological Composition of Animals, continued.
- 6. Morphological Differentiation in Plants.
- 7. The General Shapes of Plants.
- 8. The Shapes of Branches.
- 9. The Shapes of Leaves.
- 10. The Shapes of Flowers.
- 11. The Shapes of Vegetal Cells.
- 12. Changes of Shape otherwise caused.
- 13. Morphological Differentiation in Animals.
- 14. The General Shapes of Animals.
- 15. The Shapes of Vertebrate Skeletons.
- 16. The Shapes of Animal Cells.
- 17. Summary of Morphological Development.
- PART V.—PHYSIOLOGICAL
DEVELOPMENT.
- 1. The Problems of Physiology.
- 2. Differentiations between the Outer and Inner Tissues of Plants.
- 3. Differentiations among the Outer Tissues of Plants.
- 4. Differentiations among the Inner Tissues of Plants.
- 5. Physiological Integration in Plants.
- 6. Differentiations between the Outer and Inner Tissues of Animals.
- 7. Differentiations among the Outer Tissues of Animals.
- 8. Differentiations among the Inner Tissues of Animals.
- 9. Physiological Integration in Animals.
- 10. Summary of Physiological Development.
- PART VI.—LAWS OF MULTIPLICATION.
- 1. The Factors.
- 2. À Priori Principle.
- 3. Obverse à priori Principle.
- 4. Difficulties of Inductive Verification.
- 5. Antagonism between Growth and Asexual Genesis.
- 6. Antagonism between Growth and Sexual Genesis.
- 7. Antagonism between Development and Genesis, Asexual and Sexual.
- 8. Antagonism between Expenditure and Genesis.
- 9. Coincidence between high Nutrition and Genesis.
- 10. Specialities of these Relations.
- 11. Interpretation and Qualification.
- 12. Multiplication of the Human Race.
- 13. Human Evolution in the Future.
- APPENDIX.
- A Criticism on Professor Owen’s Theory of the Vertebrate Skeleton.
- On Circulation and the Formation of Wood in Plants.
5th Thousand.