The successive instalments which compose this volume, were issued to the subscribers at the following dates:—No. 7 (pp. 1-80) in January, 1863; No. 8 (pp. 81-160) in April, 1863; No. 9 (pp. 161-240) in July, 1863; No. 10 (pp. 241-320) in January, 1864; No. 11 (pp. 321-400) in May, 1864; and No. 12 (pp. 401-476) in October, 1864.

London, September 29th, 1864.

CONTENTS OF VOL. I.


PART I.—THE DATA OF BIOLOGY.
CHAPTERPAGE
I.[Organic matter][3]
II.[The actions of forces on organic matter][27]
III.[The re-actions of organic matter on forces][45]
IIIA.[Metabolism][62]
IV.[Proximate conception of life][78]
V.[The correspondence between life and its circumstances][91]
VI.[The degree of life varies as the degree of correspondence][101]
VIA.[The dynamic element in life][111]
VII.[The scope of biology][124]
PART II.—THE INDUCTIONS OF BIOLOGY.
I.[Growth][135]
II.[Development][162]
IIA.[Structure][181]
III.[Function][197]
IV.[Waste and repair][213]
V.[Adaptation][227]
VI.[Individuality][244]
VIA.[Cell-life and cell-multiplication][252]
VII.[Genesis][269]
VIII.[Heredity][301]
IX.[Variation][320]
X.[Genesis, heredity, and variation][336]

XA.

[Genesis, heredity, and variation—Concluded][356]
XI.[Classification][374]
XII.[Distribution][395]
PART III.—THE EVOLUTION OF LIFE.
I.[Preliminary][415]
II.[General aspects of the special-creation-hypothesis][417]
III.[General aspects of the evolution-hypothesis][431]
IV.[The arguments from classification][441]
V.[The arguments from embryology][450]
VI.[The arguments from morphology][468]
VII.[The arguments from distribution][476]
VIII.[How is organic evolution caused?][490]
IX.[External factors][499]
X.[Internal factors][508]
XI.[Direct equilibration][519]
XII.[Indirect equilibration][529]
XIII.[The co-operation of the factors][549]
XIV.[The convergence of the evidences][554]
XIVA.[Recent criticisms and hypotheses][559]
APPENDICES.
A.[The general law of animal fertility][577]
B.[The inadequacy of natural selection, etc.][602]
C.[The inheritance of functionally-wrought modifications:
a summary]
[692]
D.[On alleged "spontaneous generation" and on the hypothesis
of physiological units]
[696]

PART I.

THE DATA OF BIOLOGY.

CHAPTER I.

ORGANIC MATTER.

§ 1. Of the four chief elements which, in various combinations, make up living bodies, three are gaseous under all ordinary conditions and the fourth is a solid. Oxygen, hydrogen, and nitrogen are gases which for many years defied all attempts to liquefy them, and carbon is a solid except perhaps at the extremely high temperature of the electric arc. Only by intense pressures joined with extreme refrigerations have the three gases been reduced to the liquid form.[[2]] There is much significance in this. When we remember how those redistributions of Matter and Motion which constitute Evolution, structural and functional, imply motions in the units that are redistributed; we shall see a probable meaning in the fact that organic bodies, which exhibit the phenomena of Evolution in so high a degree, are mainly composed of ultimate units having extreme mobility. The properties of substances, though destroyed to sense by combination, are not destroyed in reality. It follows from the persistence of force, that the properties of a compound are resultants of the properties of its components—resultants in which the properties of the components are severally in full action, though mutually obscured. One of the leading properties of each substance is its degree of molecular mobility; and its degree of molecular mobility more or less sensibly affects the molecular mobilities of the various compounds into which it enters. Hence we may infer some relation between the gaseous form of three out of the four chief organic elements, and that comparative readiness displayed by organic matters to undergo those changes in the arrangement of parts which we call development, and those transformations of motion which we call function.