PAGE
| [Karl Ernst von Baer] | Frontispiece |
| Figure [From Fuchs' "Historia Stirpium"] | 8 |
| [Leonhard Fuchs] | 10 |
| Comparative Figures of Skeletons of [Man] and [Bird], from Belon's Book of Birds | 14, 15 |
| [Marcello Malpighi] | 31 |
| [Antony van Leeuwenhoek] | 33 |
| [John Ray] | 42 |
| [Carolus Linnæus] | 53 |
| [Georges Louis Leclerc, Comte de Buffon] | 65 |
| [Georges Cuvier] | 99 |
INTRODUCTION
Four hundred years ago, say in the year 1500, Biology, the science of life, was represented chiefly by a slight and inaccurate natural history of plants and animals. Botany attracted more students than any other branch, because it was recognised as a necessary aid to medical practice. The zoology of the time, extracted from ancient books, was most valued as a source from which preachers and moralists might draw impressive emblems. Anatomy and physiology were taught out of Galen to the more learned of physicians and surgeons. Some meagre notices of the plants and animals of foreign countries, mingled with many childish fables, eked out the scanty treatises of European natural history. It was not yet generally admitted that fossil bones, teeth, and shells were the remains of extinct animals.
It is the purpose of the following chapters to show how this insignificant body of information expanded into the biology of the twentieth century; how it became enriched by a multitude of new facts, strengthened by new methods and animated by new ideas.
The Biology of the Ancients.
Long before the year 1500 there had been a short-lived science of biology, and it is necessary to explain how it arose and how it became quenched. Ancient books and the languages in which they are written teach us that in very remote times men attended to the uses of plants and the habits of animals, gave names to familiar species, and recognised that while human life has much in common with the life of animals, it has something in common with the life of plants. Abundant traces of an interest in living things are to be found in the oldest records of India, Palestine, and Egypt. Still more interesting, at least to the inhabitants of Western Europe, is the biology of the ancient Greeks. The Greeks were an open-air people, dwelling in a singularly varied country nowhere far removed from the mountains or the sea. Intellectually they were distinguished by curiosity, imagination, and a strong taste for reasoning. Hence it is not to be wondered at that natural knowledge should have been widely diffused among them, nor that some of them should have excelled in science. Besides all the rest, the Greeks were a literary people, who have left behind them a copious record of their thoughts and experience. Greek science, and Greek biology in particular, are therefore of peculiar interest and value.