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Sir C. Lyell on

bore brunt of laughing

Philosophie Zoologique, a better work than the Origin of

Species

made Vestiges possible

opposed by Huxley, etc.

direct transforming agents

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C. Martins, and I. Geoffroy on

Lazarus of biology

LANKESTER, E. Ray, and Professor Hering's lecture

his attack in the Athenaeum on myself

greatest of living men

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on Professor Semper's book

his note in Nature

on inherited mutilation

on traitors and impostors

LAWYER, “like trying to act on the advice of a," etc.

LIBERAL, precipitate and inaccurate

LIFE, and growth, an attuning

ranges through every degree of complexity

no greater mystery than death

swallowed up in death

short and business long

of clothes in wear

they were cornering it

LIFE and death, not absolutely antagonistic

a mode of change

we can distinguish easily enough

extreme developments supplementary to one another

not fundamentally opposed to one another

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LIFE and death, as reflections in two mirrors

Life and Habit, sketch of

note written in, by an American

and the Principles of Psychology, their differentiating
feature

considered too startling a paradox to be taken seriously

LINES, hard and fast, we want

LITERARY culture, I wish my opponents had more
LIVING, all is, that is in connection with mind

which parts are most

if the body is not, what can be called living?

LIVINGNESS, on degrees of

and versatility

LOGIC, true tower of Babel
and the amoeba

the slaves of, etc.

fobbed by the rusty curb of

LORD, a being ever with the

we do it to the

LOVE, and eating

LUCK, goes without saying

C. Darwin the apostle of

enough obvious, etc.

will not hoard

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127, 132

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II

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ΙΟΙ

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229, 230

230

68-70

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60

unconditioned, uncognizable, etc.

MATTHEW, P., on natural selection

MEANNESS, I know not whether most to wonder at C. Darwin's,

or the greatness of his services

MECHANISM, the more they reduced the body to

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MIND, the more a thing knows its own, etc.

manifested through form

elementary in stone

feeling no part of

Minimis, de, etc.

MIRACLE, none can say exactly where it must cease

a, in respect of only two or three per cent.
death as great a, as life

MIRACULOUS, change, essentially

the lawful home of the

the, writ large, etc., kills
all fusion and diffusion

all change is

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224

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24

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57

MIRRORS, life and death as reflections in two

127, 132

MISTLETOE, C. Darwin's figure of straw re the

147, 148

MISUNDERSTANDING, people can remove if they choose

207, 208

MIVART, Professor St. G., his Genesis of Species

3, 6, 7

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and C. Darwin

MODIFICATION begins at home

Modus vivendi, all living forms established a, etc.

gives new lease of life

sensible people alone hold

MONISTIC Conception of the universe, we all desire

MOTION, most essential characteristic of a stone

101, 129

218

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97

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129

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178

99, 128

Patrick Matthew on

NAÏVE, this is very

NATURAL selection, the early evolutionists taught this

a misleading expression
two theories of

149

68-70

68-70

69

49, 50, 70, 135, 136, 160,

161, 170, 179, 180, 183, 189, 190

NATURAL selection, the preservation of lucky races
the original title of the Origin of Species

the biggest biological boom

as applied to machines

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75

Duke of Argyll on

C. Darwin's, explained by his attitude towards descent

123, 124
143

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not figurative

ORGANIC and inorganic, une ligne de démarcation nette, etc.

ORGANISM, and surroundings run into one another

in account with universe

more important than environment

a foolish, and its fortuitous variation

and property

ORGANS and tools

Origin of Species, its title misleading

originally called Natural Selection

should be referred to as Origin of Species, etc.
almost any view can be defended from the
concluding paragraph

first edition consisted of 4000 copies

first two editions 6000 copies

224, 225

215

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97

128

79, 80

92, 93

94

95

96, etc.

108, etc.

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153

178, 179, 185, 188

we knew there was something uncanny about it

ORIGINAL thought more common than is supposed
ORIGINAL, a trifle too

208, 209

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215

ORPHEUS-LIKE, to charm, etc.

OSTENTATIOUS unostentatiousness

PALEY, F. A., on C. Darwin's book on worms

PALEY, W., denied descent

Palmam qui meruit ferat

PARADOX, the non-livingness of the living, and the livingness

of the non-living

should be put so as to startle

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PAUL, ST., "I die daily

doubtful disputations

PAWS, our boots, spare

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PENSIONS, we have given

out of the public

PERSONALITY, the common view commonly most convenient

no more lost in generations than in seconds

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