The Theory of Evolution (an Inquiry): Part I. As Applied to Man, Part II. As Applied to Nature; from a Lawyer's Point of View |
Contents
ANALYSIS OF THE ISSUES AND STEPS | 10 |
TWO PHASES OF THE EVOLUTION THEORY | 37 |
THE TRUE ISSUE | 73 |
Copyright | |
18 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
admitted advance animals anthropoids apes appearance argument Arthur Smith Woodward asserted beginning bird bones chapter character common ancestor comparison course of descent Creation by Evolution Cro-Magnon definite departure elephant Elliott Smith elsewhere embryo Eocene evidence evolution theory existence explain facts flints Herbert Spencer Jennings heredity horse Huxley hypothesis individual inference inquiry instance invertebrate Kellogg known law of heredity line of descent living things Lull lution MacCurdy man's ment million Neanderthal Newman Old Stone Age Osborn paleontology phase Piltdown plants present Prof progeny progress proof proponents protoplasm protozoa prove question quoted race reason recognizable reptiles resemblance result says scientists shrew skeletons skull special creation species stage suggest supposed tenable theory of development theory of evolution thousand tion trace tree tribal ancestor unit of origin unit origin variation Vernon Kellogg William King Gregory writer