Unconscious Memory - Part 15
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Part 15

{140} Page 100 of this vol.

{141} Page 99 of this vol.

{144a} See page 115 of this volume.

{144b} Page 104 of this vol.

{146} The Spirit of Nature. J. A. Churchill & Co., 1880, p. 39.

{149} I have put these words into the mouth of my supposed objector, and shall put others like them, because they are characteristic; but nothing can become so well known as to escape being an inference.

{153} Erewhon, chap. xxiii.

{160} It must be remembered that this pa.s.sage is put as if in the mouth of an objector.

{177a} "The Unity of the Organic Individual," by Edward Montgomery. Mind, October 1880, p. 477.

{177b} Ibid., p. 483.

{179a} Professor Huxley, Encycl. Brit., 9th ed., art. Evolution, p. 750.

{179b} "Hume," by Professor Huxley, p. 45.

{180} "The Philosophy of Crayfishes," by the Right Rev. the Lord Bishop of Carlisle. Nineteenth Century for October 1880, p. 636.

{181a} Les Amours des Plantes, p. 360. Paris, 1800.

{181b} Philosophie Zoologique, tom. i. p. 231. Ed. M. Martin. Paris, 1873.

{182a} Journal of the Proceedings of the Linnean Society. Williams & Norgate, 1858, p. 61.

{182b} Contributions to the Theory of Natural Selection, 2d ed., 1871, p. 41.

{182c} Origin of Species, p. 1, ed. 1872.

{183a} Origin of Species, 6th ed., p. 206. I ought in fairness to Mr. Darwin to say that he does not hold the error to be quite as serious as he once did. It is now "a serious error" only; in 1859 it was "the most serious error." - Origin of Species, 1st ed., p. 209.

{183b} Origin of Species, 1st ed., p. 242; 6th ed., p. 233.

{184a} I never could find what these particular points were.

{184b} Isidore Geoffroy, Hist. Nat. Gen., tom. ii. p. 407, 1859.

{184c} M. Martin's edition of the "Philosophie Zoologique" (Paris, 1873), Introduction, p. vi.

{184d} Encyclopaedia Britannica, 9th ed., p. 750.