Abstract
THERE is growing up a generation of biological students that does not read its Darwin, its Weismann, or Gallon; instead, it cons manuals and text-books on the works of these masters. It is so very much less trouble, if the student's object is to. satisfy an examiner, to “get up” a text-book on evolutionary problems than to extract from original sources a clear conception of the authors' theories; and yet what a world of difference is there between the ipsissima verba of a master and the cut-and-dried phrases of the manual-maker! The one is the advocate pleading his cause with all the eloquence in his. power, the other the reporter compressing the living words and phrases into the limits of a polumn. The one is inspiring, stimulating, the other can scarcely avoid exceeding dulness, and certainly no,one ever yet, was roused to enthusiasm by a text-book.
Evolution and Animal Life. An Elementary Discussion of Facts, Processes, Laws and Theories relating to the Life and Evolution of Animals.
By David Starr Jordan Vernon Lyman Kellogg. Pp. xi + 489; illustrated. (New York: D. Appleton and Company, 1907.) Price 2.50 dollars net.
Enjoying our latest content?
Log in or create an account to continue
- Access the most recent journalism from Nature's award-winning team
- Explore the latest features & opinion covering groundbreaking research
or
Rights and permissions
About this article
Cite this article
S., R. Evolution and Animal Life An Elementary Discussion of Facts, Processes, Laws and Theories relating to the Life and Evolution of Animals . Nature 77, 242–243 (1908). https://doi.org/10.1038/077242a0
Issue date:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/077242a0