Audiobook: Evolutionist at Large
- Download Poem and Preface audio
- Download A Ballade of Evolution audio
- Download Microscopic Brains audio
- Download A Wayside Berry audio
- Download In Summer Fields audio
- Download A Sprig of Water Crowfoot audio
- Download Slugs and Snails audio
- Download A Study of Bones audio
- Download Blue Mud audio
- Download Cuckoo-Pint audio
- Download Berries and Berries audio
- Download Distant Relations audio
- Download Among the Heather audio
- Download Speckled Trout audio
- Download Dodder and Broomrape audio
- Download Dog's Mercury and Plantain audio
- Download Butterfly Psychology audio
- Download Butterfly Æsthetics audio
- Download The Origin of Walnuts audio
- Download A Pretty Land-Shell audio
- Download Dogs and Masters audio
- Download Blackcock audio
- Download Bindweed audio
- Download On Cornish Cliffs audio
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These Essays originally appeared in the columns of the 'St. James's Gazette,' and I have to thank the courtesy of the Editor for kind permission to republish them. My object in writing them was to make the general principles and methods of evolutionists a little more familiar to unscientific readers. Biologists usually deal with those underlying points of structure which are most really important, and on which all technical discussion must necessarily be based. But ordinary people care little for such minute anatomical and physiological details. They cannot be expected to interest themselves in the flexor pollicis longus, or the hippocampus major about whose very existence they are ignorant, and whose names suggest to them nothing but unpleasant ideas. What they want to find out is how the outward and visible forms of plants and animals were produced. They would much rather learn why birds have feathers than why they have a keeled sternum; and they think the origin of bright flowers far more attractive than the origin of monocotyledonous seeds or exogenous stems. It is with these surface questions of obvious outward appearance that I have attempted to deal in this little series. My plan is to take a simple and well-known natural object, and give such an explanation as evolutionary principles afford of its most striking external features. A strawberry, a snail-shell, a tadpole, a bird, a wayside flower—these are the sort of things which I have tried to explain. If I have not gone very deep, I hope at least that I have suggested in simple language the right way to go to work. - Summary by Grant Allen
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