Word: darwinism
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Popular Science Monthly--"Anaximander, Earliest Precursor of Darwin," by C. R. Eastman '90: "The Cause, Nature, and Consequence of Eyestrain," by G. M. Gould...
...Comte Almaviva, S. H. Shohl '06 Bartholo, J. V. Blanchet '05 Rosine, P. G. Henderson '05 Figaro, O. L. Mills '06, F. B. Thompson 2L Don Bazile, K. H. Gibson '04 La Jeunesse, M. Werthelm '06 L'Eveille, L. B. Robinson '07, W. C. Titcomb 1G. Notaire, C. B. Darwin '06, A. F. Hurlburt '07 Alcode, D. Davis '05, A. W. Rice...
...Darwin, C B, 1709 Gambridge street...
...life in the world lost hold during the upheaval of the French Revolution; and it was a French student who first suggested that man had risen to his present place by fitting himself to his surroundings. This was the origin of the theory afterward made so famous by Darwin. If it is true, then, that we can develop ourselves most fully by adaptation to surrounding conditions, it should be worth while for all who come to Cambridge to learn something about the nature of the neighboring country...
...results of my trip have been to make me realize that the whole theory of coral formation is still very uncertain. A few interesting discoveries about the Fijis have shown that the very old theory that atolls are coral growths on the rims of sunken extinct craters, for which Darwin and Dana expressed great contempt, was not entirely groundless but in some cases perfectly true...