i

Karl Ernst von Baer

(in old age), from the picture by Hagen-Schwarz.

(By permission of the Berlin Photographic Company, 133 New Bond Street,London, W.)



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HISTORY OF
BIOLOGY

BY

L. C. MIALL, D.Sc., F.R.S.,

FORMERLY PROFESSOR OF BIOLOGY IN THE UNIVERSITY OF LEEDS

[ISSUED FOR THE RATIONALIST PRESS ASSOCIATION, LIMITED]

London:

WATTS & CO.,

17 JOHNSON'S COURT, FLEET STREET, E.C.

1911


iii

iv

CONTENTS

PAGE

Introduction1
Biology of the ancients. Extinction of scientificinquiry. Revival of knowledge.
PERIOD I (1530-1660)7
Characteristics of the period. The revival ofbotany. The revival of zoology. Early notions ofsystem. The first English naturalists. The rise ofexperimental physiology. The natural history ofdistant lands (sixteenth century and earlier). Agriculture,horticulture, and silk-culture in the sixteenthcentury.
PERIOD II (1661-1740)28
Characteristics of the period. The minute anatomists.Early notions about the nature of fossils. Comparativeanatomy; the study of biological types. Adaptationsof plants and animals; natural theology.Spontaneous generation. The natural history ofJohn Ray. The scale of nature. The sexes offlowering plants.
PERIOD III (1741-1789)49
Characteristics of the period. Systems of floweringplants; Linnæus and the Jussieus. Réaumur andthe History of Insects. The budding-out of newanimals (Hydra); another form of propagation withoutmating (aphids). The historical or comparativemethod; Montesquieu and Buffon. Amateur studentsof living animals. Intelligence and instinct in thelower animals. The food of green plants. Themetamorphoses of plants. Early notions about thelower plants.
PERIOD IV (1790-1858)89
Characteris
...

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