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This Is A New Release Of The Original 1908 Edition.
This Is A New Release Of The Original 1915 Edition.
This scarce antiquarian book is a facsimile reprint of the original. Due to its age, it may contain imperfections such as marks, notations, marginalia and flawed pages. Because we believe this work is culturally important, we have made it available as part of our commitment for protecting, preserving, and promoting the world's literature in affordable, high quality, modern editions that are true to the original work.
1915. This book is intended to serve as a weapon in the hands of the champions of social progress in their battle with the representatives of superstition. It describes the history of this struggle. Contents: The Antagonists; Struggles in Greece; Science in Alexandria; Christians and Emperors; Alexandria tragedy; Bruno, the wanderer; Bruno, the martyr; Galileo to 1616; Trial and sentence; Recantation and after; The future.
This book is intended to serve as a weapon in the hands of the champions of social progress in their battle with the representatives of superstition. It describes the history of this struggle. Contents: The Antagonists; Struggles in Greece; Science in Alexandria; Christians and Emperors; Alexandria tragedy; Bruno, the wanderer; Bruno, the martyr; Galileo to 1616; Trial and sentence; Recantation and after; The future.
1908. Lewis writes in the Preface: The contents of this volume consist of the first ten lectures of the thirty-five in the Winter course of 1907-08. They were delivered in the Garrick Theater, Chicago, on Sunday mornings to crowded houses. On several occasions half as many people were turned away as managed to get in. If these lectures meet with as warm a reception when read as they did when heard, I shall be more than satisfied. For a fuller discussion of the Greek period, briefly dealt with in the first lecture, see Edward Clodd's Pioneers of Evolution to which work the early part of this lecture is greatly indebted. Every lecture proceeds on the assumption, that a knowledge of the natural sciences, and especially the great revolutionizing generalizations which they have revealed, is indispensable. Contents: Thales to Linnaeus; Linnaeus to Lamarck; Darwin's Natural Selection; Weismann's Theory of Heredity; De Vries' Mutation; Kropotkin's Mutual Aid; A Reply to Haeckel; Spencer's Social Organism; Spencer's Individualism; and Civilization-Ward and Dietzgen. See other titles by this author available from Kessinger Publishing.
1908. Lewis writes in the Preface: The contents of this volume consist of the first ten lectures of the thirty-five in the Winter course of 1907-08. They were delivered in the Garrick Theater, Chicago, on Sunday mornings to crowded houses. On several occasions half as many people were turned away as managed to get in. If these lectures meet with as warm a reception when read as they did when heard, I shall be more than satisfied. For a fuller discussion of the Greek period, briefly dealt with in the first lecture, see Edward Clodd's Pioneers of Evolution to which work the early part of this lecture is greatly indebted. Every lecture proceeds on the assumption, that a knowledge of the natural sciences, and especially the great revolutionizing generalizations which they have revealed, is indispensable. Contents: Thales to Linnaeus; Linnaeus to Lamarck; Darwin's Natural Selection; Weismann's Theory of Heredity; De Vries' Mutation; Kropotkin's Mutual Aid; A Reply to Haeckel; Spencer's Social Organism; Spencer's Individualism; and Civilization-Ward and Dietzgen. See other titles by this author available from Kessinger Publishing.
This book is intended to serve as a weapon in the hands of the champions of social progress in their battle with the representatives of superstition. It describes the history of this struggle. Contents: The Antagonists; Struggles in Greece; Science in Alexandria; Christians and Emperors; Alexandria tragedy; Bruno, the wanderer; Bruno, the martyr; Galileo to 1616; Trial and sentence; Recantation and after; The future.
"This discussion treats an important question that has received no specific and thorough examination elsewhere, notwithstanding is gravity. Mr. Darrow is probably the foremost of the American representatives of the non-resistance theory, and his case is stated in these pages more pointedly and forcibly than in any of his published works. The arguments launched against Mr. Darrow will, I think, satisfy the opponents of the non-resistance philosophy."Arthur M. LewisEditor, "The Evolutionist" magazineMarch 21, 1911
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