Page:Creation by Evolution (1928).djvu/329

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CONNECTING AND MISSING LINKS

REFERENCES

  • Darwin, Charles. The Origin of Species. 1859.
  • Lull, R. S. Organic Evolution. Macmillan, 1920. The Ways of Life. Harper, 1925.
  • McCurdy G. G. Human Origins. Appleton, 1924.
  • Osborn, H. F. The Origin and Evolution of Life. Scribner’s, 1917. Men of the Old Stone Age. Scribner’s, 1915.
  • Scott, W. B. A History of Land Mammals in the Western Hemisphere. Macmillan, 1913.
  • Shimer, H. W. An Introduction to Earth History. Ginn & Co., 1925.
  • Schuchert, Charles. Historical Geology. Wiley & Sons.
  • Schuchert, Charles, and Le Vene, C. M. Earth Rhythms. Appleton, 1927.

“The testimony yielded in the superficial layers of the earth and In the caves, embracing hundreds of specimens of the fossilized remains of man, more or less ancient, more or less complete, invariably, without a single exception, testify to the gradual ascent of man from a lower to a higher state, gradually dropping one primitive bit of anatomy after another until the high, intelligent, fully human aspect is attained.”—H. F. Osborn.


“Determinate evolution is victorious all along the line. It only remains for us either to accept the inevitable, or to take up a position as belated outsiders, living in dreamland away from the practical realities of science, rethinking the childish thoughts of primitive folk.”—C. Lloyd Morgan.


“The time has come when scientific truth must cease to be the property of the few—when it must be woven into the common life of the world.”—Agassiz.

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