Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- CHAPTER I EVOLUTION AND BEGINNINGS
- CHAPTER II EVOLUTION AND LAW
- CHAPTER III NATURE AND INTELLIGIBILITY
- CHAPTER IV THE STRIFE AGAINST PURPOSE
- CHAPTER V EVOLUTION AND CREATION
- CHAPTER VI ORGANIC EVOLUTION
- CHAPTER VII ORGANIC EVOLUTION (continued)
- CHAPTER VIII SUPER-ORGANIC EVOLUTION
- CHAPTER IX EVOLUTION AND PSYCHOLOGY
- CHAPTER X EVOLUTION AND ETHICS
- CHAPTER XI EVOLUTION AND RELIGION
CHAPTER II - EVOLUTION AND LAW
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 October 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- CHAPTER I EVOLUTION AND BEGINNINGS
- CHAPTER II EVOLUTION AND LAW
- CHAPTER III NATURE AND INTELLIGIBILITY
- CHAPTER IV THE STRIFE AGAINST PURPOSE
- CHAPTER V EVOLUTION AND CREATION
- CHAPTER VI ORGANIC EVOLUTION
- CHAPTER VII ORGANIC EVOLUTION (continued)
- CHAPTER VIII SUPER-ORGANIC EVOLUTION
- CHAPTER IX EVOLUTION AND PSYCHOLOGY
- CHAPTER X EVOLUTION AND ETHICS
- CHAPTER XI EVOLUTION AND RELIGION
Summary
THE unity of the primitive nebulosity must have been, as we have seen, a unity of elements in relation to one another. It is not undifferentiated stuff, but definite molecules existing in definite relations. It is not chaotic, but orderly, and existing in relations which can be thought. Thus the unity of the primitive nebulosity is already rational and intelligible. If this is possible at the outset, then the process of evolution will also be rational and intelligible, and the outcome will also be rational. It is not for us to contend against the existence of a primitive nebulosity either of the solar system or of the sidereal. Nor have we any interest in contending against the discovery of method, order, law in nature. We are glad to sit at the feet of those who can show us the widening bounds of order and law, who can teach us to know the dominion of order and law where we were once unable to discover it. We gladly follow Mr. Herbert Spencer as he leads us on from stage to stage of existence and of knowledge, and shows us how every stage is under law, and that even the very discovery of law is itself subject to law. We may not agree with him either in the general or in the particular, but we are grateful for the wide outlook he has cast over the universe, and for a possible interpretation of the order of nature.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Evolution and Christianity , pp. 17 - 32Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009First published in: 1894