Book contents
- Frontmatter
- PREFATORY NOTE TO SECOND EDITION
- PREFACE
- Contents
- CHAPTER I THE STATE OF THE QUESTION
- CHAPTER II THE ORGANIC HISTORY
- CHAPTER III POWERS MODIFYING EVOLUTION
- CHAPTER IV BENEFICENCE IN THE METHOD OF EVOLUTION
- CHAPTER V FINAL CAUSE IN EVOLUTION
- CHAPTER VI GEOLOGY AND SCRIPTURE
- CHAPTER VII THE AGE OF MAN
- Frontmatter
- PREFATORY NOTE TO SECOND EDITION
- PREFACE
- Contents
- CHAPTER I THE STATE OF THE QUESTION
- CHAPTER II THE ORGANIC HISTORY
- CHAPTER III POWERS MODIFYING EVOLUTION
- CHAPTER IV BENEFICENCE IN THE METHOD OF EVOLUTION
- CHAPTER V FINAL CAUSE IN EVOLUTION
- CHAPTER VI GEOLOGY AND SCRIPTURE
- CHAPTER VII THE AGE OF MAN
Summary
In my first published work, “The Method of Divine Government,” I sought to unfold the plan by which God governs the world, and I found it to be in an orderly manner—that is, by law. As having pursued this line of research, I was prepared to believe that there might be the like method in the organic kingdoms, and to listen to Darwin when he showed that there was a regular instrumentality in the descent of plants and animals. I noticed that he and others, such as Lewes, Huxley, and Spencer, who took the same view, were not swayed by any religious considerations, and that religious people generally were strongly prepossessed against the new doctrine. But I saw, at the same time, that Darwin was a most careful observer, that he published many important facts, that there was great truth in the theory, and that there was nothing atheistic in it if properly understood—that is, in the acknowledged tenet of the government of organic nature by means and according to law.
I felt it to be my only course not to reject the truth because it was proclaimed by some who turned it to an irreligious use, but to accept it wherever it might lead, and to turn it to a better use.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Religious Aspect of Evolution , pp. xi - xivPublisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009First published in: 1890