1874 1ed Mivart Man & Apes DARWIN EVOLUTION Zoology Illustrated Gorilla Catholic
A first American edition account of George Mivart’s reaction to Darwinian naturalism.
George Mivart was a 19th-century English biologist known for his attempts to merge the beliefs of Darwinian evolution and the Catholic Church – curiously, he was condemned by everyone! Mivart held views that were contrary to other scientists, including his view on the language of animals – he states:
“Since we are unable to converse with brutes, we can but divine and infer from their gestures, motions, and the sounds they emit, what may be the nature of their highest psychical powers.”
Mivart discounted many of Darwin’s own studies including his “hasty attribution of human qualities to brutes, on account of certain superficial resemblances.” (Radick, p.69).
According to Cooper and Hull,
“Mivart describes primates, including humans, as being ‘unguiculate, claviculate, placental mammals, with orbits encircled by bone; three kinds of teeth, at least at one time of life; brain always with a posterior lobe and calcarine fissure…”
1874 1ed Mivart Man & Apes DARWIN EVOLUTION Zoology Illustrated Gorilla Catholic
A first American edition account of George Mivart’s reaction to Darwinian naturalism.
George Mivart was a 19th-century English biologist known for his attempts to merge the beliefs of Darwinian evolution and the Catholic Church – curiously, he was condemned by everyone! Mivart held views that were contrary to other scientists, including his view on the language of animals – he states:
“Since we are unable to converse with brutes, we can but divine and infer from their gestures, motions, and the sounds they emit, what may be the nature of their highest psychical powers.”
Mivart discounted many of Darwin’s own studies including his “hasty attribution of human qualities to brutes, on account of certain superficial resemblances.” (Radick, p.69).
According to Cooper and Hull,
“Mivart describes primates, including humans, as being ‘unguiculate, claviculate, placental mammals, with orbits encircled by bone; three kinds of teeth, at least at one time of life; brain always with a posterior lobe and calcarine fissure…”
Item number: #7453
Price: $599
MIVART, St George Jackson
Man and apes an exposition of structural resemblances and differences bearing upon questions of affinity and origin.
New York: Appleton, 1874. First American edition.
Details:
- Collation: Complete with all pages
- [vi], 200
- 61 b/w illustrations
- References: Gregory Radick, The Simian Tongue; Cooper & Hull, Gorilla Pathology and Health
- Language: English
- Binding: Cloth; tight and secure
- Size: ~ 7.5in X 5in (19cm x 12.5cm)
- Very rare with no other example for sale worldwide
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7453
Categories
Medicine & Science
Religion
Authors
MIVART, St George Jackson
Printing Date
19th Century
Language
English
Binding
Hardcover
Book Condition
Excellent
Collation
Complete