A Manual of the Antiquity of Man Part 20
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[80] "Science Record," p. 564. 1875.
[81] "American Phrenological Journal," February, 1874.
[82] Wilson's "Pre-Historic Man," p. 40.
[83] "Pre-Historic Man," p. 46.
[84] "Antiquity of Man," p. 200; "Principles of Geology," vol. i. p.
454.
[85] "Antiquity of Man," p. 43; "Pre-Historic Man," p. 47.
[86] "Antiquity of Man," p. 44.
[87] "Primitive Man," pp. 9, 77.
[88] "Pre-Historic Man," p. 236.
[89] "Ancient Monuments," p. 304.
[90] Buchner, p. 35.
[91] Rollin, vol. i. p. 138.
[92] Anthon's Cla.s.sical Dictionary, p. 788.
[93] Buchner, 254.
[94] "New York Tribune", June 6, 1874.
[95] Rawlinson's Herodotus, vol. ii. p. 189.
[96] "Principles of Geology," vol. i. p. 432.
[97] "Antiquity of Man," p. 36.
[98] Bayard Taylor in "New York Tribune, Extra," No. 15.
[99] "Pre-Historic Nations," p. 190.
[100] _Ibid._ pp. 178, 175.
[101] "Pre-Historic Nations," p. 37.
[102] "Ancient America," p. 187.
[103] "Chips from a German Workshop," vol. i. p. 21.
[104] _Ibid._ vol. ii. p. 8.
[105] Wake's "Chapters on Man," p. 33.
[106] "Diodorus Siculus, Lucretius, Horace, and many other Greek and Roman writers, consider language as one of the arts invented by man. The first men, say they, lived for some time in woods and caves, after the manner of beasts, uttering only confused and indistinct noises, till, a.s.sociating for mutual a.s.sistance, they came by degrees to use articulate sounds mutually agreed upon, for the arbitrary signs or marks of those ideas in the mind of the speaker which he wanted to communicate to the hearer. This opinion sprung from the atomic cosmogony which was framed by Mochus, the Phoenician, and afterward improved by Democritus and Epicurus."--Pouchet's _Plurality of the Human Race_, p. 142.
[107] "Principles of Geology," vol. ii. p. 475. "It is generally acknowledged that all organic beings have been formed on two great laws--Unity of Type, and the Conditions of Existence. By unity of type is meant that fundamental agreement in structure which we see in organic beings of the same cla.s.s, and which is quite independent of their habits of life. On my theory, unity of type is explained by unity of descent."--Darwin's _Origin of Species_, p. 200.
[108] I put myself into clothes.
[109] Shepherd.
[110] And.
[111] Wonder.
[112] "Descent of Man," vol. i. p. 143.
[113] Mivart's "Genesis of Species," p. 114.
[114] "Origin of Species," p. 193.
[115] "Descent of Man," vol. i. p. 142.
[116] "Chips," vol. i. pp. 63, 62.
[117] Lady Belcher's "Mutineers of the Bounty," p. 61.
[118] "Captain Cook found on the island of Wateoo, three inhabitants of Otaheite, who had been drifted thither in a canoe, although the distance between the two isles is five hundred and fifty miles. In 1696, two canoes, containing thirty persons, who had left Ancorso, were thrown by contrary winds and storms on the Island of Samar, one of the Philippines, at a distance of eight hundred miles. In 1721, two canoes, one of which contained twenty-four, and the other six persons, men, women, and children, were drifted from an island called Farroilep to the island of Guaham, one of the Marians, a distance of two hundred miles."
Kadu, a native of Ulea, and three of his countrymen, while sailing in a boat, were driven out to sea by a violent storm, and drifted about the sea for eight months, subsisting entirely on the produce of the sea, and finally were picked up in an insensible condition by the inhabitants of Aur (Caroline Isles) one thousand five hundred miles distant from his native isle.--_Principles of Geology_, vol. ii. p. 472.
[119] "Natural History of Man," vol. i. p. 16.
[120] Powell's "Human Temperaments," p. 180.
[121] The idea that "bara" meant to create out of nothing is a modern invention, and most likely called forth by the contact between Jews and Greeks at Alexandria. The Greeks believed that matter was co-eternal with the Creator, and it was probably in contradistinction to this notion that the Jews first a.s.serted that G.o.d made all things out of nothing. The word, however, only calls forth the simple conception of _fas.h.i.+oning_ or _arranging_.--_Chips_, vol. i. p. 132.
[122] "Testimony of the Rocks," Fifth Lecture.
[123] Rev. Dr. J. P. Thompson represents Adam as a typical man (Man in Genesis and Geology, p. 105); Lubbock regards him as a typical savage (Origin Civilization, p. 361). Why not call him the first great prototype of the human race?
[124] The word _Nod_ means _to wander_, _to be driven about_, etc. It appears to have been a familiar name at the time of the fratricide. It was then the name of a land or tract of country. May there not have been roving tribes there, and from them the place was designated "Wandering Land"?
[125] Dr. Livingstone, after speaking of a half-caste man on the Zambesi, described by the Portuguese as a rare monster of humanity, "remarks, 'It is unaccountable why half-castes, such as he, are so much more cruel than the Portuguese, but such is undoubtedly the case.' An inhabitant remarked to Livingstone, 'G.o.d made white men, and G.o.d made black men, but the devil made half castes.' When two races, both low in the scale, are crossed, the progeny seem to be eminently bad. Thus the n.o.ble-hearted Humboldt speaks in strong terms of the bad and savage disposition of Zambos, or half-castes between Indians and Negroes; and this conclusion has been arrived at by various observers. From these facts we may perhaps infer that the degraded state of so many half-castes is in part due to reversion to a primitive and savage condition, as well as to the unfavorable moral conditions under which they generally exist."--_Animals and Plants under Domestication_, vol.
ii. p. 63.
[126] This view does not conflict with the doctrine of the unity of the race. The great difficulty in interpreting the Scriptures is its briefness. A long period of time is comprehended in a very few words, and much is left to inference. The tenor of the Scriptures favors the idea of the unity of the race, still it is not specifically declared.
The strongest pa.s.sage is Acts chapter 17 and verse 26: "Hath made of one blood all nations of men for to dwell on all the face of the earth."
This does not conflict with the idea of there being more than one pair, but their _blood_ is the same. It is not declared that Adam had no ancestors. When it is declared that Adam was the son of G.o.d, it is only to trace man's origin to the Supreme Being. If Adam had ancestors, the leaving of them out has no signification, as it was not uncommon to drop the name of unimportant persons. An instance of this kind is given in the genealogy of David. From the birth of Obed to the birth of his grandson David (common chronology) is a period of two hundred and twenty-three years. Evidently one or more members have been dropped. If Adam was a prototype it was not necessary to trace the line any farther back. The forming him of the dust of the ground would give his relations.h.i.+p to the rest of mankind. He was chosen, endowed for the purpose of elevating the race--of becoming the head of a new type of humanity.
A Manual of the Antiquity of Man Part 20
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