Imatges de pàgina
PDF
EPUB

arise after the papers are read, and which sometimes do not assume a very scientific character. Geology is not generally popular with the public, and has not as yet sufficient claims to make it so, the opinions of its advocates being split into party theories, and the papers that are read before the Society giving rise to discussion neither the most rational nor acceptable. What is wanted in the reason is made up for in the jocularity of the discussions, and sallies of wit usurp the place of the grave deliberations of science; what is wanted in argument made up from deductions from close investigation, is met with in the sophistry of the forum or debating-room. Sometimes it is to be lamented that these discussions take a different character, being directed against the fundamentals of revealed religion, and have a tendency to subvert those doctrines which are the basis of our modern civilization. From these circumstances the Society takes especial care that their proceedings shall not be reported the attendance of every person from whom these might emanate being carefully excluded from the meetings. Their own reports indeed appear carefully worded, and supplied by their own secretaries, in the Literary Gazette and the Athenæum, but in these accounts all allusion to their discussions is avoided. In these respects the Geological Society does not court the freedom of public discussion, which, through the medium of the press, is allowed by every other Society in the metropolis."-Pp. 77, 78.

It may be requisite to assure the reader, that this paragraph is copied with literal accuracy. The writer's representation of the general character of Geology may be very safely left to itself, as an instance of the ancient practice not yet become uncommon, that persons "speak evil of the things which they understand not." But it contains insinuations and assertions which call for attention: and I should think myself wanting in the observance of moral duty, were I to neglect the opportunity afforded by the publication of this volume, of bearing testimony to truth, and so of counteracting injurious representations. To any candid thinker it must appear an unreasonable expectation, that any person that pleases should be allowed to take notes of the papers, conversations, and discussions of any scientific or literary institution, and to publish them. No Society of respectability and honour would submit to such an intrusion. Besides other obvious objections, this one immediately presents itself; the contingency, not to call it a certainty, that mistakes and misrepresentations would be committed, and those

I

SUPPLEMENTARY NOTES.

433

often of the most serious import, even by well-intentioned reporters.

The impropriety of this complaint is however a small thing, in comparison with other parts of the passage. The writer does not say that some instance may have occurred, or even more than one, in which a speaker had uttered sentiments irreconcilable to reason or piety. The reflection would then have arisen, that no society to whose objects unreserved discussion is essential, could prevent such an occurrence, or ought to be held answerable for it, unless it had manifested approbation, or at least connivance. I do not say this as an apology for any known fact, for I have never heard of such an occurrence. But the writer evidently strives to produce the impression that scientific investigation is not the chief object of the Society's meetings, that it is made only a mask for the effecting of other purposes, that the most momentous truths of religion are assailed with scoffs in the guise of witticism and sophistry as the substitute for argument, that infidel and immoral principles are bandied about, and that the Society gives encouragement and protection to such a course of proceeding.

I feel it my duty to declare that, to the best and utmost of my knowledge, these accusations are contrary to truth and exceedingly unjust. My great affliction, extreme deafness, restricts my advantage, in attending the meetings of the Geological Society, almost entirely to the inspection of the specimens, sections, and figures. Yet I am a constant attendant: and, if infidel or otherwise irreligious and immoral sentiments were propounded by any of the speakers, I am not unprovided with the means of receiving information; and those means would not have been ineffectual. I am well assured that, even if in any long past time it may have happened that opinions or insinuations have been broached, of the character which this author alleges, the blame has rested on the offending person, and could, upon no principle of equity, have been imputed to the Society: and, from my own knowledge, I am persuaded that, were such a thing to occur, it would be met by a strong expression of disapprobation from the chair and by the general sense of the meeting. But I can go farther. I have sought information from some of the oldest, most active, and most influential Fellows of the Society: and upon good authority I am enabled to say that the accusations are not true. One of those gentlemen, whose means of knowledge are ample to a degree that few men can obtain, has written to me; "I can fully

F F

bear testimony to the entire correctness of what is stated in your Note, in contradiction of the calumnious assertions with regard to the discussions at the Geological Society.-I can truly say that no discussions or observations hostile to Revealed Religion, or treating it with levity, have ever been heard by me at the Society's meetings; nor do I believe that in so large and respectable an assembly, generally attended and often presided over by Ministers of religion, any such would be for a moment attempted or permitted."

The abstracts of papers read in the Society are printed for the use of its members, under the title of Proceedings; and brief statements, with the approbation of the Society, are sent to the two journals mentioned, by a gentleman in whose ability and accuracy the fullest confidence may be placed. By this method, the public is furnished with correct information, instead of being left to the reports of incompetent persons, which could scarcely be any other than defective and misrepresenting.

INDEX.

ANIMALS; what kinds, provided for in the
ark, 159.

Annihilation of any thing, an unfounded
opinion, 230.

Antediluvian hypothesis, 211. Objec-
tions to it, 212.

Ararat, mount, 311, 431.

Auvergne, volcanic region of, 148–154,
416. Christian piety in that district,
380.

Babbage, Charles, Esq.; on the supposed
contradiction of Geology and the
Bible, 13. On the antiquity of the
earth, 81, 394. On the Mosaic ac-
count of the creation, 198. On the
responsibility of man, 343. On the
rings of growth in fossil-trees, 379.
On the mechanical effect of the central
heat, 399.

Baxter, Richard; on the possibility of
an antecedent world, 334.
Biblicus Delvinus, an anonymous writer
on Geology, 226.

Blumenbach, John Fred. Prof. Physiol.
Götting.; his belief of the unity of the
human species, 74.
Boré, Eugene; on the Chaldeans, and
Mount Ararat, 430.
Botany, recommended as the beginning
of studies in Natural History, 329.
Bowman, J. E., Esq.; his paper on the
longevity of trees, referred to, 377.
Brown, Rev. J. Mellor; his strictures on
the author of this book, 11. His
charges against Geology, 187, 193.
His fallacious and pernicious reason-
ings, 195.

Buckland, Rev. William, D.D. and Prof.;
on the connexion of sciences, 5. His
Bridgewater Treatise recommended,
42, 373, 410. On valleys of denuda-
tion, 122. On diluvial formations,
140. On supposed concessions, 170.
On "the Sentence of Death," 298.

Burnet, Dr. Thomas; his Theory of the
Earth, 43.

Calvin; on the right and duty of exami-
nation, 167. On Genesis i. 183. On
Rom. viii. 21, 232.

Carnivorous animals; their use, 98.
Their existence in all periods of life
upon the earth, 364.

CAUSE, the SUPREME; 39, 285, 417,
418.

Chalk formation, 399, 416.

Chalmers, Rev. Dr. ; on the antiquity of
the earth, 36.

Change, perpetual, in the universe, 39, 348.
Chaos, universal, not admitted, 82, 286.
Characterism of rocks and organic re-
mains, 63.

Charlesworth, Edw., Esq.; his Magazine
of Natural History, on the early
merits of William Smith, 64. On the
longevity and magnitude of trees, 377,
378. His merits as a naturalist, 384,

311.
Christian Observer; on the futility of
antigeological objections, 189, 214,
226, 239.
On the duty of studying
the great questions in Geology, 335.
On the law of death, 374.
Chronology; systems of Usher and
Hales, 378.

Cleavage and joints, 404, 406.
Coal-formations, 383, 385, 402.
Cockburn, Dr. Wm., Dean of York; his
Letter to Dr. Buckland, 222.

Cole, Rev. Henry; his writings against
Geology, 173.

Conchology; its peculiar interest, and
relation to Geology, 411.

Conybeare, late Rev. John Josias; his
discovery of the Snowdon early fossil-
casts, 408.

Rev. William Daniel; on
ascertained geological facts, 29. His
and Mr. William Phillips's Outlines

of English Geology, recommended,
373. On the moral tendency of Geo-
logy, 422.

Copernican system; opposed by divines,
both Roman Catholic and Protestant,
268, 412.

Creation; not universal at any one point
of time, 74. The Mosaic account, 77,
205, 278, 285, 428. Not proceeding
from any single centre, 93. The
Adamic; conceived to relate only to
one region of the earth, 286. Suc-
cessive operations, 287, 289. The
heavenly bodies, 290. The animal
structure, 292. The human female,
293. Vegetable life, 288. Animals,
289. Statement in the fourth com-
mandment, 280. No intrinsic reason
for supposing the recent commence-
ment of creation, 333.
Cumbrian and Cambrian rocks, 397.
Cuvier, Baron George; hint of his geo-
logical views, 37. On the Deluge,
114. His sagacity and anticipations
in relation to Geology, 119. On Dr.
Buckland's researches in bone-caves,
121. His geological character, 116.
His death, and general character, 118.
Darwin, Charles, Esq.; on the South

American shingle formation, 129, 147.
On the longevity of trees, 379. On
elevations of land, 405.
Death; necessary in a system of organic
life, 97, 296, 298. Demonstrated

geologically, 98, 374. Attaching to
the infra-human animals, while man
remained innocent, 294, 363, 371.
How man before the fall was exempted
from death, 297.

De Candolle, Augustin Pyramus, Prof.
Genev.; on vegetable regions, 73. On
the longevity of trees, 378, 379.
De la Beche, Henry Thomas, Esq.; his
works recommended, 42, where add
his" Collection of Sections and Views
illustrative of Geological Phænomena,”
in quarto. On drift in Jamaica, 147.
On the organic remains in the earlier
fossiliferous rocks, 376.

Deluge; its moral reason, 101, 123.
Scripture narrative, 102, 157, 159.
The fact evinced by history and na-
tional traditions, 105. Its relation to
geological considerations, 106, 111,
124, 140, 143, 145. Not extending
over the whole globe, 154, 164. Sum-
mary of arguments against the com-
mon opinion, 299. Examination of
the terms in which it is described, 304.
Denudation, 61. An instructive in-
stance, 424.

Devonian system of formations, (Old
Red Sandstone,) 398, 403, 409, 417.
Didelphys Bucklandi, 84. Controversy
upon, 85, 410.

Drift, or diluvium; 125, 419. Exten-
sive, 126.
Of different ages, 128, 419.
Silurian, 130. North British, 131.
Eastern, 132. North European, 135.
North American, 136. In Jamaica,
147. Patagonian, 147. Extensively
produced by currents at the bottom of
the ocean, 147.

Earth; importance of its Natural His-
tory, 40.
Extent of our acquaintance

with its structure, 42.
fracturing, 43, 56.
such dislocations, 44.
stitution, 48, 192, 345.
dition, 281.

Elevation and
Advantages of
Interior con-
Primary con-

Meanings of the term in
the Hebrew Scriptures, 284. Its im-
mense antiquity, 77, 80, 121, 190,
239, 362, 370, 391-419.

Edinburgh Review; on successions of
animated creatures, 120. Its excel-
lent articles on James Hutton, Buck-
land, and Lyell, 52, 56.
Elevation of land, 56, 345, 369, 399, 401,
405, 424.

Entomostraca, microscopic, 99, 336.
Erratic blocks; see Drift.
Evidence, sensible, 21. Moral, 22. To
be faithfully followed, 23, 342.
Fairholme, George, Esq.; his writings on
Geology, 217.

Fathers; the early christian writers:
upon the interpretation of Genesis i.
182, 429.

Faults in the courses of strata; Dr.

George Young upon, 390.

Fichte, John Gottl.; on the first human
beings, 251.

Fitton, William Henry, M. D.; his
"Geology of Hastings," recommended,

42.

Fleming, Rev. Dr. John; on the speedy
obliteration of traces of the Deluge,
113.

Galileo; observations upon his case,

266. Mr. Harcourt's allusion to it, 412.
Genesis, the sacred book; comprises
several distinct compositions, 207.
Illustrations of its commencing por-
tion, 278, 428.

Geological Society, vindicated from
misrepresentation, 431.

Geologists, distinguished; instances of
their fidelity to evidence, 124. Charges
against them repelled, 175, 187, 195,

432.

Geology; its nature as a study, and its
objects, 1. Intention and value, 3,

« AnteriorContinua »