Lecture 3 on 'what the Darwinian ‘[theory] has cleared up'. Lecture IV giving a 'summary of Darwinism' and a list of his fellow-workers, i.e. Alfred Russell Wallace, British naturalist, 1823-1913; Herbert Spencer, English evolutionary philosopher, 1820-1903; Ernst [Heinrich] Haeckel, German naturalist, 1834-1919; and Thomas Henry Huxley, English biologist, 1825-1895. Lecture V on 'Darwinism and its critics': i.e. Asa Gray, American botanist, 1810-1888; Karl Wilhelm von Nageli, 1817- 1865; Herbert Spencer and Theodor Eimer. Pages numbered 13-18. Manuscript.
Thomson, Sir John Arthur, 1861-1933, Knight, zoologistPrinted.
Thomson, Sir John Arthur, 1861-1933, Knight, zoologistReprinted from the January number of 'The Journal of Philosophical Studies'. Vol. i. No. 1. Printed.
Thomson, Sir John Arthur, 1861-1933, Knight, zoologistPrinted.
Thomson, Sir John Arthur, 1861-1933, Knight, zoologistThe pursuit of knowledge. Criticism of 'Vestiges' - the progress of man, (with a thought diagram), mentioning the theories of Weismann, Darwin, Oliphant, Fiske and Miss Buckly and stressing his belief in the importance of the reproductive factor. Commentary on disestablishment of the church. The Duke of Argyll's attack on natural selection: he is 'tolerably far gone in muddleheadedness'. Reference to Fothergill, Erasmus, [Jean Baptiste] Lamarck, Robert Chambers and Thomas Huxley.
Thomson, Sir John Arthur, 1861-1933, Knight, zoologistWith reference to Universities and Colleges Exhibition.
Thomson, Sir John Arthur, 1861-1933, Knight, zoologistWith reference to the publication of Patrick Geddes's papers after his death. Reference to James Slater and John Ross, and the possibility of some papers being at Montpellier.
Thomson, Sir John Arthur, 1861-1933, Knight, zoologistHe is glad the Town and Gown problem has been solved; agrees to transfer his advance into investment in debentures.
Thomson, Sir John Arthur, 1861-1933, Knight, zoologistReprinted from Popular Science Monthly.
Thomson, Sir John Arthur, 1861-1933, Knight, zoologistIncludes draft of a review or article based on John Middleton Murray's God, Being an Introduction to the Science of Metabiology (1929). Manuscript.
Thomson, Sir John Arthur, 1861-1933, Knight, zoologistNotes on defining and describing evolution. Manuscript.
Thomson, Sir John Arthur, 1861-1933, Knight, zoologistManuscript, 8 pp. and typescript, 1 p.
Thomson, Sir John Arthur, 1861-1933, Knight, zoologistWith bibliography. Typescript.
Thomson, Sir John Arthur, 1861-1933, Knight, zoologistBest known for his three-volume collaboration with Bertrand Russell, ‘Principia Mathematica’ (1910, 1912, 1913), the British philosopher of logic and mathematics Alfred North Whitehead, 1861–1947, was the originator of ‘Process theory’ in philosophy. Significantly, for Geddes and Thomson, the theory rejects philosophies which value static notions of being and instead advances a dynamic notion of becoming that views the world as “a web of interrelated processes” over an independence of things. Manuscript and typescript.
Thomson, Sir John Arthur, 1861-1933, Knight, zoologist