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Price, George McCready

"Q. E. D., or New Light on the Doctrine of Creation"

In all cases the host was reared
from the moment of birth, while with the parasite both parents and
offspring were kept together.
"The result of this little fragment of work _was to send two genera and
fourteen species to the cemetery_--you may call it Mt. Synonym Cemetery,
if you choose--while the insect involved is now _Aphidius testaceipes_.
The systematist who studies only dried corpses will soon be out of
date."[22]
[Footnote 22: F.M. Webster, of the U.S. Dept. of Agriculture, in
_Science_, April 12, 1912, p. 565.]

IV
Now all this is not given to intimate that there is no scientific
justification for the term "species," but to make plain to my
non-professional readers what every well-informed biologist already
knows, namely, that at the present time the "species question" is still
in a very unsatisfactory state. The facts given above would strongly
suggest that there probably is indeed such a thing as a species, in the
sense assigned by Linnaeus, who as we have seen wished to make it a
designation covering all the descendants of each distinct kind
originally created. But this original aim of Linnaeus is to-day not
merely ignored but treated with lofty contempt; for according to the
prevailing theories of evolution, all the manifold diversities of life
in our modern world have come about gradually as the result of a slow
development by natural process, and hence it would be vain beyond
measure to attempt to determine the limits of a "species" in the sense
understood by Linnaeus.


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