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Chapter 6 - Page 2
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* Isidore Geoffroy St-Hilaire gives a detailed account of the position assigned to man by various naturalists in their classifications: Hist. Nat. Gen. tom. ii., 1859, pp. 170-189. *(2) Some of the most interesting facts ever published on the habits of ants are given by Mr. Belt, in his The Naturalist in Nicaragua, 1874. See also Mr. Moggridge's admirable work, Harvesting Ants, &c., 1873, also "L'Instinct chez les insectes," by M. George Pouchet, Revue des Deux Mondes, Feb., 1870, p. 682.
Professor Owen, relying chiefly on the structure of the brain, has divided the mammalian series into four sub-classes. One of these he devotes to man; in another he places both the marsupials and the Monotremata; so that he makes man as distinct from all other mammals as are these two latter groups conjoined. This view has not been accepted, as far as I am aware, by any naturalist capable of forming an independent judgment, and therefore need not here be further considered. We can understand why a classification founded on any single character or organ- even an organ so wonderfully complex and important as the brain- or on the high development of the mental faculties, is almost sure to prove unsatisfactory. This principle has indeed been tried with hymenopterous insects; but when thus classed by their habits or instincts, the arrangement proved thoroughly artificial.* Classifications may, of course, be based on any character whatever, as on size, colour, or the element inhabited; but naturalists have long felt a profound conviction that there is a natural system. This system, it is now generally admitted, must be, as far as
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