Gerald J. Baldasty, The Commercialization of the News in the Nineteenth Century
(Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1992), 113–38.
“Origin of Civilization,” Catholic World, July 1871, 493; J. W. Dawson, “The
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“Charles Robert Darwin,” Popular Science Monthly, February 1873, 497; David
Starr Jordan, “Darwin,” Dial, May 1882, 3; “Charles Darwin and Evolution,” Living Age,
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Ladies’ Repository, May 1870, 334; “New Publications,” Catholic World, May 1884, 284.
William North Rice, “The Darwinian Theory on the Origin of Species,” New
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George F. Wright, “Recent Works Bearing on the Relation of Science to Reli-
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Frank M. Turner, “The Victorian Confl ict Between Science and Religion: A Pro-
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A. F. Hewit, “Scriptural Questions, Part III,” Catholic World, February 1887, 656;
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“The New Atheism,” Princeton Review, January–June 1880, 370; “The Evolution of Life,”
Catholic World, May 1873, 155; “The Skepticism of Science,” Princeton Review, January
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Horace Bushnell, Nature and the Supernatural (New York: Charles Scribner,
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“Books of the Day,” Appleton’s Scientifi c Monthly, December 1878, 576; “Con-
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“Dramatic Notes,” Appleton’s Scientifi c Monthly, Febuary 3, 1872, 135
Thomas Henry Huxley, “The Progress of Science,” in Methods and Results (New
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John Tyndall, “On the Scientifi c Use of the Imagination,” Appleton’s Scientifi c
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Jevons, Principles of Science, 576; F. W. Clarke, “Evolution and the Spectro-
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Theory of Evolution on Education,” Educational Review, September 1895, 123–4. For
more on Jevons’s methodology, see Margaret Schabas, A World Ruled by Number: Wil-
liam Stanley Jevons and the Rise of Mathematical Economics (Princeton, NJ: University of
Princeton Press, 1990), 54–79. On Thomas C. Chamberlin, a geologist who took a lead-