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Informationen zum Autor George John Romanes FRS was a Canadian-Scottish evolutionary biologist and physiologist who pioneered comparative psychology by proposing that humans and other animals share cognitive processes and mechanisms. He was the youngest of Charles Darwin's academic friends, and his ideas about evolution are historically significant. He is regarded to originate the phrase neo-Darwinism, which in the late 19th century was seen as a theory of evolution that concentrates on natural selection as the main evolutionary force. However, Samuel Butler used this term with a similar meaning in 1880. George Romanes was born in Kingston, Canada West, in 1848, as the youngest of three boys from a wealthy and highly developed family. His father, Rev. George Romanes (1805-1871), was a Scottish Presbyterian pastor. Two years after his birth, his parents relocated to Cornwall Terrace in London, United Kingdom, paving the way for Romanes' fruitful and long-lasting association with Charles Darwin. Romanes spent time growing up in Germany and Italy, where he became fluent in both languages. His early education was erratic, taking both in public schools and at home. He developed an early interest in poetry and music, at which he excelled. Klappentext A pioneering work of comparative psychology from 1883 containing an essay on instinct by Charles Darwin (1809-82). Zusammenfassung Evolutionary biologist George John Romanes (1848–94) wrote this influential work on the evolution of the mental faculties of animals in 1883. It is one of the pioneering works of comparative psychology and contains a posthumous essay on instinct by Charles Darwin (1809–82), who was a friend of Romanes. Inhaltsverzeichnis Preface; Introduction; 1. The criterion of mind; 2. The structure and functions of nerve-tissue; 3. The physical basis of mind; 4. The root-principles of mind; 5. Explanation of the diagram; 6. Consciousness; 7. Sensation; 8. Pleasures and pains, memory, and association of ideas; 9. Perception; 10. Imagination; 11. Instinct; 12. Instinct (continued) - origin and development of instincts; 13. Instinct (continued) - blended origin, or plasticity of instinct; 14. Instinct (continued) - modes in which intelligence determines the variation of instinct in definite lines; 15. Instinct (continued) - domestication; 16. Instinct (continued) - local and specific varieties of instinct; 17. Instinct (continued) - examination of the theories of other writers on the evolution of instinct, with a general summary of the theory here set forth; 18. Instinct (continued) - cases of special difficulty with regard to the foregoing theory of the origin and development of instincts; 19. Reason; 20. Animal emotions, and summary of intellectual faculties; Appendix. A posthumous essay on instinct by Charles Darwin; Index....