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The subject of this article is presented under the following

sections:

I. The Formative Force of Organisms.

II. The Conception of Death.

III. A Comparison of Larva and Embryo.

IV. Concluding Remarks.

The first section is not new, but a reproduction without change, of an article published in Science, July 3d, 1885. As this article has not become generally known, and yet is an essential link in the chain of reasoning, I venture to repeat itThough written in 1885, I consider that to-day it is still sufficient to disprove Weismann's theory of germ plasm. Weismann has not considered this article, otherwise, from my point of view, he could not have maintained his theory.

'This article is translated from one which appeared in the Biologisches Centralblatt, Vol. XV, Page 571, August 1st, 1895. A few trifling changes have been made in the text. An abstract of the article was read before the American Association for the Advancement of Science, at its recent Springfield meeting. Professor in the Harvard Medical School.

The views which I then defended have been recently brought forward in almost parallel form, and without essential additions, by O. Hertwig (Zeit-und Streitfragen der Biologie, I, Heft, D. 32-53) as arguments against the views of Weis

mann.

The second section is also directed against Weismann, for it attempts to replace his conception of death by one more

exact.

The third section is intended to make the significance of rejuvenation clear, and at the same time, by a comparison of larvæ and embryos, to demonstrate a law of heredity which has not been hitherto recognized.

THE FORMATIVE FORCE OF ORGANISMS.

The assertion is safe, that the majority of biologists incline at present to explain the forming of an organism out of its germ upon mechanical principles. The prevalent conception is that the forces of the ovum are so disposed that the evolution of the adult organism is the mechanical result of the predetermined interplay of those forces. The object of the present article is to point out that this conception is inadequate, and must be at least supplemented, if not replaced, by another view, namely, that the formative force is a generally diffused tendency, so that all parts inherently tend to complete by their own growth and modification the whole organism-a fact which finds a legitimate hypothetical expression in Darwin's Doctrine of pangenesis. The nature of the view here advanced will become clearer upon consideration of the evidence upon which it is based, and which is adduced below. The evidence that the formative force is diffused through all parts falls under three heads: 1. The process of regeneration. in unicellular and multicellular bionts; 2. The phenomena of of the duplication of parts; 3. All forms of organic reproduction. Let us briefly consider these categories.

1. Regeneration.-All living organisms have, to a greater or less degree, the ability to repair injuries; indeed, we must regard the power of regeneration as coextensive with life, but

the capacity varies enormously in the different species. In man the power is very small, though more extensive than is generally realized. Among Annelids are species, the individuals of which may be divided in two, and each piece can regenerate all that is needed to render it a complete worm. We sometimes see a small fragment of a plant, a single switch of a willow, for instance, regenerate an entire tree, roots, trunk, branches, leaves, flowers, and all. In the last instance a few cells possess a latent formative force, which we recognize by its effects, but cannot explain. We perceive, therefore, that each individual has, as it were, a scheme or plan of its organization to which it strives to conform. As long as it actually does so, the cells perform their routine functions; but when an injury destroys or removes some portion, then the remaining cells strive to conform again to the complete scheme, and to add the missing fragment. The act of regeneration of lost parts strikes the imagination almost as an intelligent pursuit by the tissues of an ideal purpose.

Our knowledge of the regeneration power has recently received important extensions through the noteworthy experiments of Nussbaum3 and Gruber, who have demonstrated, independently, the possibility of dividing unicellular animals so that each piece will regenerate the missing parts. In this manner the number of individuals can be artifically multiplied. For example: Nussbaum divided a well-isolated Oxytricha into two equal parts, either transversely or longitudinally, and found that the edges of the cut became soon surrounded with new cilia. Although some of the substance of the body, or even a nucleus, was lost through the operation yet, by the following day, the two parts converted themselves into complete animals with four nuclei and nucleoli (Nebenkerne) and the characteristic ciliary apparatus. "The head piece has formed a new hind end; the right half, a new left half." The

M. Nussbaum, Ueber spontane und kunstliche Zellteilung, Sitzungsb. d. neiderrh. Ges. f. Nat. u. Heilkunde, Bonn, 15, Dez., 1884.

*A. Gruber, l'eber kunstliche Teilung bei Infusorien, Biol. Centralblatt, Bd. IV, No. 23, 717--722.

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