SUPPLEMENTARY BIBLIOGRAPHY
- In addition to the works cited above in text and footnotes, the following have been found useful for this paper:
- Erasmus Darwin, Phytologia, Dublin, 1800.
- Loren Eiseley, Darwin's Century, New York, 1958, pp. 46–55.
- Charles Singer, A History of Biology, New York, 1950, pp. 430–42.
- William Dampier, A History of Science, Cambridge University Press, 1958, pp. 185–6, 264–75, 317, 352.
- William Bulloch, The History of Bacteriology, Oxford University Press, 1938, pp. 67–110.
- Schwartz and Bishop, Moments of Discovery, New York, 1958, pp. 402, 5, 10, 17, 506, 714.
- Ernst Krause, Erasmus Darwin, New York, 1880.
- James V. Logan, The Poetry and Aesthetics of Erasmus Darwin, Princeton, 1936.
- Minute Book of the American Philosophical Society—Entries of Joseph Priestley's paper on Equivocal or Spontaneous Generation, 18 November and s December, 1803.
- F. J. Cole, Early Theories of Sexual Generation, Oxford, 1930.
- Joseph Needham, History of Embryology, Cambridge, 1959.
- Robert E. Schofield, Membership of the Lunar Society of Birmingham, Annals of Science, Vol 12, 1956, pp. 118–36.
- Ann Holt, A Life of Joseph Priestley, Oxford University Press, 1931.
- John G. Gillam, The Crucible, London, 1954.
- T. E. Thorpe,. Joseph Priestley, London and New York, 1906.
- John T. Rutt, Life and Correspondence of Joseph Priestley, London, 1831.
- J. H. White, The History of the Phlogiston Theory, London, 1932 (enables one to note the parallel between eighteenth-century biology and chemistry).
- Joseph Priestley, Disquisitions relating to matter and spirit, to which is added the history of the philosophical doctrine concerning the origin of the soul and the nature of matter, London, 1777, Vol. I.