He had many interests, but perhaps his stongest was in nineteenth century scientific literature, and central to that was the work of T. H. Huxley.
He and I worked to edit many of Huxley's works for publication on the internet.
D. Joyce, 2003
| GUIDES | |
|---|---|
| § 1. | THH: His Mark |
| § 2. | Voyage of the Rattlesnake |
| § 3. | A Sort of Firm |
| § 4. | Darwin's Bulldog |
| § 5. | Hidden Bond: Evolution |
| § 6. | Frankensteinosaurus |
| § 7. | Bobbing Angels: Human Evolution |
| § 8. | Matter of Life: Protoplasm |
| § 9. | Medusa |
| § 10. | Liberal Education |
| § 11. | Scientific Education |
| § 12. | Unity in Diversity |
| § 13. | Agnosticism |
| § 14. | New Reformation |
| § 15. | Verbal Delusions: The Bible |
| § 16. | Miltonic Hypothesis: Genesis |
| § 17. | Extremely Wonderful Events: Resurrection and Demons |
| § 18. | Emancipation: Gender and Race |
| § 19. | Aryans et al.: Ethnology |
| § 20. | The Good of Mankind |
| § 21. | Jungle Versus Garden |