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he bodies of other animals to help us in understanding the physical structure and functions of the human body; but we must stop trying to apply the sex-ways of birds, spiders or even cows (which are at least mammals) to human society, which is not made up of any of these. It is possible to be quite sure that some facts carefully observed about mammals in a biological laboratory apply to similar structures in man, also a mammal. Because of this relationship, the data from medicine and surgery are priceless. Thus we are enabled to check up our systematic experimental knowledge of animals by an ascertained fact here and there in the human material, and to get a fairly exact idea of how great the correspondence actually is. Gaps thus filled in are narrow enough, and our certainty of the ground on either side sufficiently great, to give a good deal of justifiable assurance. If we use our general biological evidence in this way, merely to help in clearing up points about _human_ biology, we need not be entirely limited to mammals. Some sex phenomena are quite general, and may be drawn from the sexual species most convenient to study and control in experiments. When we get away from mammalian forms, however, we must be very sure that the cases used for illustrations are of general application, are similar in respect to the points compared, or that any vital differences are understood and conscientiously pointed out. Too much stress cannot be laid upon the point that such animal data, carefully checked up with the human material, cannot safely be used for any other purpose than to discover what the facts are about the human body. When the discussion of human social institutions is taken up in Part II, the obvious assumption will always be that these rest upon human biology, and that we must not let our minds wander into vague analogies concerning birds, spiders or crustacea. BIBLIOGRAPHY FOR CHAPTER I 1. Loeb, Jacques. Artificial Parthenogenesis and Fertilization. Chicago, 1913. 2. Loeb, Jacques. The Organism as a Whole. N.Y., 1916, p. 125--brief summary of results of [1]. 3. Bower, Kerr & Agar. Sex and Heredity. N.Y., 1919, 119 pp. 4. Schaefer, E.A. Nature, Origin and Maintenance of Life. Science, n.s., Vol. 36, pp. 306 f., 1912. 5. Guyer, M.F. Being Well-Born. Indianapolis, 1916; p. 123. CHAPTER II SEX IN TERMS OF INTERNAL SECRETIONS Continuity of germplasm; The sex chromosome; The interna
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