. The literary digest. .i Ton Chassis - f. o. b. Buffalo). ITie Literary Digest for March 29, 1919 123 SCIENCE AND INVENTION Continued SURVIVAL OF THE FITTEST INTHE WAR WE may be animals in om- bodilymake-up, but the war has provedthat we are more than that, and the peoplewho argued for a survival of the fitteston the zoological plane have learned some-thing, or should have done so. One ofmany reasons given for the continued studyof zoology, observes Dr. Herbert Osbornin an address before the zoological sectionof the American Association for the Ad-vancement of Science, printed in Scie


. The literary digest. .i Ton Chassis - f. o. b. Buffalo). ITie Literary Digest for March 29, 1919 123 SCIENCE AND INVENTION Continued SURVIVAL OF THE FITTEST INTHE WAR WE may be animals in om- bodilymake-up, but the war has provedthat we are more than that, and the peoplewho argued for a survival of the fitteston the zoological plane have learned some-thing, or should have done so. One ofmany reasons given for the continued studyof zoology, observes Dr. Herbert Osbornin an address before the zoological sectionof the American Association for the Ad-vancement of Science, printed in Science(New York), is that the great problems ofhuman society are fundamentally zoolog-ical. They are founded on the facts ofsex, industry, and other relations thatexist between animals to-day as they existbetween man and man. And in particularthe Great War may be looked upon as anincident in the struggle for existence thatis going on everywhere in animate Osborn is satisfied that the fittesthave finally come out on top, altho he isnot sure that the commo


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