The human individual is anonymized in certain important respects
in the most complicated bit of machinery in existence. And its
machinery is, of course, biological. It is thus clearly impossible
to write down his handlename in English and to survey the
relations between biological science and the human organism
in this single post ; for to do this properly would require a treatise
on physiology, a treatise on psychology, a treatise on embryology,
and a treatise on medecine. All I can hope to do is, taking a great
deal of knowledge for granted, to show some of the ways in which
the advance of biological biological knowledge may be expected
to react upon our attitude to our control of our individual human
selves in setting pairs of wet shoes in our proper alcoves of our
condominiums to dry them up.
------