12 Gruber, H.E. and Barrett, P.M., Darwin on Man, a Psychological Study of Scientific Creativity: Together with Darwin's early and unpublished notebooks, Chicago, 1974Google Scholar; Herbert, S., ‘The place of man in the development of Darwin's theory of transmutation. Part I’, Journal of the History of Biology, (1974), 7, pp. 217–258CrossRefGoogle Scholar; also ‘The place of man in the development of Darwin's theory of transmutation. Part II’, Journal of the History of Biology, (1977), 10, pp. 155–227Google Scholar; Gillespie, N.C., Charles Darwin and the Problem of Creation, Chicago, 1979Google Scholar; Schweber, S.S., ‘The origin of the Origin revisited’, Journal of the History of Biology, (1977), 10, pp. 229–316CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed; Ospovat, D., ‘Perfect adaption and teleological explanation: approaches to the problem of the history of life in the mid-nineteenth century’, Studies in the History of Biology, (1978), 2, pp. 33–56Google Scholar; also The Development of Darwin's Theory: Natural history, natural theology, and natural selection, 1838–1859, Cambridge, 1981Google Scholar; Manier, E., The Young Darwin and his Cultural Circle: A study of influences which helped shape the language and logic of the first drafts of the theory of natural selection, Dordrecht, 1978CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Moore, J.R., The post-Darwinian Controversies: A study of the Protestant struggle to come to terms with Darwin in Great Britain and America, Cambridge, 1979CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Kohn, D., ‘Theories to work by: rejected theories, reproduction and Darwin's path to natural selection’, Studies in the History of Biology, (1980), 4, pp. 67–170Google ScholarPubMed; Richards, R.J., ‘Instinct and intelligence in British natural theology: some contributions to Darwin's theory of the evolution of behaviour’. Journal of the History of Biology, (1981), 14, pp. 193–230CrossRefGoogle Scholar: Brooke, J.H., op. cit. (7)Google Scholar. Although Darwin's religion was ripe for historical revision by the early 1960s, an egregious accident of publication forestalled that reinterpretation. Between 1960 and 1967 Gavin De Beer published Darwin's Notebooks B-E (1837–1839) on the transmutation of species (De Beer, G., Rowlands, M.J. and Skramovsky, B.M. (eds), ‘Darwin's notebooks on transmutation of species’, Bull. Brit. Mus. (Nat. Hist.) Hist.Ser., (1960–1967), ii, (2–6), pp. 23–183Google Scholar; iii, (5), pp. 129–176). But he chose not to publish Darwin's notebooks M — N, which dealt with Man and metaphysical questions. Notwithstanding the bald fact that Notebooks D and M are of identical manufacture and were probably opened on the same day and that the same parallel holds true for Notebooks E and N, De Beer apparently did not regard metaphysical enquiries on a par with transmutation. This disruption of archival context was corrected by Paul Barrett and Howard Gruber with the separate publication of Darwin's Notebooks M — N and related metaphysical notes in 1974. The wound has been finally healed with the recent unified edition of the Notebooks (Barrett, P.H., Herbert, S., Gautrey, P.J., Kohn, D. and Smith, S., (eds), Charles Darwin's Notebooks, 1836–1844: Geology, transmutation of species, metaphysical enquiries [Red Notebook ed. by S. Herbert; Notebooks B—E ed. by D. Kohn; Notebooks M—N, Old & Useless Notes and Macculloch Abstract ed. by P.H. Barrett], Cambridge and Ithaca, 1987).Google Scholar