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Show 576. Brace, 1970), pp. 164-96. (7) "All flesh is grass.": SoMBHY, p. 205. (7) The debate over spectacles: SoMBHY, p. 196. (8) Modern Humanism: David Ehrenfeld, The Arrogance of Humanism (New York: Oxford U. Press, 1978), p. 16-17. (8) "I have about made up my mind . . .": Huntington, FAC 625 (11), May 7, 1866. (8) The industrial accident: Huntington FAC 625 (11) , Aug. 12, 1866. (9) "I should like to invent . . .": LtF, p. 9; Sept. 13, 1866 (9) "How intensely I desire . . .": LtF, p. 9. (9) "My mind seems to so bury itself . . .": LtF, p. 9. (10) Dr. Carr and the "great book of Nature": LtF, p. 13. (10) Emulating Humboldt: SoMBHY, p. 207- (10) Grangers: see Ezra S. Carr, Th^Patrons of Husbandry on the Pacific Coast (San Francisco: A.L. Bancroft, 1875). (11) Mrs. Carr as guiding power: Verne A. Stadtman, The University of California, 1868-1968 (New York: McGraw Hill, 1970), pp. 69, 76, 80. (11) Ezra Carr's alliance with Henry George: Stadtman, p. 74. (ID "Social man . . .": Huntington, Carr, Papers, Ezra Carr, "Forestry: Its Relation to Civilization," tea. 1873], p. 26. This document refers to George Perkins Marsh, Man and Nature, ed. David Lowenthall (1864; rpt. Cambridge: Harvard U. Press, 1965). (12) "Love thy neighbor . . .-« Huntington CA 22, Jeanne Carr, "Christmas," [speech delivered to a Granger group, |