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Introduction by Sir Julian HuxleyThe Phenomenon of Man is a very remarkable work by a very remarkable human being. Pere Teilhard de Chardin was at the same time a Jesuit Father and a distinguished palaeontologist. In The Phenomenon of Man he has effected a threefold synthesisof the material and physical world with the world of mind and spirit ; of the past with the future ; and of variety v^dth unity, the many with the one. He achieves this by examining every fact and every subject of his investigation sub specie evolutionis, vnth reference to its development in time and to its evolutionary position. Conversely, he is able to envisage the whole of know-able reahty not as a static mechanism but as a process. In consequence, he is driven to search for human significance in relation to the trends of that enduring and comprehensive process ; the measure of his stature is that he so largely succeeded in the search. I would like to introduce The Phenomenon of Man to Enghsh readers by attempting a summary of its general thesis, and of what appear to me to be its more important conclusions.I make no excuse for this personal approach. As I discovered when I first met Pere Teilhard in Paris in 1946, he and I were on the same quest, and had been pursuing parallel roads ever since we were young men in our twenties. Thus, to mention a few signposts which I independently found along my road, already in 1913 I had envisaged human evolution and biological evolution as two phases of a single process, but separated by a ' critical point after which the properties of the evolving material underwent radical change. This thesis I developed years later in my Uniqueness of Man, adding that man's evolution was unique in showing the dominance of convergence over divergence : inII