Collingwood’s writings spanned both natural history and theology.
Scientific publications •
Twenty-one Essays on Various Subjects, Scientific and Literary (1865) – a collection of essays blending natural history, philosophy, and literary reflections. •
Rambles of a Naturalist on the Shores and Waters of the China Seas (1868) – his best‑known work, documenting voyages aboard HMS
Rifleman and HMS
Serpent, with descriptions of marine life and coastal ecology. •
The Travelling Birds (1872) – a study of bird migration, aimed at both scientific and general audiences. • Around forty papers on natural history in scientific periodicals, including detailed observations from his China Seas expedition.
Selected papers • "On recurrent animal form, and its significance in systematic zoology,"
Annals and Magazine of Natural History, 3rd series, vol. 6 (1860), pp. 81–91. • "On the Nudibranchiate Mollusca inhabiting the estuary of the Dee,"
Annals and Magazine of Natural History, 3rd series, vol. 6 (1860), pp. 196–202. • "Remarks upon oceanic forms of
Hydrozoa observed at sea,"
Annals and Magazine of Natural History, 3rd series, vol. 20 (1867), pp. 309–314. • "New species of Nudibranchs from the Eastern Seas,"
Journal of the Linnean Society of London, Zoology, vol. 14 (1879), pp. 737–738. • "The Natural History of Pratas Island in the China Sea,"
Journal of Science (April 1867). • "Instinct and Reason," read before the Victoria Institute, 2 December 1889; published in
Transactions of the Victoria Institute, vol. XXIV (1890), pp. 83–104.
Theological and philosophical writings Collingwood was a prominent member of the
New Jerusalem Church. He published several expositions of his religious beliefs: •
A Vision of Creation: A Poem with a Geological Introduction (1872) – an attempt to reconcile geological science with biblical creation. •
New Studies in Christian Theology (1883, published anonymously) – reflections on theology in light of modern science. •
Christ as Found in the Evangelists Compared with Present-Day Teaching (1883) – a comparative theological study. •
The Bible and the Age: Principles of Consistent Interpretation (1886) – a work on biblical hermeneutics and consistency of interpretation.
Debates with Darwin Collingwood was present at the meeting of the Linnean Society on 1 July 1858 when the joint papers by Charles Darwin and Alfred Russel Wallace on natural selection were first read. Following Louis Agassiz’s critical review of Darwin’s
On the Origin of Species in 1860, Collingwood aligned himself with Agassiz’s views and published two papers that year:
On Homomorphism: or organic representative form and
On recurrent animal form and its significance in systematic zoology. Darwin later mentioned Collingwood’s assertions in correspondence with Henry Walter Bates, particularly regarding mimicry. Bates’s 1861 paper on mimetic butterflies provided evidence for natural selection and was regarded as a decisive rebuttal of Collingwood’s analogy-based explanation. ==Legacy==