The Life and Letters of Charles Darwin, Volume I

Part 10 out of 10



that if ever I lived to see Lyell, yourself, and Huxley come round, partly
by my book, and partly by their own reflections, I should feel that the
subject is safe, and all the world might rail, but that ultimately the
theory of Natural Selection (though, no doubt, imperfect in its present
condition, and embracing many errors) would prevail. Nothing will ever
convince me that three such men, with so much diversified knowledge, and so
well accustomed to search for truth, could err greatly. I have spoken of
you here as a convert made by me; but I know well how much larger the share
has been of your own self-thought. I am intensely curious to hear Huxley's
opinion of my book. I fear my long discussion on Classification will
disgust him; for it is much opposed to what he once said to me.

But, how I am running on. You see how idle I am; but I have so enjoyed
your letter that you must forgive me. With respect to migration during the
glacial period: I think Lyell quite comprehends, for he has given me a
supporting fact. But, perhaps, he unconsciously hates (do not say so to
him) the view as slightly staggering him on his favourite theory of all
changes of climate being due to changes in the relative position of land
and water.

I will send copies of my book to all the men specified by you;...you would
be so kind as to add title, as Doctor, or Professor, or Monsieur, or Von,
and initials (when wanted), and addresses to the names on the enclosed
list, and let me have it pretty SOON, as towards the close of this week
Murray says the copies to go abroad will be ready. I am anxious to get my
view generally known, and not, I hope and think, for mere personal
conceit...


CHARLES DARWIN TO C. LYELL.
Ilkley, Yorkshire, October 25th [1859].

...Our difference on "principle of improvement" and "power of adaptation"
is too profound for discussion by letter. If I am wrong, I am quite blind
to my error. If I am right, our difference will be got over only by your
re-reading carefully and reflecting on my first four chapters. I
supplicate you to read these again carefully. The so-called improvement of
our Shorthorn cattle, pigeons, etc., does not presuppose or require any
aboriginal "power of adaptation," or "principle of improvement;" it
requires only diversified variability, and man to select or take advantage
of those modifications which are useful to him; so under nature any slight
modification which CHANCES to arise, and is useful to any creature, is
selected or preserved in the struggle for life; any modification which is
injurious is destroyed or rejected; any which is neither useful nor
injurious will be left a fluctuating element. When you contrast natural
selection and "improvement," you seem always to overlook (for I do not see
how you can deny) that every step in the natural selection of each species
implies improvement in that species in relation to its conditions of life.
No modification can be selected without it be an improvement or advantage.
Improvement implies, I suppose, each form obtaining many parts or organs,
all excellently adapted for their functions. As each species is improved,
and as the number of forms will have increased, if we look to the whole
course of time, the organic condition of life for other forms will become
more complex, and there will be a necessity for other forms to become
improved, or they will be exterminated; and I can see no limit to this
process of improvement, without the intervention of any other and direct
principle of improvement. All this seems to me quite compatible with
certain forms fitted for simple conditions, remaining unaltered, or being
degraded.

If I have a second edition, I will reiterate "Natural Selection," and, as a
general consequence, "Natural Improvement."

As you go, as far as you do, I begin strongly to think, judging from
myself, that you will go much further. How slowly the older geologists
admitted your grand views on existing geological causes of change!

If at any time you think I can answer any question, it is a real pleasure
to me to write.

Yours affectionately,
C. DARWIN.


CHARLES DARWIN TO J. MURRAY.
Ilkley, Yorkshire [1859].

My dear Sir,

I have received your kind note and the copy; I am infinitely pleased and
proud at the appearance of my child.

I quite agree to all you propose about price. But you are really too
generous about the, to me, scandalously heavy corrections. Are you not
acting unfairly towards yourself? Would it not be better at least to share
the 72 pounds 8 shillings? I shall be fully satisfied, for I had no
business to send, though quite unintentionally and unexpectedly, such badly
composed MS. to the printers.

Thank you for your kind offer to distribute the copies to my friends and
assistors as soon as possible. Do not trouble yourself much about the
foreigners, as Messrs. Williams and Norgate have most kindly offered to do
their best, and they are accustomed to send to all parts of the world.

I will pay for my copies whenever you like. I am so glad that you were so
good as to undertake the publication of my book.

My dear Sir, yours very sincerely,
CHARLES DARWIN.

P.S.--Please do not forget to let me hear about two days before the copies
are distributed.

I do not know when I shall leave this place, certainly not for several
weeks. Whenever I am in London I will call on you.


CHAPTER 1.XIV.

BY PROFESSOR HUXLEY.

ON THE RECEPTION OF THE 'ORIGIN OF SPECIES.'

To the present generation, that is to say, the people a few years on the
hither and thither side of thirty, the name of Charles Darwin stands
alongside of those of Isaac Newton and Michael Faraday; and, like them,
calls up the grand ideal of a searcher after truth and interpreter of
Nature. They think of him who bore it as a rare combination of genius,
industry, and unswerving veracity, who earned his place among the most
famous men of the age by sheer native power, in the teeth of a gale of
popular prejudice, and uncheered by a sign of favour or appreciation from
the official fountains of honour; as one who in spite of an acute
sensitiveness to praise and blame, and notwithstanding provocations which
might have excused any outbreak, kept himself clear of all envy, hatred,
and malice, nor dealt otherwise than fairly and justly with the unfairness
and injustice which was showered upon him; while, to the end of his days,
he was ready to listen with patience and respect to the most insignificant
of reasonable objectors.

And with respect to that theory of the origin of the forms of life peopling
our globe, with which Darwin's name is bound up as closely as that of
Newton with the theory of gravitation, nothing seems to be further from the
mind of the present generation than any attempt to smother it with ridicule
or to crush it by vehemence of denunciation. "The struggle for existence,"
and "Natural selection," have become household words and every-day
conceptions. The reality and the importance of the natural processes on
which Darwin founds his deductions are no more doubted than those of growth
and multiplication; and, whether the full potency attributed to them is
admitted or not, no one doubts their vast and far-reaching significance.
Wherever the biological sciences are studied, the 'Origin of Species'
lights the paths of the investigator; wherever they are taught it permeates
the course of instruction. Nor has the influence of Darwinian ideas been
less profound, beyond the realms of Biology. The oldest of all
philosophies, that of Evolution, was bound hand and foot and cast into
utter darkness during the millennium of theological scholasticism. But
Darwin poured new life-blood into the ancient frame; the bonds burst, and
the revivified thought of ancient Greece has proved itself to be a more
adequate expression of the universal order of things than any of the
schemes which have been accepted by the credulity and welcomed by the
superstition of seventy later generations of men.

To any one who studies the signs of the times, the emergence of the
philosophy of Evolution, in the attitude of claimant to the throne of the
world of thought, from the limbo of hated and, as many hoped, forgotten
things, is the most portentous event of the nineteenth century. But the
most effective weapons of the modern champions of Evolution were fabricated
by Darwin; and the 'Origin of Species' has enlisted a formidable body of
combatants, trained in the severe school of Physical Science, whose ears
might have long remained deaf to the speculations of a priori philosophers.

I do not think any candid or instructed person will deny the truth of that
which has just been asserted. He may hate the very name of Evolution, and
may deny its pretensions as vehemently as a Jacobite denied those of George
the Second. But there it is--not only as solidly seated as the Hanoverian
dynasty, but happily independent of Parliamentary sanction--and the dullest
antagonists have come to see that they have to deal with an adversary whose
bones are to be broken by no amount of bad words.

Even the theologians have almost ceased to pit the plain meaning of Genesis
against the no less plain meaning of Nature. Their more candid, or more
cautious, representatives have given up dealing with Evolution as if it
were a damnable heresy, and have taken refuge in one of two courses.
Either they deny that Genesis was meant to teach scientific truth, and thus
save the veracity of the record at the expense of its authority; or they
expend their energies in devising the cruel ingenuities of the reconciler,
and torture texts in the vain hope of making them confess the creed of
Science. But when the peine forte et dure is over, the antique sincerity
of the venerable sufferer always reasserts itself. Genesis is honest to
the core, and professes to be no more than it is, a repository of venerable
traditions of unknown origin, claiming no scientific authority and
possessing none.

As my pen finishes these passages, I can but be amused to think what a
terrible hubbub would have been made (in truth was made) about any similar
expressions of opinion a quarter of a century ago. In fact, the contrast
between the present condition of public opinion upon the Darwinian
question; between the estimation in which Darwin's views are now held in
the scientific world; between the acquiescence, or at least quiescence, of
the theologians of the self-respecting order at the present day and the
outburst of antagonism on all sides in 1858-9, when the new theory
respecting the origin of species first became known to the older generation
to which I belong, is so startling that, except for documentary evidence, I
should be sometimes inclined to think my memories dreams. I have a great
respect for the younger generation myself (they can write our lives, and
ravel out all our follies, if they choose to take the trouble, by and by),
and I should be glad to be assured that the feeling is reciprocal; but I am
afraid that the story of our dealings with Darwin may prove a great
hindrance to that veneration for our wisdom which I should like them to
display. We have not even the excuse that, thirty years ago, Mr. Darwin
was an obscure novice, who had no claims on our attention. On the
contrary, his remarkable zoological and geological investigations had long
given him an assured position among the most eminent and original
investigators of the day; while his charming 'Voyage of a Naturalist' had
justly earned him a wide-spread reputation among the general public. I
doubt if there was any man then living who had a better right to expect
that anything he might choose to say on such a question as the Origin of
Species would be listened to with profound attention, and discussed with
respect; and there was certainly no man whose personal character should
have afforded a better safeguard against attacks, instinct with malignity
and spiced with shameless impertinences.

Yet such was the portion of one of the kindest and truest men that it was
ever my good fortune to know; and years had to pass away before
misrepresentation, ridicule, and denunciation, ceased to be the most
notable constituents of the majority of the multitudinous criticisms of his
work which poured from the press. I am loth to rake any of these ancient
scandals from their well-deserved oblivion; but I must make good a
statement which may seem overcharged to the present generation, and there
is no piece justificative more apt for the purpose, or more worthy of such
dishonour, than the article in the 'Quarterly Review' for July, 1860. (I
was not aware when I wrote these passages that the authorship of the
article had been publicly acknowledged. Confession unaccompanied by
penitence, however, affords no ground for mitigation of judgment; and the
kindliness with which Mr. Darwin speaks of his assailant, Bishop
Wilberforce (vol.ii.), is so striking an exemplification of his singular
gentleness and modesty, that it rather increases one's indignation against
the presumption of his critic.) Since Lord Brougham assailed Dr. Young,
the world has seen no such specimen of the insolence of a shallow pretender
to a Master in Science as this remarkable production, in which one of the
most exact of observers, most cautious of reasoners, and most candid of
expositors, of this or any other age, is held up to scorn as a "flighty"
person, who endeavours "to prop up his utterly rotten fabric of guess and
speculation," and whose "mode of dealing with nature" is reprobated as
"utterly dishonourable to Natural Science." And all this high and mighty
talk, which would have been indecent in one of Mr. Darwin's equals,
proceeds from a writer whose want of intelligence, or of conscience, or of
both, is so great, that, by way of an objection to Mr. Darwin's views, he
can ask, "Is it credible that all favourable varieties of turnips are
tending to become men;" who is so ignorant of paleontology, that he can
talk of the "flowers and fruits" of the plants of the carboniferous epoch;
of comparative anatomy, that he can gravely affirm the poison apparatus of
the venomous snakes to be "entirely separate from the ordinary laws of
animal life, and peculiar to themselves;" of the rudiments of physiology,
that he can ask, "what advantage of life could alter the shape of the
corpuscles into which the blood can be evaporated?" Nor does the reviewer
fail to flavour this outpouring of preposterous incapacity with a little
stimulation of the odium theologicum. Some inkling of the history of the
conflicts between Astronomy, Geology, and Theology, leads him to keep a
retreat open by the proviso that he cannot "consent to test the truth of
Natural Science by the word of Revelation;" but, for all that, he devotes
pages to the exposition of his conviction that Mr. Darwin's theory
"contradicts the revealed relation of the creation to its Creator," and is
"inconsistent with the fulness of his glory."

If I confine my retrospect of the reception of the 'Origin of Species' to a
twelvemonth, or thereabouts, from the time of its publication, I do not
recollect anything quite so foolish and unmannerly as the 'Quarterly
Review' article, unless, perhaps, the address of a Reverend Professor to
the Dublin Geological Society might enter into competition with it. But a
large proportion of Mr. Darwin's critics had a lamentable resemblance to
the 'Quarterly' reviewer, in so far as they lacked either the will, or the
wit, to make themselves masters of his doctrine; hardly any possessed the
knowledge required to follow him through the immense range of biological
and geological science which the 'Origin' covered; while, too commonly,
they had prejudiced the case on theological grounds, and, as seems to be
inevitable when this happens, eked out lack of reason by superfluity of
railing.

But it will be more pleasant and more profitable to consider those
criticisms, which were acknowledged by writers of scientific authority, or
which bore internal evidence of the greater or less competency and, often,
of the good faith, of their authors. Restricting my survey to a
twelvemonth, or thereabouts, after the publication of the 'Origin,' I find
among such critics Louis Agassiz ("The arguments presented by Darwin in
favor of a universal derivation from one primary form of all the
peculiarities existing now among living beings have not made the slightest
impression on my mind."

"Until the facts of Nature are shown to have been mistaken by those who
have collected them, and that they have a different meaning from that now
generally assigned to them, I shall therefore consider the transmutation
theory as a scientific mistake, untrue in its facts, unscientific in its
method, and mischievous in its tendency."--Silliman's 'Journal,' July,
1860, pages 143, 154. Extract from the 3rd volume of 'Contributions to the
Natural History of the United States.'); Murray, an excellent entomologist;
Harvey, a botanist of considerable repute; and the author of an article in
the 'Edinburgh Review,' all strongly adverse to Darwin. Pictet, the
distinguished and widely learned paleontogist of Geneva, treats Mr. Darwin
with a respect which forms a grateful contrast to the tone of some of the
preceding writers, but consents to go with him only a very little way. ("I
see no serious objections to the formation of varieties by natural
selection in the existing world, and that, so far as earlier epochs are
concerned, this law may be assumed to explain the origin of closely allied
species, supposing for this purpose a very long period of time."

"With regard to simple varieties and closely allied species, I believe that
Mr. Darwin's theory may explain many things, and throw a great light upon
numerous questions."--'Sur l'Origine de l'Espece. Par Charles Darwin.'
'Archives des Sc. de la Bibliotheque Universelle de Geneve,' pages 242,
243, Mars 1860.) On the other hand, Lyell, up to that time a pillar of the
anti-transmutationists (who regarded him, ever afterwards, as Pallas Athene
may have looked at Dian, after the Endymion affair), declared himself a
Darwinian, though not without putting in a serious caveat. Nevertheless,
he was a tower of strength, and his courageous stand for truth as against
consistency, did him infinite honour. As evolutionists, sans phrase, I do
not call to mind among the biologists more than Asa Gray, who fought the
battle splendidly in the United States; Hooker, who was no less vigorous
here; the present Sir John Lubbock and myself. Wallace was far away in the
Malay Archipelago; but, apart from his direct share in the promulgation of
the theory of natural selection, no enumeration of the influences at work,
at the time I am speaking of, would be complete without the mention of his
powerful essay 'On the Law which has regulated the Introduction of New
Species,' which was published in 1855. On reading it afresh, I have been
astonished to recollect how small was the impression it made.

In France, the influence of Elie de Beaumont and of Flourens--the former of
whom is said to have "damned himself to everlasting fame" by inventing the
nickname of "la science moussante" for Evolutionism (One is reminded of the
effect of another small academic epigram. The so-called vertebral theory
of the skull is said to have been nipped in the bud in France by the
whisper of an academician to his neighbour, that, in that case, one's head
was a "vertebre pensante."),--to say nothing of the ill-will of other
powerful members of the Institut, produced for a long time the effect of a
conspiracy of silence; and many years passed before the Academy redeemed
itself from the reproach that the name of Darwin was not to be found on the
list of its members. However, an accomplished writer, out of the range of
academical influences, M. Laugel, gave an excellent and appreciative notice
of the 'Origin' in the 'Revue des Deux Mondes.' Germany took time to
consider; Bronn produced a slightly Bowdlerized translation of the
'Origin'; and 'Kladderadatsch' cut his jokes upon the ape origin of man;
but I do not call to mind that any scientific notability declared himself
publicly in 1860. (However, the man who stands next to Darwin in his
influence on modern biologists, K.E. von Baer, wrote to me, in August 1860,
expressing his general assent to evolutionist views. His phrase, "J'ai
enonce les memes idees...que M. Darwin" (volume ii.) is shown by his
subsequent writings to mean no more than this.) None of us dreamed that,
in the course of a few years, the strength (and perhaps I may add the
weakness) of "Darwinismus" would have its most extensive and most brilliant
illustrations in the land of learning. If a foreigner may presume to
speculate on the cause of this curious interval of silence, I fancy it was
that one moiety of the German biologists were orthodox at any price, and
the other moiety as distinctly heterodox. The latter were evolutionists, a
priori, already, and they must have felt the disgust natural to deductive
philosophers at being offered an inductive and experimental foundation for
a conviction which they had reached by a shorter cut. It is undoubtedly
trying to learn that, though your conclusions may be all right, your
reasons for them are all wrong, or, at any rate, insufficient.

On the whole, then, the supporters of Mr. Darwin's views in 1860 were
numerically extremely insignificant. There is not the slightest doubt
that, if a general council of the Church scientific had been held at that
time, we should have been condemned by an overwhelming majority. And there
is as little doubt that, if such a council gathered now, the decree would
be of an exactly contrary nature. It would indicate a lack of sense, as
well as of modesty, to ascribe to the men of that generation less capacity
or less honesty than their successors possess. What, then, are the causes
which led instructed and fair-judging men of that day to arrive at a
judgment so different from that which seems just and fair to those who
follow them? That is really one of the most interesting of all questions
connected with the history of science, and I shall try to answer it. I am
afraid that in order to do so I must run the risk of appearing egotistical.
However, if I tell my own story it is only because I know it better than
that of other people.

I think I must have read the 'Vestiges' before I left England in 1846; but,
if I did, the book made very little impression upon me, and I was not
brought into serious contact with the 'Species' question until after 1850.
At that time, I had long done with the Pentateuchal cosmogony, which had
been impressed upon my childish understanding as Divine truth, with all the
authority of parents and instructors, and from which it had cost me many a
struggle to get free. But my mind was unbiassed in respect of any doctrine
which presented itself, if it professed to be based on purely philosophical
and scientific reasoning. It seemed to me then (as it does now) that
"creation," in the ordinary sense of the word, is perfectly conceivable. I
find no difficulty in imagining that, at some former period, this universe
was not in existence; and that it made its appearance in six days (or
instantaneously, if that is preferred), in consequence of the volition of
some pre-existent Being. Then, as now, the so-called a priori arguments
against Theism; and, given a Deity, against the possibility of creative
acts, appeared to me to be devoid of reasonable foundation. I had not
then, and I have not now, the smallest a priori objection to raise to the
account of the creation of animals and plants given in 'Paradise Lost,' in
which Milton so vividly embodies the natural sense of Genesis. Far be it
from me to say that it is untrue because it is impossible. I confine
myself to what must be regarded as a modest and reasonable request for some
particle of evidence that the existing species of animals and plants did
originate in that way, as a condition of my belief in a statement which
appears to me to be highly improbable.

And, by way of being perfectly fair, I had exactly the same answer to give
to the evolutionists of 1851-8. Within the ranks of the biologists, at
that time, I met with nobody, except Dr. Grant, of University College, who
had a word to say for Evolution--and his advocacy was not calculated to
advance the cause. Outside these ranks, the only person known to me whose
knowledge and capacity compelled respect, and who was, at the same time, a
thorough-going evolutionist, was Mr. Herbert Spencer, whose acquaintance I
made, I think, in 1852, and then entered into the bonds of a friendship
which, I am happy to think, has known no interruption. Many and prolonged
were the battles we fought on this topic. But even my friend's rare
dialectic skill and copiousness of apt illustration could not drive me from
my agnostic position. I took my stand upon two grounds: firstly, that up
to that time, the evidence in favour of transmutation was wholly
insufficient; and secondly, that no suggestion respecting the causes of the
transmutation assumed, which had been made, was in any way adequate to
explain the phenomena. Looking back at the state of knowledge at that
time, I really do not see that any other conclusion was justifiable.

In those days I had never even heard of Treviranus' 'Biologie.' However, I
had studied Lamarck attentively and I had read the 'Vestiges' with due
care; but neither of them afforded me any good ground for changing my
negative and critical attitude. As for the 'Vestiges,' I confess that the
book simply irritated me by the prodigious ignorance and thoroughly
unscientific habit of mind manifested by the writer. If it had any
influence on me at all, it set me against Evolution; and the only review I
ever have qualms of conscience about, on the ground of needless savagery,
is one I wrote on the 'Vestiges' while under that influence.

With respect to the 'Philosophie Zoologique,' it is no reproach to Lamarck
to say that the discussion of the Species question in that work, whatever
might be said for it in 1809, was miserably below the level of the
knowledge of half a century later. In that interval of time the
elucidation of the structure of the lower animals and plants had given rise
to wholly new conceptions of their relations; histology and embryology, in
the modern sense, had been created; physiology had been reconstituted; the
facts of distribution, geological and geographical, had been prodigiously
multiplied and reduced to order. To any biologist whose studies had
carried him beyond mere species-mongering in 1850, one-half of Lamarck's
arguments were obsolete and the other half erroneous, or defective, in
virtue of omitting to deal with the various classes of evidence which had
been brought to light since his time. Moreover his one suggestion as to
the cause of the gradual modification of species--effort excited by change
of conditions--was, on the face of it, inapplicable to the whole vegetable
world. I do not think that any impartial judge who reads the 'Philosophie
Zoologique' now, and who afterwards takes up Lyell's trenchant and
effectual criticism (published as far back as 1830), will be disposed to
allot to Lamarck a much higher place in the establishment of biological
evolution than that which Bacon assigns to himself in relation to physical
science generally,--buccinator tantum. (Erasmus Darwin first promulgated
Lamarck's fundamental conceptions, and, with greater logical consistency,
he had applied them to plants. But the advocates of his claims have failed
to show that he, in any respect, anticipated the central idea of the
'Origin of Species.')

But, by a curious irony of fate, the same influence which led me to put as
little faith in modern speculations on this subject, as in the venerable
traditions recorded in the first two chapters of Genesis, was perhaps more
potent than any other in keeping alive a sort of pious conviction that
Evolution, after all, would turn out true. I have recently read afresh the
first edition of the 'Principles of Geology'; and when I consider that this
remarkable book had been nearly thirty years in everybody's hands, and that
it brings home to any reader of ordinary intelligence a great principle and
a great fact--the principle, that the past must be explained by the
present, unless good cause be shown to the contrary; and the fact, that, so
far as our knowledge of the past history of life on our globe goes, no such
cause can be shown (The same principle and the same fact guide the result
from all sound historical investigation. Grote's 'History of Greece' is a
product of the same intellectual movement as Lyell's 'Principles.')--I
cannot but believe that Lyell, for others, as for myself, was the chief
agent for smoothing the road for Darwin. For consistent uniformitarianism
postulates evolution as much in the organic as in the inorganic world. The
origin of a new species by other than ordinary agencies would be a vastly
greater "catastrophe" than any of those which Lyell successfully eliminated
from sober geological speculation.

In fact, no one was better aware of this than Lyell himself. (Lyell, with
perfect right, claims this position for himself. He speaks of having
"advocated a law of continuity even in the organic world, so far as
possible without adopting Lamarck's theory of transmutation"...

"But while I taught that as often as certain forms of animals and plants
disappeared, for reasons quite intelligible to us, others took their place
by virtue of a causation which was beyond our comprehension; it remained
for Darwin to accumulate proof that there is no break between the incoming
and the outgoing species, that they are the work of evolution, and not of
special creation...

"I had certainly prepared the way in this country, in six editions of my
work before the 'Vestiges of Creation' appeared in 1842 [1844], for the
reception of Darwin's gradual and insensible evolution of species."--'Life
and Letters,' Letter to Haeckel, volume ii. page 436. November 23, 1868.)
If one reads any of the earlier editions of the 'Principles' carefully
(especially by the light of the interesting series of letters recently
published by Sir Charles Lyell's biographer), it is easy to see that, with
all his energetic opposition to Lamarck, on the one hand, and to the ideal
quasi-progressionism of Agassiz, on the other, Lyell, in his own mind, was
strongly disposed to account for the origination of all past and present
species of living things by natural causes. But he would have liked, at
the same time, to keep the name of creation for a natural process which he
imagined to be incomprehensible.

In a letter addressed to Mantell (dated March 2, 1827), Lyell speaks of
having just read Lamarck; he expresses his delight at Lamarck's theories,
and his personal freedom from any objection based on theological grounds.
And though he is evidently alarmed at the pithecoid origin of man involved
in Lamarck's doctrine, he observes:--

"But, after all, what changes species may really undergo! How impossible
will it be to distinguish and lay down a line, beyond which some of the so-
called extinct species have never passed into recent ones."

Again, the following remarkable passage occurs in the postscript of a
letter addressed to Sir John Herschel in 1836:--

"In regard to the origination of new species, I am very glad to find that
you think it probable that it may be carried on through the intervention of
intermediate causes. I left this rather to be inferred, not thinking it
worth while to offend a certain class of persons by embodying in words what
would only be a speculation." (In the same sense, see the letter to
Whewell, March 7, 1837, volume ii., page 5:--

"In regard to this last subject [the changes from one set of animal and
vegetable species to another]...you remember what Herschel said in his
letter to me. If I had stated as plainly as he has done the possibility of
the introduction or origination of fresh species being a natural, in
contradistinction to a miraculous process, I should have raised a host of
prejudices against me, which are unfortunately opposed at every step to any
philosopher who attempts to address the public on these mysterious
subjects." See also letter to Sedgwick, January 12, 1838 ii. page 35.) He
goes on to refer to the criticisms which have been directed against him on
the ground that, by leaving species to be originated by miracle, he is
inconsistent with his own doctrine of uniformitarianism; and he leaves it
to be understood that he had not replied, on the ground of his general
objection to controversy.

Lyell's contemporaries were not without some inkling of his esoteric
doctrine. Whewell's 'History of the Inductive Sciences,' whatever its
philosophical value, is always worth reading and always interesting, if
under no other aspect than that of an evidence of the speculative limits
within which a highly-placed divine might, at that time, safely range at
will. In the course of his discussion of uniformitarianism, the
encyclopaedic Master of Trinity observes:--

"Mr. Lyell, indeed, has spoken of an hypothesis that 'the successive
creation of species may constitute a regular part of the economy of
nature,' but he has nowhere, I think, so described this process as to make
it appear in what department of science we are to place the hypothesis.
Are these new species created by the production, at long intervals, of an
offspring different in species from the parents? Or are the species so
created produced without parents? Are they gradually evolved from some
embryo substance? Or do they suddenly start from the ground, as in the
creation of the poet?...

"Some selection of one of these forms of the hypothesis, rather than the
others, with evidence for the selection, is requisite to entitle us to
place it among the known causes of change, which in this chapter we are
considering. The bare conviction that a creation of species has taken
place, whether once or many times, so long as it is unconnected with our
organical sciences, is a tenet of Natural Theology rather than of Physical
Philosophy." (Whewell's 'History,' volume iii. page 639-640 (Edition 2,
1847.))

The earlier part of this criticism appears perfectly just and appropriate;
but, from the concluding paragraph, Whewell evidently imagines that by
"creation" Lyell means a preternatural intervention of the Deity; whereas
the letter to Herschel shows that, in his own mind, Lyell meant natural
causation; and I see no reason to doubt (The following passages in Lyell's
letters appear to me decisive on this point:--

To Darwin, October 3, 1859 (ii, 325), on first reading the 'Origin.'

"I have long seen most clearly that if any concession is made, all that you
claim in your concluding pages will follow.

"It is this which has made me so long hesitate, always feeling that the
case of Man and his Races, and of other animals, and that of plants, is one
and the same, and that if a vera causa be admitted for one instant,
[instead] of a purely unknown and imaginary one, such as the word
'creation,' all the consequences must follow."

To Darwin, March 15, 1863 (volume ii. page 365).

"I remember that it was the conclusion he [Lamarck] came to about man that
fortified me thirty years ago against the great impression which his
arguments at first made on my mind, all the greater because Constant
Prevost, a pupil of Cuvier's forty years ago, told me his conviction 'that
Cuvier thought species not real, but that science could not advance without
assuming that they were so.'"

To Hooker, March 9, 1863 (volume ii. page 361), in reference to Darwin's
feeling about the 'Antiquity of Man.'

"He [Darwin] seems much disappointed that I do not go farther with him, or
do not speak out more. I can only say that I have spoken out to the full
extent of my present convictions, and even beyond my state of FEELING as to
man's unbroken descent from the brutes, and I find I am half converting not
a few who were in arms against Darwin, and are even now against Huxley."
He speaks of having had to abandon "old and long cherished ideas, which
constituted the charm to me of the theoretical part of the science in my
earlier day, when I believed with Pascal in the theory, as Hallam terms it,
of 'the arch-angel ruined.'"

See the same sentiment in the letter to Darwin, March 11, 1863, page 363:--

"I think the old 'creation' is almost as much required as ever, but of
course it takes a new form if Lamarck's views improved by yours are
adopted.") that, if Sir Charles could have avoided the inevitable corollary
of the pithecoid origin of man--for which, to the end of his life, he
entertained a profound antipathy--he would have advocated the efficiency of
causes now in operation to bring about the condition of the organic world,
as stoutly as he championed that doctrine in reference to inorganic nature.

The fact is, that a discerning eye might have seen that some form or other
of the doctrine of transmutation was inevitable, from the time when the
truth enunciated by William Smith that successive strata are characterised
by different kinds of fossil remains, became a firmly established law of
nature. No one has set forth the speculative consequences of this
generalisation better than the historian of the 'Inductive Sciences':--

"But the study of geology opens to us the spectacle of many groups of
species which have, in the course of the earth's history, succeeded each
other at vast intervals of time; one set of animals and plants
disappearing, as it would seem, from the face of our planet, and others,
which did not before exist, becoming the only occupants of the globe. And
the dilemma then presents itself to us anew:--either we must accept the
doctrine of the transmutation of species, and must suppose that the
organized species of one geological epoch were transmuted into those of
another by some long-continued agency of natural causes; or else, we must
believe in many successive acts of creation and extinction of species, out
of the common course of nature; acts which, therefore, we may properly call
miraculous." (Whewell's 'History of the Inductive Sciences.' Edition ii.,
1847, volume iii. pages 624-625. See for the author's verdict, pages 638-
39.)

Dr. Whewell decides in favour of the latter conclusion. And if any one had
plied him with the four questions which he puts to Lyell in the passage
already cited, all that can be said now is that he would certainly have
rejected the first. But would he really have had the courage to say that a
Rhinoceros tichorhinus, for instance, "was produced without parents;" or
was "evolved from some embryo substance;" or that it suddenly started from
the ground like Milton's lion "pawing to get free his hinder parts." I
permit myself to doubt whether even the Master of Trinity's well-tried
courage--physical, intellectual, and moral--would have been equal to this
feat. No doubt the sudden concurrence of half-a-ton of inorganic molecules
into a live rhinoceros is conceivable, and therefore may be possible. But
does such an event lie sufficiently within the bounds of probability to
justify the belief in its occurrence on the strength of any attainable, or,
indeed, imaginable, evidence?

In view of the assertion (often repeated in the early days of the
opposition to Darwin) that he had added nothing to Lamarck, it is very
interesting to observe that the possibility of a fifth alternative, in
addition to the four he has stated, has not dawned upon Dr. Whewell's mind.
The suggestion that new species may result from the selective action of
external conditions upon the variations from their specific type which
individuals present--and which we call "spontaneous," because we are
ignorant of their causation--is as wholly unknown to the historian of
scientific ideas as it was to biological specialists before 1858. But that
suggestion is the central idea of the 'Origin of Species,' and contains the
quintessence of Darwinism.

Thus, looking back into the past, it seems to me that my own position of
critical expectancy was just and reasonable, and must have been taken up,
on the same grounds, by many other persons. If Agassiz told me that the
forms of life which had successively tenanted the globe were the
incarnations of successive thoughts of the Deity; and that he had wiped out
one set of these embodiments by an appalling geological catastrophe as soon
as His ideas took a more advanced shape, I found myself not only unable to
admit the accuracy of the deductions from the facts of paleontology, upon
which this astounding hypothesis was founded, but I had to confess my want
of any means of testing the correctness of his explanation of them. And
besides that, I could by no means see what the explanation explained.
Neither did it help me to be told by an eminent anatomist that species had
succeeded one another in time, in virtue of "a continuously operative
creational law." That seemed to me to be no more than saying that species
had succeeded one another, in the form of a vote-catching resolution, with
"law" to please the man of science, and "creational" to draw the orthodox.
So I took refuge in that "thatige Skepsis" which Goethe has so well
defined; and, reversing the apostolic precept to be all things to all men,
I usually defended the tenability of the received doctrines, when I had to
do with the transmutationists; and stood up for the possibility of
transmutation among the orthodox--thereby, no doubt, increasing an already
current, but quite undeserved, reputation for needless combativeness.

I remember, in the course of my first interview with Mr. Darwin, expressing
my belief in the sharpness of the lines of demarcation between natural
groups and in the absence of transitional forms, with all the confidence of
youth and imperfect knowledge. I was not aware, at that time, that he had
then been many years brooding over the species-question; and the humorous
smile which accompanied his gentle answer, that such was not altogether his
view, long haunted and puzzled me. But it would seem that four or five
years' hard work had enabled me to understand what it meant; for Lyell
('Life and Letters,' volume ii. page 212.), writing to Sir Charles Bunbury
(under date of April 30, 1856), says:--

"When Huxley, Hooker, and Wollaston were at Darwin's last week they (all
four of them) ran a tilt against species--further, I believe, than they are
prepared to go."

I recollect nothing of this beyond the fact of meeting Mr. Wollaston; and
except for Sir Charles' distinct assurance as to "all four," I should have
thought my "outrecuidance" was probably a counterblast to Wollaston's
conservatism. With regard to Hooker, he was already, like Voltaire's
Habbakuk, "capable du tout" in the way of advocating Evolution.

As I have already said, I imagine that most of those of my contemporaries
who thought seriously about the matter, were very much in my own state of
mind--inclined to say to both Mosaists and Evolutionists, "a plague on both
your houses!" and disposed to turn aside from an interminable and
apparently fruitless discussion, to labour in the fertile fields of
ascertainable fact. And I may, therefore, further suppose that the
publication of the Darwin and Wallace papers in 1858, and still more that
of the 'Origin' in 1859, had the effect upon them of the flash of light,
which to a man who has lost himself in a dark night, suddenly reveals a
road which, whether it takes him straight home or not, certainly goes his
way. That which we were looking for, and could not find, was a hypothesis
respecting the origin of known organic forms, which assumed the operation
of no causes but such as could be proved to be actually at work. We
wanted, not to pin our faith to that or any other speculation, but to get
hold of clear and definite conceptions which could be brought face to face
with facts and have their validity tested. The 'Origin' provided us with
the working hypothesis we sought. Moreover, it did the immense service of
freeing us for ever from the dilemma--refuse to accept the creation
hypothesis, and what have you to propose that can be accepted by any
cautious reasoner? In 1857, I had no answer ready, and I do not think that
any one else had. A year later, we reproached ourselves with dullness for
being perplexed by such an inquiry. My reflection, when I first made
myself master of the central idea of the 'Origin,' was, "How extremely
stupid not to have thought of that!" I suppose that Columbus' companions
said much the same when he made the egg stand on end. The facts of
variability, of the struggle for existence, of adaptation to conditions,
were notorious enough; but none of us had suspected that the road to the
heart of the species problem lay through them, until Darwin and Wallace
dispelled the darkness, and the beacon-fire of the 'Origin' guided the
benighted.

Whether the particular shape which the doctrine of evolution, as applied to
the organic world, took in Darwin's hands, would prove to be final or not,
was, to me, a matter of indifference. In my earliest criticisms of the
'Origin' I ventured to point out that its logical foundation was insecure
so long as experiments in selective breeding had not produced varieties
which were more or less infertile; and that insecurity remains up to the
present time. But, with any and every critical doubt which my sceptical
ingenuity could suggest, the Darwinian hypothesis remained incomparably
more probable than the creation hypothesis. And if we had none of us been
able to discern the paramount significance of some of the most patent and
notorious of natural facts, until they were, so to speak, thrust under our
noses, what force remained in the dilemma--creation or nothing? It was
obvious that, hereafter, the probability would be immensely greater, that
the links of natural causation were hidden from our purblind eyes, than
that natural causation should be incompetent to produce all the phenomena
of nature. The only rational course for those who had no other object than
the attainment of truth, was to accept "Darwinism" as a working hypothesis,
and see what could be made of it. Either it would prove its capacity to
elucidate the facts of organic life, or it would break down under the
strain. This was surely the dictate of common sense; and, for once, common
sense carried the day. The result has been that complete volte-face of the
whole scientific world, which must seem so surprising to the present
generation. I do not mean to say that all the leaders of biological
science have avowed themselves Darwinians; but I do not think that there is
a single zoologist, or botanist, or palaeontologist, among the multitude of
active workers of this generation, who is other than an evolutionist,
profoundly influenced by Darwin's views. Whatever may be the ultimate fate
of the particular theory put forth by Darwin, I venture to affirm that, so
far as my knowledge goes, all the ingenuity and all the learning of hostile
critics have not enabled them to adduce a solitary fact, of which it can be
said, this is irreconcilable with the Darwinian theory. In the prodigious
variety and complexity of organic nature, there are multitudes of phenomena
which are not deducible from any generalisations we have yet reached. But
the same may be said of every other class of natural objects. I believe
that astronomers cannot yet get the moon's motions into perfect accordance
with the theory of gravitation.

It would be inappropriate, even if it were possible, to discuss the
difficulties and unresolved problems which have hitherto met the
evolutionist, and which will probably continue to puzzle him for
generations to come, in the course of this brief history of the reception
of Mr. Darwin's great work. But there are two or three objections of a
more general character, based, or supposed to be based, upon philosophical
and theological foundations, which were loudly expressed in the early days
of the Darwinian controversy, and which, though they have been answered
over and over again, crop up now and then to the present day.

The most singular of these, perhaps immortal, fallacies, which live on,
Tithonus-like, when sense and force have long deserted them, is that which
charges Mr. Darwin with having attempted to reinstate the old pagan
goddess, Chance. It is said that he supposes variations to come about "by
chance," and that the fittest survive the "chances" of the struggle for
existence, and thus "chance" is substituted for providential design.

It is not a little wonderful that such an accusation as this should be
brought against a writer who has, over and over again, warned his readers
that when he uses the word "spontaneous," he merely means that he is
ignorant of the cause of that which is so termed; and whose whole theory
crumbles to pieces if the uniformity and regularity of natural causation
for illimitable past ages is denied. But probably the best answer to those
who talk of Darwinism meaning the reign of "chance," is to ask them what
they themselves understand by "chance"? Do they believe that anything in
this universe happens without reason or without a cause? Do they really
conceive that any event has no cause, and could not have been predicted by
any one who had a sufficient insight into the order of Nature? If they do,
it is they who are the inheritors of antique superstition and ignorance,
and whose minds have never been illumined by a ray of scientific thought.
The one act of faith in the convert to science, is the confession of the
universality of order and of the absolute validity in all times and under
all circumstances, of the law of causation. This confession is an act of
faith, because, by the nature of the case, the truth of such propositions
is not susceptible of proof. But such faith is not blind, but reasonable;
because it is invariably confirmed by experience, and constitutes the sole
trustworthy foundation for all action.

If one of these people, in whom the chance-worship of our remoter ancestors
thus strangely survives, should be within reach of the sea when a heavy
gale is blowing, let him betake himself to the shore and watch the scene.
Let him note the infinite variety of form and size of the tossing waves out
at sea; or of the curves of their foam-crested breakers, as they dash
against the rocks; let him listen to the roar and scream of the shingle as
it is cast up and torn down the beach; or look at the flakes of foam as
they drive hither and thither before the wind; or note the play of colours,
which answers a gleam of sunshine as it falls upon the myriad bubbles.
Surely here, if anywhere, he will say that chance is supreme, and bend the
knee as one who has entered the very penetralia of his divinity. But the
man of science knows that here, as everywhere, perfect order is manifested;
that there is not a curve of the waves, not a note in the howling chorus,
not a rainbow-glint on a bubble, which is other than a necessary
consequence of the ascertained laws of nature; and that with a sufficient
knowledge of the conditions, competent physico-mathematical skill could
account for, and indeed predict, every one of these "chance" events.

A second very common objection to Mr. Darwin's views was (and is), that
they abolish Teleology, and eviscerate the argument from design. It is
nearly twenty years since I ventured to offer some remarks on this subject,
and as my arguments have as yet received no refutation, I hope I may be
excused for reproducing them. I observed, "that the doctrine of Evolution
is the most formidable opponent of all the commoner and coarser forms of
Teleology. But perhaps the most remarkable service to the Philosophy of
Biology rendered by Mr. Darwin is the reconciliation of Teleology and
Morphology, and the explanation of the facts of both, which his views
offer. The teleology which supposes that the eye, such as we see it in
man, or one of the higher vertebrata, was made with the precise structure
it exhibits, for the purpose of enabling the animal which possesses it to
see, has undoubtedly received its death-blow. Nevertheless, it is
necessary to remember that there is a wider teleology which is not touched
by the doctrine of Evolution, but is actually based upon the fundamental
proposition of Evolution. This proposition is that the whole world, living
and not living, is the result of the mutual interaction, according to
definite laws, of the forces (I should now like to substitute the word
powers for "forces.") possessed by the molecules of which the primitive
nebulosity of the universe was composed. If this be true, it is no less
certain that the existing world lay potentially in the cosmic vapour, and
that a sufficient intelligence could, from a knowledge of the properties of
the molecules of that vapour, have predicted, say the state of the fauna of
Britain in 1869, with as much certainty as one can say what will happen to
the vapour of the breath on a cold winter's day...

...The teleological and the mechanical views of nature are not,
necessarily, mutually exclusive. On the contrary, the more purely a
mechanist the speculator is, the more firmly does he assume a primordial
molecular arrangement of which all the phenomena of the universe are the
consequences, and the more completely is he thereby at the mercy of the
teleologist, who can always defy him to disprove that this primordial
molecular arrangement was not intended to evolve the phenomena of the
universe." (The "Genealogy of Animals" ('The Academy,' 1869), reprinted in
'Critiques and Addresses.')

The acute champion of Teleology, Paley, saw no difficulty in admitting that
the "production of things" may be the result of trains of mechanical
dispositions fixed beforehand by intelligent appointment and kept in action
by a power at the centre ('Natural Theology,' chapter xxiii.), that is to
say, he proleptically accepted the modern doctrine of Evolution; and his
successors might do well to follow their leader, or at any rate to attend
to his weighty reasonings, before rushing into an antagonism which has no
reasonable foundation.

Having got rid of the belief in chance and the disbelief in design, as in
no sense appurtenances of Evolution, the third libel upon that doctrine,
that it is anti-theistic, might perhaps be left to shift for itself. But
the persistence with which many people refuse to draw the plainest
consequences from the propositions they profess to accept, renders it
advisable to remark that the doctrine of Evolution is neither Anti-theistic
nor Theistic. It simply has no more to do with Theism than the first book
of Euclid has. It is quite certain that a normal fresh-laid egg contains
neither cock nor hen; and it is also as certain as any proposition in
physics or morals, that if such an egg is kept under proper conditions for
three weeks, a cock or hen chicken will be found in it. It is also quite
certain that if the shell were transparent we should be able to watch the
formation of the young fowl, day by day, by a process of evolution, from a
microscopic cellular germ to its full size and complication of structure.
Therefore Evolution, in the strictest sense, is actually going on in this
and analogous millions and millions of instances, wherever living creatures
exist. Therefore, to borrow an argument from Butler, as that which now
happens must be consistent with the attributes of the Deity, if such a
Being exists, Evolution must be consistent with those attributes. And, if
so, the evolution of the universe, which is neither more nor less
explicable than that of a chicken, must also be consistent with them. The
doctrine of Evolution, therefore, does not even come into contact with
Theism, considered as a philosophical doctrine. That with which it does
collide, and with which it is absolutely inconsistent, is the conception of
creation, which theological speculators have based upon the history
narrated in the opening of the book of Genesis.

There is a great deal of talk and not a little lamentation about the so-
called religious difficulties which physical science has created. In
theological science, as a matter of fact, it has created none. Not a
solitary problem presents itself to the philosophical Theist, at the
present day, which has not existed from the time that philosophers began to
think out the logical grounds and the logical consequences of Theism. All
the real or imaginary perplexities which flow from the conception of the
universe as a determinate mechanism, are equally involved in the assumption
of an Eternal, Omnipotent and Omniscient Deity. The theological equivalent
of the scientific conception of order is Providence; and the doctrine of
determinism follows as surely from the attributes of foreknowledge assumed
by the theologian, as from the universality of natural causation assumed by
the man of science. The angels in 'Paradise Lost' would have found the
task of enlightening Adam upon the mysteries of "Fate, Foreknowledge, and
Free-will," not a whit more difficult, if their pupil had been educated in
a "Real-schule" and trained in every laboratory of a modern university. In
respect of the great problems of Philosophy, the post-Darwinian generation
is, in one sense, exactly where the prae-Darwinian generations were. They
remain insoluble. But the present generation has the advantage of being
better provided with the means of freeing itself from the tyranny of
certain sham solutions.

The known is finite, the unknown infinite; intellectually we stand on an
islet in the midst of an illimitable ocean of inexplicability. Our
business in every generation is to reclaim a little more land, to add
something to the extent and the solidity of our possessions. And even a
cursory glance at the history of the biological sciences during the last
quarter of a century is sufficient to justify the assertion, that the most
potent instrument for the extension of the realm of natural knowledge which
has come into men's hands, since the publication of Newton's 'Principia,'
is Darwin's 'Origin of Species.'

It was badly received by the generation to which it was first addressed,
and the outpouring of angry nonsense to which it gave rise is sad to think
upon. But the present generation will probably behave just as badly if
another Darwin should arise, and inflict upon them that which the
generality of mankind most hate--the necessity of revising their
convictions. Let them, then, be charitable to us ancients; and if they
behave no better than the men of my day to some new benefactor, let them
recollect that, after all, our wrath did not come to much, and vented
itself chiefly in the bad language of sanctimonious scolds. Let them as
speedily perform a strategic right-about-face, and follow the truth
wherever it leads. The opponents of the new truth will discover, as those
of Darwin are doing, that, after all, theories do not alter facts, and that
the universe remains unaffected even though texts crumble. Or, it may be,
that, as history repeats itself, their happy ingenuity will also discover
that the new wine is exactly of the same vintage as the old, and that
(rightly viewed) the old bottles prove to have been expressly made for
holding it.







 


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