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+Project Gutenberg's ON THE RECEPTION OF THE 'ORIGIN OF SPECIES'
+by Thomas Henry Huxley
+From Life and Letters of Charles Darwin
+#9 in our series by or about Charles Darwin
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+ON THE RECEPTION OF THE 'ORIGIN OF SPECIES'
+
+by Thomas Henry Huxley
+
+From The Life and Letters of Charles Darwin
+
+edited by Francis Darwin
+
+February, 2000 [Etext #2089]
+
+
+Project Gutenberg's ON THE RECEPTION OF THE 'ORIGIN OF SPECIES'
+******This file should be named oroos10.txt or oroos10.zip*****
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+
+ON THE RECEPTION OF THE 'ORIGIN OF SPECIES'
+
+by PROFESSOR THOMAS HENRY HUXLEY
+
+FROM THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF CHARLES DARWIN
+
+EDITED BY FRANCIS DARWIN
+
+
+
+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.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's ON THE RECEPTION OF THE 'ORIGIN OF SPECIES'
+by Thomas Henry Huxley
+
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