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authornfenwick <nfenwick@pglaf.org>2025-02-06 15:44:25 -0800
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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
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+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #53319 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/53319)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Initiative in Evolution, by Walter Kidd
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Initiative in Evolution
-
-Author: Walter Kidd
-
-Release Date: October 19, 2016 [EBook #53319]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK INITIATIVE IN EVOLUTION ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Thiers Halliwell, Chris Curnow and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
-file was produced from images generously made available
-by The Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber’s notes:
-
-The text of this book has been preserved as in the original except
-for correction of some typographic errors (see below) and punctuation
-inconsistencies. Italic text is denoted by _underscores_ and a caret
-mark ^ precedes any superscripted character(s). Footnotes have been
-numbered and positioned below the relevant paragraphs, and some
-illustration captions have been moved closer to the relevant text.
-
-Corrected misspellings include the following:
-
- constitutent —> constituent
- It —> If
- o —> to
- endotheliun —> endothelium
- ecomomy —> economy
- involutary —> involuntary
- old factory —> olfactory
- tacile —> tactile
- irrevelant —> irrelevant
- tranverse —> transverse
- decebrate —> decerebrate
- Thistleton —> Thiselton
- opprobious —> opprobrious
- Duputryen's —> Dupuytren's
- ditēthēsis —> diēthēsis
-
-
-
-
- INITIATIVE IN
- EVOLUTION
-
-
- BY
- WALTER KIDD, M.D., F.R.S.E.
-
-
- AUTHOR OF
- “USE--INHERITANCE,” “DIRECTION OF HAIR IN ANIMALS AND MAN,”
- “THE SENSE OF TOUCH IN MAMMALS AND BIRDS,” ETC.
-
-
- _WITH NUMEROUS ILLUSTRATIONS_
-
-
- H. F. & G. WITHERBY
- 326 HIGH HOLBORN, LONDON
-
- 1920
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE.
-
-
-The Great War imposed on speculative biology a moratorium as in the
-long vacation of lawyers, in which are causes left over to the next
-term. And so the old case Lamarck _versus_ Weismann was not heard in
-the Courts of Science during the war. In the present term it is due to
-be heard afresh, and at some future date to come up for settlement.
-The chapters that follow comprise some of the pleadings on behalf of
-the plaintiff and are part of the brief of a junior counsel. This
-adjective, alas! signifies not the years--for such are often old enough
-to be the fathers of the leaders--but the standing and attainments of
-a junior. But in the open Court of Science, and on suited occasions,
-it may be the business of a junior to question, in the interests of
-his client, the authority even of Attorneys-General and Lords Chief
-Justice. In matters of thought and inquiry it is useless to retreat
-within a stronghold and bar the gates. It may be satisfactory to
-himself for one Milner to write a book on behalf of a certain body of
-doctrine and call it _The End of Controversy_, but the book should
-have held the sub-title _The End of Progress_. The Newtons, Pasteurs
-and Darwins have seldom wielded the weapon of controversy, though the
-triumph of _The Origin of Species_ would have been slower without the
-aid of Darwin’s brilliant champion and candid friend. But, if the
-leaders seldom need such help, for the Gibeonite it is a matter of
-course and simple necessity. With all the urbanity due to the great
-subject-matter should this pleasant duty be performed. Who would not
-prefer to the fierce Spaniard the genial Portuguese, discussing all
-subjects without rancour, and lover of bull-fights though he be, taking
-care to wrap in cork the horns of his fighting bulls?
-
-The earlier chapters treat of the arrangement of the mammalian hair,
-which has occupied my attention for over twenty years, and this
-has led straight to the other subjects, because of their bearing on
-Lamarckism and Initiative in Evolution. The tentative conclusions
-reached years ago have been strengthened by further knowledge and
-reflection, and perhaps by certain criticisms. The furrow ploughed
-may have been lonely, but the pursuit has not been without the mild
-pleasure of seeing fresh scattered portions of the field coming into
-their natural order. The resulting state of mind resembles that of
-a certain Mr. Burke recorded in the annals of a golf club, second
-to none, the Ancient, and now Royal Blackheath, among whose minutes
-appears the following:--
-
- “20th September, 1834.
-
- Present, Mr. Burke, _Solus_.
-
- The dinner was good, wine abundant, and the utmost harmony prevailed.
- The want of grouse was severely felt this day.”
-
-It is written on page 101 of the _Chronicles of Blackheath Golfers_.
-
-My debt to such writings as those of Professors Arthur Keith, Woods
-Jones, Graham Kerr, and Professors Sherrington, Starling, Schäfer,
-McDougall and Ward is too obvious to the reader to need more than a
-bare mention.
-
-I have to thank one critic, Miss Inez Whipple, now Mrs. H. Wilder
-Harris, for her able if hostile criticism of two former books of mine
-which has been of use in this one; and Mr. R. E. Holding for good help
-extending over many years in the preparation of the illustrations, and
-for many a good suggestion.
-
- W.K.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS.
-
-
- CHAPTER PAGE
-
- I.--From Known to Unknown 1
-
- II.--Review of the Position 8
-
- III.--The Problems Presented 22
-
- IV.--Initial Variations and Total Experience 30
-
- V.--Method of Proof 36
-
- VI.--Evidence from Arrangement of Hair 39
-
- VII.--The Evolution of Patterns of Hair 50
-
- VIII.--Can Muscular Action change the Direction
- of Hair in the Individual? 64
-
- IX.--Habits and Hair of Ungulates 74
-
- X.--Habits and Hair of Ungulates 86
-
- XI.--Habits and Hair of Carnivores 92
-
- XII.--Habits and Hair of Carnivores 98
-
- XIII.--Habits and Hair of Primates 103
-
- XIV.--Miscellaneous Examples 115
-
- XV.--Experimental 124
-
- XVI.--First Summary 140
-
- XVII.--Varieties of Epidermis 145
-
- XVIII.--Arrangement of the Papillary Ridges 157
-
- XIX.--Flexures of the Palm and Sole 170
-
- XX.--The Evolution of a Bursa 178
-
- XXI.--The Plantar Arch 192
-
- XXII.--Muscles 200
-
- XXIII.--Innervation of the Human Skin 218
-
- XXIV.--The Building of Reflex Arcs 231
-
- SUMMARY 257
-
- INDEX 259
-
-
-
-
-LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.
-
-
- FIG. PAGE
-
- 1 Arrangement of hair on the forearm 42
-
- 2 Diagrams of hair-patterns 51
-
- 3, 4, 5 Neck of horse, showing muscles and tendons 53, 54
-
- 6–19 Side of neck of various horses, showing
- varieties of hair-patterns 56–62
-
- 20–29 Illustrations of human eyebrows, showing
- muscular action and hair-direction 70–73
-
- 30 Front view of horse, showing pectoral pattern 76
-
- 31 Side view of horse showing hair-direction 77
-
- 32, 32a Frontal region of horses, showing muscles and
- hair-pattern 78
-
- 33 Side view of horse, showing chief superficial
- muscles 79
-
- 34, 35 Side and back views of cow, showing
- hair-patterns on back 88
-
- 36 Lioness, showing direction of hair-streams on
- muzzle 93
-
- 37 Back of lion, showing hair-pattern 95
-
- 38–40 Gluteal region, foreleg and chest of
- domestic dog, showing hair-direction 99, 101
-
- 41 Arrangement of hair on back of lemur,
- chimpanzee and man 105
-
- 42 _Idem_ chest 109
-
- 43 Giraffe, showing hair-patterns of neck 116
-
- 44 Giraffe in attitude of drinking or browsing
- off the ground 117
-
- 45 Bongo, showing hair-patterns of chest 119
-
- 46 Kiang. Side view showing inguinal and
- axillary patterns 121
-
- 47 Forefoot of llama, showing hair-direction 122
-
- 48 Two-toed sloth, showing action of gravity
- on hair 123
-
- 49 Domestic horse, fully harnessed 128
-
- 50 Side view of domestic horse, showing
- reversed hair due to harness 129
-
- 51–58 Necks of various horses, showing reversed
- hair due to collar 132–135
-
- 59 Right hand, drawing of papillary ridges,
- made from impressions 158
-
- 60 Right foot. _Idem_ 160
-
- 61–70 Hands and feet of lower animals,
- showing papillary ridges 161, 163–166, 168
-
- 71 Flexures on palm of right hand.
- Drawing made from impression 171
-
- 72–79 Flexures on hands and feet of various
- lower animals 172–175
-
- 80 Drawing of flexures of sole of foot of man,
- young adult 176
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-
-FROM KNOWN TO UNKNOWN
-
-
-Upward--still upward--still upward to the highest! Such is the claim
-of modern man for the story of himself and the lower inhabitants of
-the globe. The zoologists have gone so far as to confer upon him the
-surname Sapiens--Homo Sapiens. Learned indeed he is, and heir of all
-the ages, but whether or not his assumed surname be warranted the
-doctrine of descent with modification can never again be questioned.
-The work of Darwin was crowned when he compelled a general acceptance
-of that doctrine, and now the Descent of Man and the Ascent of Man
-are equivalent terms for a natural process which has converted man
-from a thing to a person, and is the foundation of all modern thought.
-The biologist works secure in the knowledge that he is studying some
-portion of a chain of life stretching back for incalculable ages, and
-is not careful to produce those missing links demanded by the once
-formidable foes of his fundamental principle. Haeckel may announce that
-Pithecanthropus Erectus of Dubois is truly a Pliocene remainder of that
-famous group of highest Catarrhines which were the immediate pithecoid
-ancestors of man. This may or may not be true, but if true it makes
-the descent of man from a lower stock none the surer, the increasing
-verification of which is not found to rest on missing links.
-
-Many of the discoveries of modern science are made by proceeding from
-known phenomena to the unknown, or, more precisely, from the well-known
-through the little-known to the hitherto unknown.
-
-As to the validity of knowledge it is enough to say this--and pass
-on--_all our knowledge is provisional and imperfect, and much of our
-ignorance is as transient as ourselves_.
-
-There are two chief ways in which historians deal with their
-subject-matter, though the moderns combine them. When oral tradition
-gives place to written records the lineal descendant of the bards
-and annalists collects his scanty authorities and compiles his story
-from them from beginning to end. The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle of Bede
-and Alfred, the Book of Howth, the works of Giraldus Cambrensis, the
-Chronicles of Froissart and the Memoirs of de Comines were composed
-in the only way that was then possible. But the muse of history
-entered on a deeper and more fruitful course when about ninety years
-ago the study of documents became an essential feature of historical
-work. It was then that the historian grew up, entered upon his finest
-inheritance and assumed his Greek title, Enquirer, Student of facts,
-Man of research. He is now nothing if not a man of science as well as
-of letters. With a wealth of documents within his reach so great that
-the 3239 Vatican cases full of them formed by no means the richest
-collection in the archives of Europe, he proceeds to read backwards
-correctly what many an earlier annalist read forwards falsely. “We
-are still at the beginning of the documentary age which is destined
-to make history independent of historians, to develop learning at the
-expense of writing, and to accomplish a revolution in other sciences as
-well.”[1]
-
- [1] Acton. _A Lecture on the Study of History_, p. 19.
-
-
-The Historian a Biologist.
-
-It is not too much to say that he who studies history, national,
-political, constitutional, ecclesiastical, military or economic is as
-much a biologist in the widest sense as the botanist and zoologist.
-Indeed these were till recently termed students of natural _history_,
-until the advance of knowledge gave us the various special groups of
-workers, conveniently called biologists. Though the study of human
-history by documents is an essential part of the historical method
-and the student may read _his_ subject backwards, this would not of
-itself warrant the technical biologist in doing so, even though he be
-a child of Nature and part of her--“Nature’s insurgent son.” But some
-reflection on the facts of certain provinces of science affords ample
-justification for the method. It is chiefly in questions of origin
-that it avails, while it fails in that form of research by experiment
-which is the glory of modern science. A few examples of the process of
-passing from the known to the unknown will illustrate the method.
-
-
-Darwin.
-
-Much of the _Origin of Species_ and all of the _Descent of Man_ was
-founded on this method; thus in the former the conceptions of struggle
-took their main rise from the work of Malthus on Human Population, and
-of variation from domesticated animals and plants, and this is true
-also of Wallace. A mere glance at the divisions of _The Descent of Man_
-shows that it could never have been attempted in any other than the
-backward way.
-
-
-Geology.
-
-In their researches on the crust of the earth Playfair, Hutton and
-Lyell did not pursue them by going down a coal mine till they came to
-the lowest available beds and work upward from these to the highest.
-Though for purposes of exposition a great geologist, as Sir Archibald
-Geikie, may expound the making of the earth from the lowest to the
-highest levels, and Professor Bonney tell us the _Story of our Planet_
-from beginning to end as if he had watched it unfolding, Lyell in his
-_Principles of Geology_ shows how the studies of his great province
-began. There we have the backward reading of its story pursued by
-himself and other great ones, and where it led them. Commencing with
-the Pleistocene period and passing through Neocene and Eocene periods
-through the Mesozoic Era and its cretaceous, jurassic and triassic
-systems to the Newer Palæozoic Era and its Permian, carboniferous, and
-Devonian systems, the older Palæozoic Era and its Silurian Ordovician
-and Cambrian systems, he reaches the unknown. But before all this
-patient research and its record is reached he treats, as he must, of
-consolidation and alteration of strata, of petrification of organic
-remains, elevation of strata, horizontal and inclined stratification,
-of faulting, denudation, upheaval and subsidence as they combine
-to remodel the earth’s crust. The title of his classical work is
-significant--_An Attempt to Explain the Former Changes of the Earth’s
-Surface by Reference to Causes now in Operation_ (it may be noted that
-in 1830 they were fond of capital letters and of underlining their
-words). If these great men had been condemned to the sole use of the
-method of the annalist in his treatment of human history, that of the
-coal mine in geology, this great province of knowledge would never have
-been what it is to-day.
-
-At this point I think it well to state that this illuminating principle
-of Lyell is pursued in nearly all the matters of fact and their
-interpretation contained in the following chapters, so that from time
-to time I shall have to employ the verb, coined for the purpose, when I
-attempt to “Lyell” them on behalf of Lamarck.
-
-
-Anthropology.
-
-The anthropologist could hardly make a start with his research, if,
-knowing nothing of his own anatomy, physiology, customs and beliefs, he
-tried to interpret the physical features, habits, manners, customs and
-rites of an African tribe. Without such prior knowledge he would find
-it a profitless task to journey to the banks of the Zambesi and bring
-back any intelligible history of the aborigines. If he did not know the
-games of a European child how could he understand the variants of them
-such as the writer of _Savage Childhood_[2] expounds so well?
-
- [2] _Savage Childhood_, Dudley Kidd.
-
-
-The Sources of Rivers.
-
-To trace the course and source of a river is a simple task through the
-work of modern geographers, and such a pursuit illustrates well the
-two methods here considered, but it is doubtful if any river was ever
-traced originally from its fountain head to its mouth. The backward
-way of such exploration, from the nature of the case, has always been
-taken, and men have traced the more or less finished products of the
-lower stretches, backward, still backwards, even as in the Indus, to
-the still-unknown. The earliest thinkers and seekers in the plains of
-Bengal were familiar with much of their great sacred and composite
-river as it flowed into its delta. Slowly, laboriously, here a little
-and there a little, they learned its stupendous story. They found the
-plateau of Tibet in the Himalayas where the twin-sisters, Brahmaputra
-and Ganges were born, and saw how from the one high cradle they parted
-on their eastward course for a thousand miles with the mountain-chain
-between them, and how, coming together again, the one descending
-through Assam and the other flowing through the plains, reinforced by
-the Jumna, they united to form the Ganges-Brahmaputra. A great subject
-indeed for the early geographer, but one which he could only follow in
-the backward way. Again how well known and revered in Egypt was the
-Nile for thousands of years before its source in Victoria Nyanza could
-be traced, even though Nero might send his explorers as far as the
-marshes of the White Nile, and Ptolemy’s search for it might lead him
-to guess the riddle, and assign it to two great lakes!
-
-
-Genealogy.
-
-Not many of us can trace our ancestry in the direct male line to
-the 8th century by authentic and written documents as did a Hebrew
-friend of mine, thus effectually meeting the doubts of a prospective
-brother-in-law who asked him as to his fitness to enter a family which
-was able to produce a stray peer of the realm in its roll. On the other
-hand a man who has lost his parents in childhood may know nothing of
-them but that his father’s name was A. Mann, and that he was buried
-in a Kentish churchyard. He may go on a pilgrimage and find there
-recorded the fact that A. Mann was the son of A. Mann, Gent, who came
-from Northumberland. He will doubtless make another pilgrimage and find
-there a large vault, and over it an imposing record of many a Mann,
-and yet further he may go, and from the Heralds’ College find out the
-still earlier derivation of his ancestors.
-
-
-Detection of a Crime.
-
-There are two chief ways of detecting a crime. By oral evidence from
-eye-witnesses or confession of the accused you may get direct proof,
-though even here are pitfalls from careless and hasty witnesses on the
-one hand, or on the other from a strange perversion of mind of the
-confessing person which is well enough known to forensic medicine.
-You may thus bring home to the accused his guilt by the method of
-the annalist. Or you may employ the more common method of studying
-circumstantial evidence; the story of the crime is read backwards and
-a verdict of guilty is given. This is the main stuff of which the
-prevalent detective story is composed.
-
-
-A Parable.
-
-A plain parable may well conclude this chapter.
-
-As I mused on the chain of life I found a piece of whipcord which had
-been lying by for twenty-five years since some of it was used for
-rigging a model yacht, and this very efficient product of human art
-seemed to speak to me on the subject of my musings. Perhaps if Huxley
-could extract from a piece of chalk or lumps of coal two magnificent
-expositions on geology and biology, this little trifle of cord might
-afford a text on a way of looking at living things which should be
-useful in this old case of Lamarck _v._ Weismann--and others.
-
-Should I learn the story of the whipcord forwards like an annalist,
-or backward like a modern historian? Clearly it could be done in a
-measure by either method. Here was a highly finished product of which
-either might furnish the story, and of which, we may suppose, I knew
-nothing. I tried the backward way, and by the aid of a needle began
-to unravel it. The cord was as good as if just made, slender, strong,
-twisted, with some glazing on the twisted threads. It showed three
-main bundles, and each of these was composed of two smaller ones.
-The substance of all these six was found when examined with a lens
-to consist of minute silky fibres varying from a quarter of an inch
-to an inch in length. This was all I could learn without a stronger
-magnifying power or a chemical analysis, and the direct search was at
-an end. I gathered since then that the first three bundles were called
-“strands,” and the two composing each of these “yarns,” and that the
-fibres were from a plant called hemp. This did not carry the story
-deep or far, and illustrates how often in the backward method facts
-have to be supplemented by inference. But I had learnt some undoubted
-facts and some inferences from them nearly as certain. Some mind of
-man had conceived and hands carried out the division of the bundles of
-fibres into three strands, had twisted them somehow so as to reduce
-their length by a quarter and yet not far enough to rupture them, and
-had thus fitted them the better for their purpose by a reinforcement
-of tensile strength due to the twisting. I could also see that this
-same mind had seen it better to divide each of these strands into two
-yarns before the final twisting, and that in framing the yarns the
-silky fibres of the plant had been squeezed together by some powerful
-agency and yet not disintegrated, and that the finished product had
-been immersed in a protective substance which gave it a slight glaze.
-In short, I, though a child in these matters, read much of the story
-of this cord in terms of mind dealing with given organic matter. I may
-add that I did not imagine myself a little Paley, and that I do not
-intend to “take in” the reader as to the argument from design and final
-causes, even though this parable may feebly resemble Paley’s study of
-a watch. The conclusion was perfectly clear that certain directing
-grey cells of a certain brain had interfered with and acted upon some
-plastic vegetable matter, and one could at the “strand” stage, the
-“yarn” stage, and the “fibre” stage see mind writ large.
-
-
-The Forward Way.
-
-The limits of the former method are obvious, but I might also attempt
-to follow the little story as a crime is followed and described by
-eye-witnesses. So I go to an old-fashioned rope-factory and ask the
-foreman questions about the making of twine, cords, ropes and cables.
-He shows me bundles of hemp; he calls them Russian, Italian or
-American, and goes on to tell me how the fibre is “heckled” or combed,
-how “tow” is separated from “line,” and how the yarns are pressed
-together and twisted, how they are at first rough and bristly, and are
-then dressed, polished, and “sized” with such a starch as that of the
-potato. When I proceed to ask him about the plant itself his interest
-flags, and he becomes vague. He says, “You had better ask the Head,
-young Mr. X., he knows these things better.” I find the Head with his
-golf clubs over his shoulder and about to start on his “business,” and
-he is polite, but says he knows very little about the origin of his
-hemp. “You should go over the way and ask Messrs. Y. if they will let
-you see the expert who advises them in their business, he will know.”
-The expert is at home and kindly and fully describes to me the early
-home of the wild _Cannabis Sativa_ in a moderate climate of Asia, the
-rich soil it needs for its growth and the various countries of the
-world into which it has been introduced; and the bast-fibres of the
-bark of this plant which from remote antiquity has supplied the silky
-stuff. He then tells me how the stems are dried and crushed, and then
-of the important stage of fermentation or “retting” in water, how they
-are again beaten in a “break,” then rubbed and “scutched,” and finally
-“heckled” or combed; and, as to analytic chemistry, he tells me that
-the chief constituent is cellulose. This quest is now over and I know
-much I could not find out by the backward method, though the dependence
-of its rival upon the presence of honest and capable eye-witnesses
-is not less obvious. It is not alone in ecclesiastical history that
-cheats and forgers of documents exist. In the world of Nature there
-may be, for all we know, biological False Decretals that may lead
-us far astray, such perhaps as Amphioxous and Archæopteryx, and the
-Pseudo-Isidore who produced them may yet be discovered.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II.
-
-REVIEW OF THE POSITION
-
-
-The modern story of the theory of organic evolution shows certain
-important dates--1859, 1880, 1894, 1895, 1899 and 1909. These begin
-with the _Origin of Species_ and end with the publication of a volume
-in commemoration of its jubilee, when most of the leading students of
-evolution united to render homage to Darwin. The year 1859 has been so
-often and so worthily treated that it is enough here to say that the
-fifty years between the issue of the work of Darwin and Wallace and
-1909 saw a greater revolution in biology, speculative and practical,
-than any period so relatively brief had ever seen.
-
-In the year 1880 the “coming of age” of the _Origin of Species_ was
-celebrated. On the 9th of April at the Royal Institution an address
-was given by the powerful friend, champion and candid critic of
-Darwin, and before the scientific and educated world Huxley was able
-to say with his own force and directness: “Evolution is no longer an
-hypothesis, but an historical fact.” It may be noted in passing that
-Darwin’s theory of natural selection is not referred to in the address.
-Challenges and opposition from various quarters met this confident
-claim of the formidable speaker, as doubtless he desired, but the work
-of the succeeding half-century has done little or nothing that does
-not establish that claim. It is hardly to be doubted that if in the
-jubilee-year, 1909, Huxley had been alive on this earth, instead of
-elsewhere, his eloquent voice would have been heard to declare with
-emphasis equal to that of 1880: “Selection is no longer an hypothesis,
-but an historical fact.” Some such statement, with the _imprimatur_ of
-a great name would have removed from the jubilee-volume that slight
-aspect as of a Dutch chorus[3] which is apparent in it. A remark of
-Kelvin’s when he was conferring a medal of the Royal Society on Huxley
-may illustrate what has been said above. He said that they must all be
-thankful to have still among them that champion of Evolution who once
-bore down its enemies, but was now possibly needed to save it from its
-friends. It may be regretted that it was not so in 1909.
-
- [3] The above remark as to the jubilee-volume needs to be explained
- and justified. In it there is an important essay on each of the great
- provinces of Weismann, Mendel and de Vries, and in each of these the
- highest living exponent speaks, Professors Weismann, Bateson and de
- Vries. Bateson expresses admiration for Weismann’s destructive work,
- but shows plainly that he holds it to have failed in its fundamental
- purpose. Nevertheless, by a neat _tour d’addresse_ he adopts
- Weismann’s uncompromising attitude on the inheritance of acquired
- characters, which happens to agree exceedingly well with his own
- scheme. He has but one insignificant reference to de Vries on p. 95
- where he finds help for his doctrine.
-
- Weismann makes no reference to Mendel or de Vries. De Vries makes
- none to Weismann or Mendel, but without stating it in his essay he
- is known to be in opposition to Weismann’s dogma on the inheritance
- of acquired characters. These three eminent biologists would
- thus seem to have worked on diverging lines. The two first agree
- heartily, Weismann explicitly and Bateson by implication, as to the
- forbidden doctrine, “on the ground that it closes the way to deeper
- insight”--in other words their mutually destructive theories. So it
- stands thus in the book--Weismann throws over Lamarck, Mendel and de
- Vries; Bateson throws over Weismann (as again in 1914) and de Vries;
- de Vries ignores Weismann and Mendel.
-
- Dr. Lock in his book on Variation, Heredity and Evolution, 1906,
- says that Weismann practically ignores the evidence of Mendelism in
- heredity, and adds, p. 261, “But at the next step the Mendelian parts
- company with Weismann.”
-
- One cannot avoid noticing, incidentally, that the vast mass of work
- of the biometricians led by Galton, Weldon and Professor Karl Pearson
- is conspicuously absent from the book. Prof. J. Arthur Thomson says
- that there should be no opposition between Mendelian and Galtonian
- formulæ, “they are correlated, and ultimately they will be seen in
- complete harmony as different aspects of the same phenomena. But it
- is simply muddleheadedness which can find any opposition between a
- statistical formula applicable to averages of successive generations
- breeding freely, and a physiological formula applicable to particular
- sets of cases where parents with contrasted dominant and recessive
- characters are crossed and their hybrid offspring are inbred.”(a)
- concerning which see the Preface to Bateson’s _Mendel’s Principles of
- Heredity_, 1902, with remarks on some of the Galtonians.
-
- (a) _Heredity_, p. 374.
-
- Considering the mole-like and persistent work of the biometricians,
- some who are at present keeping well-ordered lawns may find some
- day a few disturbing heaps of facts. I am reminded here of an
- historic duel, Oxford _v._ Cambridge, which took place soon after
- the introduction of Mendel’s discoveries into England at the London
- Zoological Society, when Prof. Bateson expounded them with enthusiasm
- and when Weldon repelled them with cogent and incisive arguments.
- The duel lasted nearly two hours and that was not too long for the
- audience, but one has the impression that some of what Professor
- Thomson calls muddleheadedness must have been somewhere existing.
- However, the duel was fought when Mendelism was young.
-
-
-Three Blows to Darwin.
-
-But other historic events are more relevant to my immediate purpose
-than these.
-
-Three blows were delivered against Darwinism in the years 1894, 1895
-and 1899 by Prof. Bateson, Weismann, and again Prof. Bateson, under
-which it seemed to reel, but from which it is more than likely it has
-derived but greater strength.
-
-
-BATESON.
-
-In 1894 Prof. Bateson published his large and important work,
-_Materials for the Study of Variation_. As a distinguished student
-and teacher of biology he found the received doctrine of evolution
-in straits as regards the factor of natural selection in producing
-specific differences, as indeed happened to another equally eminent man
-during the next year. He was profoundly discontented as to the origin
-of specific differences on the theory of direct utility of variations,
-and he said “on our present knowledge the matter is talked out.”[4]
-He threw over the study of adaptation “as a means of directly solving
-the problem of species.” He came to the conclusion “Variation is
-Evolution,” and affirmed that the readiest way of solving the problem
-of evolution is to study the facts of variation. Hence arose this
-notable book, and hence one of his trenchant statements to the effect
-“that the existence of new forms having from their beginning more or
-less of the kind of perfection that we associate with normality, is a
-fact that once and for all disposes of the attempt to interpret all
-perfection and definiteness of form as the work of selection,”[5]
-and “Inquiry into the causes of variation is as yet, in my judgment,
-premature.”[6] It will hardly be denied that a work which contained
-such statements as these from such a source seemed momentous in its
-influence on the fate of Darwin’s theory. Prof. Bateson yielded to
-none in his loyalty to Darwin, as far as he knew himself, and here he
-is as candid as Huxley, and he declares that in his treatment of the
-phenomena of variation is found nothing which is in any way opposed
-to Darwin’s theory. The shade of Darwin might nevertheless have
-looked with some misgiving at this man over against him with a drawn
-sword in his hand, and have asked gently, “Art thou for us or for our
-adversaries?” Prof. Bateson’s work chiefly requires to be considered
-here because to any reader of it there must come the conviction on
-the one hand of Prof. Bateson’s merits and power, and on the other of
-his limitation as a student of organic evolution. In 1894 is evident
-already an exclusive attention to structure rather than function,
-to anatomy than physiology; the anatomical leaven in doctrine has
-leavened the whole lump. For him physiology of animals and plants does
-not exist, or at the best is the outcome of structures which arise
-through variation and selection. This, if I may say so, is as much his
-strength as his weakness. There have been other great biologists, such
-as Geoffrey Saint-Hilaire and Richard Owen, of whom this is true. If
-that were all one would not wish the reader to be troubled with any
-criticism of one’s betters, indeed such remarks as are here made do not
-amount to criticism at all, but just plain text-book statements. It is
-also evident that the outlook of Prof. Bateson was being prepared for
-a revelation which had not yet come, in which he took a prominent, if
-not dominant part, I mean the great rediscovery of Mendel’s work by
-de Vries, Correns and Tschermak and himself in England. His keen and
-close attention to anatomical structures was preparing his mind for the
-germinal conceptions of unit-characters, dominance and segregation.
-The intensive cultivation of the fertile field of genetics proceeded
-apace, and Prof. Bateson in his contribution to the jubilee-volume of
-1909 betrayed the trend of his devotion to a system of _distribution_
-rather than formation of the qualities of an organism. The organism as
-an historical functioning, striving being, had receded once for all
-from his vision. He hazarded the suggestion in _Heredity and Variation
-in Modern Lights_ that “variation consists largely in the unpacking
-and repacking of an original complexity,” and that “it is not so
-certain as we might like to think that the order of these events is not
-predetermined.” Incidentally one may remark that, _malgré lui_, Prof.
-Bateson stands forth as a modern Paley as does Weismann in his great
-rival and opposing scheme. It is true that he says “I see no ground
-whatever for holding such a view, but in fairness the possibility
-should not be forgotten and in the light of modern research it scarcely
-looks so absurdly improbable as before.” Having drawn the sword he
-threw away the scabbard in 1914 when he occupied the presidential chair
-of the British Association of Science at Melbourne and Sydney. He had
-said in 1894 in his book on variation as stated before, “Inquiry into
-the causes of variation is as yet, in my opinion, premature,” and
-then in 1914 at Melbourne, after twenty more years of study of the
-subject in the Mendelian direction, “It is likely that the occurrence
-of these variations is wholly irregular, and as to their causation _we
-are absolutely without surmise or even plausible speculation_.” (my
-italics).[7] So, on this fundamental point, he stands where he did when
-he began the study of variation, but apart from this point he again
-threw out his suggestion of 1909 as to the unpacking and repacking of
-an original complexity. At Melbourne he said, “Lotsy has lately with
-great courage suggested to us that all variation may be due to such
-crossing. I do not disguise my sympathy with this effort.”[8] _All
-variation!_ He said later, “In spite of seeming perversity, therefore,
-we have to admit that there is no evolutionary change which in the
-present state of our knowledge we can positively declare _not due to
-loss_.”[9] (Italics mine.) These two statements of 1914 are enough to
-show that the biologist of 1894, 1899, 1909 and 1914 has evolved in
-a definite line, and it is to his honour that he has remembered “to
-thine ownself be true.” But he is not so true to himself in his scorn
-of those who propound theories. For myself I would give little for
-the biologist who did not hold or propound some theory. What was the
-penultimate and stirring message of the gifted G. B. Howes? “We live
-by ideas, we advance by a knowledge of the facts.” The self-denying
-ordinance affirmed and reaffirmed by Prof. Bateson is not observed
-even in the Melbourne and Sydney addresses. In the former, he says
-“at first it may seem rank absurdity to suppose that the primordial
-form or forms of protoplasm could have contained complexity enough to
-produce the divers types of life,” and asks us to open our minds to
-this possibility. Again “I have confidence that the artistic gifts of
-mankind will prove to be due not to something added to the makeup of an
-ordinary man, but to the absence of factors which in the normal person
-inhibit the development of these gifts.” And at Sydney, “Ages before
-written history began, in some unknown place, plants, or more likely a
-plant of wheat lost the dominant factor to which this brittleness is
-due, and the recessive thrashable wheat resulted. Some man noticed this
-wonderful novelty, and it has been disseminated over the earth. The
-original variation may well have occurred once only in a single germ,”
-and “so must it have been with man.”[10]
-
- [4] _Materials for the Study of Variation_, p. 5.
-
- [5] _Op, cit._, p. 568.
-
- [6] _Op. cit._, p. 78.
-
- [7] _Nature_, 1914.
-
- [8] _Op. cit._, Aug. 20th and Aug. 27th, 1914.
-
- [9] _Nature_, 1914.
-
- [10] _Op. cit._, 1914.
-
-These are three stupendous stretches of imagination and theory in one
-address, which would have been the poorer if they had not overcome
-the accomplished speaker’s dislike of the theories--of others. If
-they are not ideal constructions of a high order I do not know the
-meaning of that term. They are worthy of Weismann the Prince of ideal
-constructionists. Prof. Bateson might indeed be another Newton with his
-_Hypotheses non fingo_.
-
-Turning to another important biological doctrine one can see what it
-may be legitimate to call a bi-phyletic parallelism in the biological
-make-up of Prof. Bateson. Again is seen consistency of view and loyalty
-to his first love. Two references from these addresses will be enough
-to introduce the point.
-
-At Melbourne, “We thus reach the essential principle that an organism
-cannot pass on to offspring a factor which it did not itself receive in
-fertilization.”[11]
-
- [11] _Op. cit._, 1914.
-
-At Sydney, “The factors which the individual receives from his
-parents, and no others, are those which he can transmit to his
-offspring”[12]--in other words the doctrine of the inheritance of
-acquired characters is estopped. As to this he speaks in 1909 more
-doubtfully on p. 90 and on p. 95 almost dogmatically.[13] There is just
-a convenient haziness of meaning in the term “factor” with which some
-play might be made, but, taking it to mean what the context indicates,
-an acquirement made by the individual during its personal life, we have
-pretty clear evidence that Prof. Bateson will have nothing to do with
-the inheritance of acquired characters as that doctrine is understood
-by the unsophisticated biologist. This opposition should be counted
-unto him for righteousness rather than the reverse, for it falls into
-line with his life’s work to which he has given of his best.--_Vestigia
-nulla retrorsum._ The point reached here which concerns my purpose is
-that the orthodox Mendelian still knows nothing of the cause or origin
-of variation, and will have none of Lamarck.
-
- [12] _Nature_, 1914.
-
- [13] _Darwin and Modern Science._
-
-This consideration of Prof. Bateson’s work of a quarter of a century
-has been necessary for showing how the work of Weismann and himself
-diverge gravely and yet meet at one point, and the year 1899, being
-linked with 1894, has been taken out of its chronological order.
-
-It may be permitted perhaps to say respectfully to the Mendelians in
-the words of the dying father in the fable, “Dig, my sons, dig in the
-vineyard.” If they follow still the course of the sons they may find
-more gold than they have found already and perchance that which is
-better than gold. But they will produce from it nothing that is not
-there.
-
-
-Two Parables.
-
-Here gentle reader (I seem to remember this style of address in
-the stories of our youth) pause with me in a little oasis of the
-desert-stage of our journey, and brush off some of the dust, while I
-briefly narrate two incidents, but I pray you also not to leave me in
-the midst of them so that you may escape the next short stage.
-
- A traveller, small and insignificant, armed only with an oak cudgel,
- was passing alone through a South American forest. As he trudged
- forward he noticed at a certain point in the path (shall we call it
- 1894–1899?) that a jaguar was watching him and was about to break his
- truce with man. He turned off to the right and there he saw a puma
- and this too seemed to meditate evil. He hastened forward just in
- time as his two enemies sprang at him, and these two near relatives
- were locked in mortal grip--and so he passed on safe!
-
-The reader, naturalist or layman, can point the moral for himself.
-
- At the battle of Trafalgar, while fighting was in full progress on
- one of the ships, some sailors were occupied in throwing overboard
- the bodies of those who had been killed. A poor Scotchman badly
- wounded and hardly conscious was taken up by two seamen, an
- Englishman and an Irishman, and as they were about to throw him
- overboard his feeble voice was heard to say “I’m no deed yet.”
- “What’s that?” said the Irishman. “I’m no deed yet”; “Arrah, the
- doctor said he was dead, over wid him,” said the Irishman.
-
-
-Weismann.
-
-During the period 1894–1899 there was a dramatic proclamation on the
-part of one of the greatest living biologists, which was, in the cosmos
-of biology, what the Proclamation of the Empress-Queen of India was in
-1876, and it is not out of place to remind the reader that the fates
-of the two Imperial utterances have been somewhat different. In 1895
-Weismann issued his official statement of doctrine which was to crown
-the work of his life, an essay on Germinal Selection. From Freyburg
-in November, 1895, he wrote a preface to his address delivered on
-September 16th in that year to the International Congress of Zoologists
-at Leyden. This formed an epoch in biological thought and there lived
-none so well qualified as Weismann to stand forth as its interpreter.
-The well-translated, forcible language, and lucid thought leave the
-reader in no manner of doubt as to his meaning. It took a wider form
-in his final book on the Evolution Theory, but the germinal and
-essential thoughts of the latter were contained in the former. From
-1895 onwards the praise of Weismann was in all the churches. Probably
-no modern worker in the fields of heredity and evolution has done so
-much as Weismann towards raising great issues and removing some ancient
-misconceptions; but it is one thing to raise great issues and another
-to solve them. In this he has signally failed, nevertheless biological
-theory would be the poorer if he had not made the attempt. Reflection,
-the work of other biologists, and the remorseless hand of time have
-shaken the edifices then raised. I will here only bring forward a few
-of the most illuminating passages of the 1895 essay, and then refer to
-the handling of Weismann’s work by Romanes.
-
-This trenchant essay contains fifty-seven pages, of which reasoning
-forms the greater part. As to the facts it might well pass for an
-essay from Professor Poulton’s pen, for Weismann’s special province
-of insects occupies nearly all the evidence from facts. Outside this
-highly specialised group there are exactly fifty-three lines, or one
-and a half pages, which deal with other animal groups, and there are
-four casual allusions to plants occupying twelve lines in all! In the
-essay of 1909 on the Selection Theory this treatment of animated life
-in the world is improved upon and thirteen out of its forty-seven pages
-refer to animals outside his favourite group of insects. Such exclusive
-dealing with these little things does not commend the reasoning, at any
-rate to a neo-Lamarckian; such a circle is too select for him.
-
-
-Weismann’s Twelve Points.
-
-The most striking remarks from the 1895 essay on germinal selection
-are:--
-
-1. “The real aim of the present essay is to rehabilitate the principle
-of selection. If I should succeed in reinstating this principle in its
-imperilled rights, it would be a source of extreme satisfaction to
-me.”[14]
-
- [14] Preface to _Germinal Selection_, 1895, p. xii.
-
-2. Speaking of the whole theory of selection he claimed to have
-found a position “which is necessary to protect it against the many
-doubts which gathered around it on all sides like so many lowering
-thunder-clouds.”[15] And he speaks on page 26 of “the flood of
-objections against the theory of selection touching its inability to
-modify many parts at once.”
-
- [15] p. 38.
-
-Thus Weismann stood forth to defend the crumbling edifice of Darwinism
-and threw his shining sword into the scales, a scientific Athanasius
-“contending for our all.” Again is seen a friend of Darwin from another
-camp than that of Mendel, whose support needs to be received with some
-caution. _Toujours en vedette_ is a useful rule.
-
-3. Speaking of adaptedness in animated nature he says, “We know of
-only one natural principle of explanation for this fact--that of
-selection.”[16]
-
- [16] p. 43.
-
-4. “Germinal selection is the last consequence of the application of
-the principle of Malthus to living nature.”[17]
-
- [17] p. 43.
-
-5. “Without doubt the theory (Germinal Selection) requires that the
-initial steps of a variation should also have selective value.”[18]
-
- [18] p. 38.
-
-6. “Something is still wanting in the theory of Darwin and Wallace
-which it is obligatory on us to discover if we possibly can. We must
-seek to discover why it happens that useful variations are always
-present.”[19]
-
- [19] p. 15.
-
-7. “It is impossible to do without the assumption that the useful
-variations are always present, or that _they always exist in
-a sufficiently large number of individuals for the selective
-process_.”[20]
-
- [20] p. 14.
-
-8. “_Some profound connexions must exist between the utility of a
-variation and its actual appearance, or the direction of the variation
-of a part must be determined by utility._”[21]
-
- [21] p. 18.
-
-9. That “germinal selection performs the same services for the
-understanding of observed transformations ... that a heredity of
-acquired characters would perform without rendering necessary so
-_violent an assumption_!”[22] (Italics mine.)
-
- [22] p. 40.
-
-10. Weismann speaks warmly of Professor Lloyd Morgan for his caution
-and calmness of judgment but complains of him that he “has not been
-able to abandon completely the heredity of acquired characters.”[23]
-
- [23] p. 56.
-
-11. As to passive effects of environment, etc., he says “the Lamarckian
-principle is here excluded _ab initio_.”[24]
-
- [24] p. 11.
-
-12. “It seems to me that a hypothesis of this kind (Lamarckism) has
-performed its services and must be discarded the moment it is found to
-be at hopeless variance with the facts.”[25]
-
- [25] p. 17.
-
-I have only to add here that several years ago I wrote to Weismann
-drawing his attention to some facts I had observed which seemed to me
-to be instances of use-inheritance, and I received a reply in polite
-but brief and Prussian terms to the effect that the facts referred to
-must be capable of some other interpretation, for _the machinery for
-their transmission did not exist_.
-
-Each of these twelve quotations from Weismann’s essay is important from
-the present point of view, and shows how far neo-Darwinians are likely
-to promote the greater glory of Darwin, and though more than a quarter
-of a century elapsed between this essay and his death Weismann was not
-the man to have repudiated any of these strong statements.
-
-
-Lighthouse Value.
-
-I hope at this point a small digression is not out of place in order
-to introduce an aspect of Weismann’s work which is not usually
-appreciated. A child is aware of the great and lesser lights that
-rule the day and night, but for modern man these are not sufficient.
-Accordingly he has invented from immemorial times his oil lamps,
-rushlights, tallow and wax candles, gas and electric light for the
-illumination of his streets and houses. Prehistoric man did not seem to
-need them, as he thought. These useful examples of applied knowledge
-were obviously brought into use for showing man better where he was
-going and where to go, what he was doing and what he wished to see. I
-hope this trite remark may be pardoned, for there is another form of
-light which suits my purpose of illustrating the aspect of Weismannism
-referred to above, that is the light of a lighthouse. The ancients in
-their crude way saw the need for this and as far back as the days of
-Ptolemy II. a tower to give light was erected on the island of Pharus,
-off the Egyptian coast, and it was called a _pharos_. Man found it
-necessary, as navigation and seafaring advanced, to use this principle
-more and more, and on headland, sandbank and rugged coast has built
-noble structures to aid the sailor in his dangerous course. The oldest
-and finest of these in Great Britain is the Eddystone lighthouse, built
-first in 1695 by Winstanley and finally by Smeaton in 1756–9. For what
-reason is a lighthouse built and placed where it is? For the precisely
-opposite reason to that of the domestic candle. While this shows you
-where to go and how better to do your immediate business, a lighthouse
-is for the main purpose of showing a mariner where he should _not go_.
-It has no relation to adornment or pleasure. It does not invite you to
-come in your vessel and admire it. It tells you to go away and avoid
-the sunken rock or treacherous sands.
-
-I submit here the suggestion with all deference, that the final work
-of Weismann has lighthouse value of a high order, as to the _modus
-operandi_ of evolution. His greatness as a biologist, his candour and
-skill in dialectics, have built up a veritable lighthouse which may
-usefully warn the seeker after the path of evolution that he must turn
-elsewhere if he would not founder upon a reef of facts.
-
-The two great contributions to evolutionary thought that Weismann has
-made should be considered separately, the theory of germ-plasm and that
-of evolution, though the latter seems to be the necessary outcome of
-the former. But the truth of Weismann’s view of heredity does not of
-necessity require the error of his theory of evolution.
-
-
-Romanes on Weismann.
-
-For this study the examination of Weismannism by Romanes published in
-1893 is of great value. I need only refer here to the main conclusions
-of that lucid and learned examination.
-
-Weismann’s work on the germ-plasm in pursuance of a theory of heredity
-is pronounced by Romanes to have remained up to 1893 substantially
-unaltered, though largely added to in matters of detail, and at the
-present time as far as I gather from a study of the more recent
-literature this theory holds the field or at least a commanding
-position in it.[26] Originally he held that the germ-plasm possessed
-_perpetual_ continuity since the first origin of life, and _absolute_
-stability since the first origin of sexual propagation, but he has
-shown himself willing to surrender the first postulate, and has himself
-altered the second. As it stands now it must be admitted that the
-continuity of the germ-plasm is an interrupted continuity with the
-appearance of every inherited change; the continuity is theoretical,
-not actual, and the stability of the germ-plasm is not absolute but of
-a high degree. We can thus see in the story of this original theory of
-heredity the lighthouse value of the _pharos_ of Ptolemy II.
-
- [26] Romanes, _Examination of Weismannism_, p. 115.
-
- “It is doubtful if anything better as to Weismann’s theory of
- heredity can be said to-day than Romanes said in 1893, and inasmuch
- as these two latter or distinctive postulates are not needed for
- Weismann’s theory of heredity, while they are both essential to his
- theory of evolution, I cannot but regret that he should have thus
- crippled the former by burdening it with the latter. Hence my object
- throughout has been to display, as sharply as possible, the contrast
- that is presented between the brass (“iron” preferably) and the clay
- in the colossal figure which Weismann has constructed. Hence also
- my emphatic dissent from his theory of evolution does not prevent
- me from sincerely appreciating the great value which attaches to
- his theory of heredity. And although I have not hesitated to say
- that this theory is, in my opinion, incomplete; that it presents not
- a few manifest inconsistencies, and even logical contradictions;
- that the facts on which it is founded have always been facts of
- general knowledge; that in all its main features it was present to
- the mind of Darwin, and distinctly formulated by Galton; that in so
- far as it has been constituted the basis of a more general theory
- of organic evolution it has proved a failure; such considerations
- in no way diminish my cordial recognition of the services which its
- distinguished author has rendered to science by his speculations
- upon these topics. For not only has he been successful in drawing
- renewed and much more general attention to the important questions
- touching the transmissibility of acquired characters, the causes of
- variation, and so on; but even those parts of his system which have
- proved untenable are not without such value as temporary scaffoldings
- present in relation to permanent buildings. Therefore, if I have
- appeared to play the _role_ of a hostile critic, this has been only
- an expression of my desire to separate what seems to me the grain of
- good science from the chaff of bad speculation.”
-
-It is far otherwise with Weismann’s theory of evolution. Romanes shows
-that with the removal of its essential postulate the absolute stability
-of germ-plasm, Weismann’s theory of evolution falls to the ground. He
-has indeed surrendered much in his later building, his second temple
-of Solomon, and prominent among these was the claim that the only
-causes of individual variation and of the origin of species in the
-uni-cellular organisms are the Lamarckian factors, just as in the
-multicellular _the only cause of these is natural selection_. Thus we
-see standing at the critical date, 1892, the first Eddystone lighthouse
-of Winstanley, a greater and more important structure than the old
-pharos.
-
-
-Germinal Selection.
-
-It can hardly be doubted that one of the “thunderclouds” threatening
-Darwinism, of which Weismann spoke in 1895, was this examination of
-Weismannism by Romanes. As the case stood then some fresh strategy
-was needed if victory for Darwin was to be won, at least so the great
-leader said. It must be remembered that it was the _personal_ selection
-of Darwin which was held to be in danger. Accordingly germinal
-selection was brought forth and remained the basis of Weismann’s later
-_Evolution Theory_ of 1904 and 1909. Romanes did not live to see or
-assist in the disproof of this ambitious piece of work so that his
-“examination” is so far incomplete.
-
-The position of germinal selection is defined in Weismann’s statement
-that “it is the adaptive requirement itself that produces the useful
-direction of variation by means of selectional processes within the
-germ.” Here it is in a nutshell. The theory itself is consistent,
-and clearness has been added to the earlier evolution theory by the
-claim that a struggle for nutriment occurs within the fertilised ovum
-between the innumerable determinants of the different parts, so that
-maintenance or victory over weaker determinants takes place. Thus we
-have a survival of the fittest _in petto_ in the germ analogous to
-that of the individual organisms as we see them. There is of course
-a resemblance here to the cellular or histonal selection of Roux,
-but his doctrines are not weighted with the intolerable dogma of the
-non-inheritance of acquired characters. But ultimately this conception
-of germinal selection has to come down and bow to the tribunal of
-facts, and the remark of Weismann on Lamarckism which has been
-already quoted, “It seems to me that an hypothesis of this kind has
-performed its service and must be discarded the moment it is found
-to be at hopeless variance with the facts,” confronts the consistent
-Weismannian. And I venture to say here that germinal selection is
-represented by the Eddystone lighthouse of 1756–9 erected by Smeaton.
-
-The grounds for this statement are afforded by numerous facts and
-experiments, to which in the later chapters I propose to add a few
-fresh ones, and by a growing body of opinion and authority in favour of
-Lamarckian factors in evolution.
-
-Three “lighthouses” of this metaphorical sort have thus been afforded
-by the work of Weismann, represented by the Pharos of old, Winstanley’s
-Eddystone lighthouse and that of Smeaton.
-
-
-Authority.
-
-We have then Weismann and Professor Bateson definitely ranged against
-the position taken in this volume as to a cause or origin or variation
-and the inheritance of acquired characters. To these we must add the
-great weight of Sir E. Ray Lankester’s opinion lately given in a reply
-to Professor Adami that “it is very widely admitted (more correctly
-“claimed”) that no case of the transmission of what are called acquired
-characters from parent to offspring has been demonstrated in so far as
-those higher animals and plants which multiply by means of specialised
-egg-cells and sperm-cells are concerned.”
-
-It is not necessary to mention more than these “three mighties” of the
-biological world.
-
-Many others such as Prof. J. Arthur Thomson and Prof. W. K. Brooks,
-of Johns Hopkins University, are still unconvinced as to Lamarckian
-factors and ask for more evidence, and they have many to support them
-in their opinion and claim. There is often a tone of weariness, as well
-as wariness in their remarks on the matter.
-
-In favour of the neo-Lamarckian position, with which stands or falls
-the suggested cause of variation, there is a growing body of opinion,
-with the mention of which I conclude this review.
-
-1. The accomplished writer of _Form and Function_, Mr. E. S. Russell,
-says the theory of Lamarck “although it had little influence upon
-biological thought during and for a long time after the lifetime of
-its author, _is still at the present day a living and developing
-doctrine_.”[27]
-
- [27] p. 215.
-
-2. Sir Francis Darwin from the Presidential Chair of the British
-Association of Science in Dublin in 1908 proclaimed his adherence to
-the mnemonic theory of heredity, foreshadowed by Samuel Butler and
-inaugurated by Semon, a condition of which is that acquired characters
-are inherited. This caused much stir in the camp of “our friends the
-enemy.”
-
-3. Observations and experiments at variance with germinal selection and
-its negative presupposition have been rapidly accumulated from the work
-of botanists and zoologists who were prepared to appeal to the tribunal
-of natural processes; though Weismann and some of his followers, with
-some reason, look upon the evidence from plants as a weak link in
-the chain of evidence. Many of the observations and experiments are
-well-known and only a mere mention of them need be made here, they are
-such as Mr. J. T. Cunningham’s observations on the effect of light on
-the under surface of flounders, Kammerer’s on the changes in the colour
-of salamanders to surrounding objects, and others by him on certain
-amphibia and reptiles especially _alytes_ held by Professor McBride
-to be convincing, though the latter are to be repeated at the London
-Zoological Society’s gardens and are therefore _sub judice_--others
-on brine-shrimps, on the effects of change of food on bee-grubs and
-tadpoles, and of the change of level of environments of certain
-cereals--others by Henslow on plants which have never been refuted, and
-many by the late Prince Kropotkin. The latter have appeared at length
-in certain issues of the Nineteenth Century in September 1901, March
-1912, October 1914, and the last in January 1919, and they deal both
-with plants and animals, and are too numerous to be mentioned here
-individually.
-
-Again, Professor Dendy as President of the Zoological Section of
-the British Association of Science in September, 1914, devoted most
-of his address to the subject of Lamarckism and firmly claimed as a
-necessary factor of evolution “the direct response of the organism to
-environmental stimuli at all stages of development, whereby individual
-adaptation is secured, and this individual adaptation must arise
-again and again in each succeeding generation.” He also maintains
-this position in several passages in his important work _Outlines of
-Evolutionary Biology_ published in 1912.
-
-A statement by Professor Bower, President of the Botanical section
-of the British Association of Science in 1914 should also be noted:
-“I share it (the doctrine in question) in whole or in part with many
-botanists, with men who have lived their lives in the atmosphere of
-observation and experiment found in large botanical gardens and not
-least with a former President of the British Association, viz., Sir
-Francis Darwin.”
-
-Professor Adami, in 1917, published an original work called _Medical
-Contributions to the Study of Evolution_ in which from his extensive
-knowledge of the subject he deals with evidence of inheritance of
-acquired characters in lowly organisms as well as higher animals from
-the point of view of pathology.
-
-Enough has been stated here to show that the dogma of Weismann or
-Lamarckian factors in organic evolution, _quâ_ authority, has been in
-poor case during recent years, and it remains for me now to add my
-small quota of the authority of facts.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-
-THE PROBLEMS PRESENTED.
-
-
-In his classical work on Heredity, Professor J. Arthur Thomson exhausts
-the evidence on Lamarckism available then (1908) in a manner worthy of
-the summing-up of an English judge. This is presented to the jury of
-the biological world and they are still considering it. Their verdict
-and his sentence are not yet delivered, and it may be they will still
-be long delayed. One might almost use the words of Professor Bateson,
-previously quoted, “on our present knowledge the matter is talked out.”
-
-I will make one prophecy in this volume and predict that the fourth
-edition of this work in 1930 will contain the verdict of the jury and
-sentence of the distinguished judge to the effect that in the case
-Lamarck _v._ Weismann the plaintiff has won. As in the Great War the
-Old Contemptibles held their line with the utmost difficulty against
-the disciplined hosts of the greatest army ever known till then, and
-yet the latter found their First Battle of the Marne, so perchance it
-may be in the present struggle.
-
-I introduce this chapter with an important passage from the above work
-on the _Logical position of the Argument_, in which the two possible
-methods of establishing the affirmative position of Lamarck are given;
-these are, first, actual experimental proof of transmission, and,
-second, a collection of facts which cannot be interpreted without
-the hypothesis of modification inheritance. The words are:[28] “_The
-neo-Lamarckians have to show that the phenomena they adduce as
-illustrations of modification-inheritance cannot be interpreted as the
-results of selection operating on germinal variations. In order to do
-this to the satisfaction of the other side, the neo-Lamarckians must
-prove that the characters in question are outside the scope of natural
-selection, that they are non-utilitarian and not correlated with any
-useful characters--a manifestly difficult task. The neo-Darwinians, on
-the other hand, have to prove that the phenomena in question cannot
-be the results of modification-inheritance. And this is in most cases
-impossible._”[29]
-
- [28] _Heredity_, 1908, p. 240.
-
- [29] I prefer to state the above passage rather than that on
- page 179, which is as follows: “The precise question is this:
- _Can a structural change in the body, induced by some change in
- use or disuse, or by a change in surrounding influence, affect
- the germ-cells in such a specific or representative way that the
- offspring will through its inheritance exhibit, even in a slight
- degree, the modification which the parent acquired?_” (Italics in
- original). The question is very precise and important, but I employ
- that given above in preference as lending itself better to the line
- of inquiry followed here.
-
-I have placed this passage in italics because of its importance from
-the point of view of the two problems which I am presenting and would
-remark here that if only all the writers had used Professor Thomson’s
-term “modifications” instead of “characters” in the statement of this
-doctrine much confusion and evasion of plain facts would have been
-avoided, and yet such workers as the Mendelians, if deprived of their
-clear-cut term “characters” would have been less able to carry on their
-studies. To this point of terminology I refer below.[30]
-
- [30] The term “character” derives both from its etymological origin
- and its application to biology a double-edged quality. This is of
- great value to the study of Mendelism which can only or mainly
- work with “unit-characters,” and it also serves the Weismann dogma
- well. In both cases the term obliterates the conception of initial
- variation, and while serving the purposes of these two great schools
- of thought it directs attention away from the early minute and
- unimportant stages by which many _germinal_ variations may have
- arisen. If it had been coined for the purpose, which it was not, it
- would have been a remarkable instance of polemic cunning. It will
- be evident in the course of this study of initial variation, that
- the accredited and general use of the term “character” begs the
- question far too manifestly for the general use of biologists. If
- it be retained for the neo-Darwinian and Mendelian provinces there
- is nothing to say against it, but I adopt here with pleasure the
- alternative term, often used by Professor Thomson, “modification.”
- This is wide enough to include the more clear-cut “character” so
- long as one makes it clear that the latter is one of the germinal
- variations. Further, I hold that his use of the term “transmission”
- instead of “inheritance” is the more useful for a wide range
- of phenomena. As far as possible I shall employ the expression
- “transmission of modifications,” instead of that well-worn but often
- sophisticated expression “inheritance of acquired characters.” This
- has been subjected by Sir Archdall Reid and Dr. Dixey, to say nothing
- of others such as Mr. George Sandeman, to a somewhat bewildering
- analysis. Thus the former says, “It follows that the so-called
- “acquirements” are innate and “inherited” in precisely the same
- manner as the so-called inborn characters.”* Dr. Dixey admits “that
- all characters are both acquired and innate”** and goes on to say
- that the accepted meaning of the terms was vague, that it led to
- confusion, and that it ought to be dropped. For this remark of Dr.
- Dixey one may be thankful, but of my friend Sir Archdall Reid I would
- ask what he is doing in this galley?
-
- * _Nature_, Vol. 77, Jan. 30th, 1908, p. 293.
-
- ** _Nature_, Vol. 77, Feb. 1908, p. 392.
-
- Sir E. Ray Lankester in a letter in _Nature_, 21st March, 1912,
- dissented from the mode of treatment of this point by Sir Archdall
- Reid and presumably also by Dr. Dixey in the words “It is not, I
- think, permissible to say that the normal characters which arise in
- response to normal conditions are with equal fitness to be described
- as ‘acquired.’” As to what is a normal character and what are normal
- conditions there may be much reason for difference of opinion, but I
- have said enough of this discussion to show that the terms “acquired”
- and “character” would afford a biological Pascal some such food for
- criticism as did the term “probable” in his _Provincial Letters_. The
- less these two terms are employed the less misunderstanding there
- will be of certain problems.
-
- It has been held that “discussing words is often indescribably
- tiresome, but it is better than misunderstanding them,” which is most
- true.
-
-In a world teeming with the life of plants and animals, and in the
-branch of science which seeks to interpret them, where we enter
-upon the unknown much sooner than in any other sphere of science,
-Weismann has set out to prove or maintain the most stupendous negative
-ever framed by the human mind. It would require generations of men
-to _prove_ this negative, if it were probable, and his case rests
-mainly on the assumed weakness of his opponents. So what is needed
-and demanded from the neo-Lamarckians is the production of a few
-well-attested and verified facts, and, as he admits himself, then it
-must follow as the night the day that his followers will surrender
-his characteristic dogma. The more cautious leaders and teachers of
-the day say that this has not taken place and ask for facts, more
-facts and still more facts, and this attitude is both judicious and
-judicial, for example in a teacher so eminent as Professor J. Arthur
-Thomson. Scientific men, in such a position as he occupies with grace
-and distinction, owe a serious debt of loyalty to ultimate truth and
-to the inquiring minds of the young students of to-day and to-morrow.
-Those who are in a position of inferior responsibility and honour,
-and more freedom, just rank and file members of the Commons’ House
-of Parliament, may be pardoned if they do not exhibit an excess of
-deference to authority and if they think for themselves.
-
-
-Two Questions.
-
-There are before the Scientific jury to-day two very vivid questions.
-
- (1) Can modifications in the structure of an individual organism,
- occurring as a result of its experience, be transmitted?
-
- (2) What is the cause of variation?
-
-If, as Weismann taught, the answer to No. 1 is in the negative, there
-is little use here in trying to answer No. 2, for from the present
-point of view the two stand or fall together in the study of Initiative
-in Evolution. Such _distributional_ answers to No. 2 as Bateson and de
-Vries may offer do not concern my purpose.
-
-If No. 1 be answered in the affirmative it is sufficient for the
-purpose of treating initial variations from the Lamarckian standpoint,
-for it is hardly conceivable that Nature would neglect so simple and
-obvious a method of leading upwards and onwards the organisms that
-inhabit a changing world.
-
-It is very clear from what is written on the subject of evolution
-to-day that a _point d’appui_ in the process is earnestly desired
-by many workers and that Weismann’s dogma stops the way. A very
-significant and important remark is made by Professor W. McDougall
-in his small book on Physiological Psychology, with reference to the
-inheritance of acquired characters, that it is a “proposition which
-most biologists at the present time are inclined to deny because they
-cannot conceive how such transmission can be effected. Nevertheless the
-rejection of this view leaves us with insuperable difficulties when we
-attempt to account for the evolution of the nervous system, and there
-are no established facts with which it is incompatible.”[31] I am aware
-that in the scheme of observed nature there is evidence of no iron
-necessity, that the convenience of psychologists should be provided
-for, and they, like others of us, have to do the best they can with the
-tools and the materials which exist, and I agree with Professor Thomson
-in his remark on _Misunderstanding No. 1_, “that our first business
-is to find out the facts of the case, careless whether it makes our
-interpretation of the history of life more or less difficult,”[32]
-but I am persuaded that he will not treat lightly _such_ a statement,
-from _such_ a source, on _such_ a subject as that I have quoted from
-Professor McDougall. As to his second statement on the same page
-“that in the supply of terminal _variations_, whose transmissibility
-is unquestioned, there is ample raw material for evolution” it is
-important as an opinion, and no more, and there is in the present
-connection, an elusiveness about it which prevents one allowing it to
-pass. It should be noted that stress is laid upon the term “variations”
-and from the context this means congenital full-blown “characters”
-such as those that Weismann says are provided in the germ guided by
-selection. At any rate, initial modifications are not signified by
-Professor Thomson’s remark. So for _evolution_ of forms of life it is
-possible the assertion may be true, but apart from distribution of
-variations, under the process called amphimixis, some starting point is
-required for the initial and wholly useless stages of many variations.
-These may or may not become “characters” or adaptive.
-
- [31] _Physiological Psychology_, 1911, p. 156.
-
- [32] _Op. cit._, p. 179.
-
-
-What the Problems are not.
-
-The ground may be cleared here by saying what our problems are not.
-There is no question as to whether Lamarckism or Darwinism represents
-the predominant partner in the story of life; there is no question
-of the “relative importance of natural selection and the Lamarckian
-factors in organic evolution,” though such a question may arise when
-once Lamarckism has received its passport from the authorities; but the
-time is not yet. Nor is it a question as to the reason why adaptive
-modifications are so constantly present in the germ. It is not a
-question of Nature _or_ Nurture, but perhaps may be found to be a study
-of Nature _and_ Nurture. It is not a question of Mendelian analysis,
-nor as to the distribution of either mutations on the one hand, nor of
-minute fluctuating variations on the other. The problems are therefore
-limited in scope and ambition, and are none the worse for that, as
-being better open to correction or support.
-
-
-The Problems Considered.
-
-It seems but natural to most persons who contemplate with any care the
-ever-changing and progressive drama of life in plants and animals that
-unquestionably the _dramatis personæ_ by their individual response to
-the environments and exercise of their functions must contribute a
-share, however small, to their offspring. When first this view presents
-itself to their minds they resent as “unnatural” any other possibility.
-But, alas! they find that such a conclusion is not permitted in those
-regions where alone the white light of science shines. Here the writ of
-_a priori_ does not run. The spirit of inquiry makes its challenge to
-every presupposition and every assertion in its province--even those
-of current science. I have shown that this particular assumption of
-the natural man was firmly challenged by Weismann, who was not the
-first, but the greatest, biologist to teach that modifications are
-not transmitted. Accordingly, agreeable and convenient as it would be
-to assume the Lamarckian hypothesis as a working one, it needs in the
-present day to be supported by evidence before this can be allowed.
-Facts, then, against Weismann’s dogma are demanded and of such a kind
-as will satisfy so powerful an advocate of his own views. In passing
-it may be remarked again that there is nothing so misleading as facts,
-except statistics, and for both sides to bear in mind the warning of a
-French writer that in such inquiries as this we should be careful lest
-we find the facts for which we are looking.
-
-To meet the conditions laid down in Professor Thomson’s Canon I
-propose to describe certain phenomena which are adduced as instances
-of modifications in certain mammals whose structure and mode of life
-are intimately known, and whose ancestry is little in dispute.[33]
-The most convincing of these lines of evidence are those which are
-shown to be outside the range of any form of selection, as well as
-the _distributional_ factors of Mendel and de Vries. It is well to
-enumerate here the six different factors in organic evolution which
-might claim a share in the production of such humble phenomena as form
-the subject-matter of this volume--they are:
-
- 1. Personal Selection of Darwin.
- 2. Sexual Selection.
- 3. Histonal or Cellular Selection of Roux.
- 4. Germinal Selection.
- 5. Inheritance according to Mendelian principles.
- 6. Inheritance of Mutations.
-
- [33] With the exception perhaps of the highest of all, for since the
- publication of Prof. Woods Jones’ _Arboreal Man_ the question “Who is
- Man?” has received a new answer.
-
-There is a somewhat severe and ill-defined condition attached to the
-formula in question for it demands that such modifications as will
-satisfy the neo-Darwinians shall not be _correlated with any useful
-character_.[34] If such a _conditio sine quâ non_ were taken too
-literally it would at once foreclose the case as to the possibility of
-transmission of modifications at all, the questions of issue ought in
-that case never to have been raised--and, _cadit quæstio_. This cannot
-be the intention of the biologist who propounds the formula. It could
-not reasonably be carried so far as to insist that a modification
-arising from a certain habit, active or passive, in an animal, and
-which on that account, and on paper, may loosely be said to be
-‘correlated’ with it, is to be ruled out. That would be tantamount to
-saying for example, that, because an animal must lie down in a certain
-attitude when it rests, or walk or run in a certain manner, in other
-words that it is useful to exist, certain modifications claimed to be
-due to these fundamental parts of existence must be excluded from the
-inquiry. The neo-Darwinian is not a critic easy to be entreated, but
-_that_ he would not claim. Let me take one example of what I mean. A
-short-haired dog will spend a considerable part of its daily life,
-and presumably a long line of ancestors did so too, lying with its
-forelegs planted in front of its chest and its head either raised in
-the air when awake or resting on the upper surface of the forelegs (of
-course the familiar attitude of a dog with its body and head curled
-up and fore-legs doubled is not referred to here). If the hairy coat
-be examined over its neck and jaw, which lie in this attitude, on and
-against the forelegs, a remarkable reversal of the direction of the
-hairs is found and the outline of this forms an accurate mould of
-the surface applied to the forelegs. This is transmitted of course
-from previous generations of domestic dogs. A precisely analogous
-reversal of the hairs is found on the under or extensor surfaces of
-the forelegs, matching with wonderful exactness the area of pressure
-of these on the ground, and anyone can see it who has a canine friend
-of the fox-terrier type. Long-haired dogs display it less neatly
-outlined. An instance such as this cannot be excluded from the evidence
-forthcoming because it is correlated with the useful “character” of
-lying in a certain attitude. Such a phenomenon, many similar to which
-will be seen later, had at any rate an origin _de novo_ at _some time_
-in the ancestral stock, and in _some way_. To discover these is part
-of my business. The boldest neo-Darwinian will not claim that this
-arrangement of a dog’s hair arose by selectional processes within the
-germ either in the initial or completed stages.
-
- [34] My italics.
-
-
-Correlation.
-
-The term “correlation” is somewhat scornfully said by Weismann to be
-“unquestionably a fine word,” and it has indeed in biological writings
-a very varied set of meanings. I will not vex the reader with a
-reference to our old friend Mesopotamia, but mention what Dr. Vernon in
-_Variation in Animals and Plants_ says of the term, referring to the
-relation between stature and head-index in man: “Such a statement must
-vary according to the notion of the observer as to what does and what
-does not constitute correlation.”[35] The most approved and precise
-meaning of the loose term in question is that associated with the work
-of the biometricians, and a few examples from Dr. Vernon’s book will
-show how far this conception of correlation is removed from the literal
-application of Professor Thomson’s formula. Dr. Vernon treats of such
-phenomena as the correlation of the long heads of greyhounds with
-length of legs, contrasting them with the shortened heads and legs of
-bull-dogs. He describes also the correlation in man between the stature
-and length of forearm from elbow to tip of middle finger, correlated
-measurements of crabs, of external structures of prawns, the tufts of
-Polish fowls correlated with perforations in the skull, also certain
-constitutional peculiarities with colour of skin. These few cases are
-enough to give an idea of the more precise and fairer acceptation of
-the term, but while these form a useful subject for minute study it may
-be remarked that they agree also with Lamarckian factors as to their
-origin and development. They are much more in line with Darwin’s use of
-the word and are strangely reminiscent of the well-known example of the
-Irish elk with its great head and horns which was brought forward in
-favour of Lamarckism by Herbert Spencer. They breathe an atmosphere of
-physiology rather than anatomy, or function than form.
-
- [35] p. 74.
-
-Enough has been said here by way of defining the terms of the issue.
-The negative we have to sustain is that the following facts and
-observations declare that certain small modifications cannot be
-governed by selection and are not correlated with useful characters.
-It will be shown later that Professor Thomson’s stringent condition
-is not in all of them compiled with, but that, in spite of this, the
-probability of their being valid examples of Lamarckism in practice is
-immense.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-
-INITIAL VARIATIONS AND TOTAL EXPERIENCE.
-
-
-The present chapter is on _a priori_ lines and will perhaps be
-dismissed with a wave of the hand or hurriedly skimmed over, but I pray
-the reader at least to read the two or three last pages of it. It is
-at any rate suggestive, and perhaps I may anticipate the comments of
-the neo-Darwinian and throw myself on his mercy by mentioning a remark
-of the late Sir Andrew Clark, prince of physicians and genial cynic,
-which he made to a patient in my presence. A lady not distinguished for
-depth of thought asked him a rather silly question in medicine. As if
-offended he drew himself up, holding in his hand a cup of tea which he
-was enjoying, and replied at once “Madam, you must get a younger and
-more inexperienced man than I am to answer you that question.”
-
-A very high degree of probability may be attached to the presupposition
-that Lamarckian factors, even in their humblest form, may enter into
-the story of the organisms as historical and living beings. Every
-hypothesis in matters of science, or, to put it at its lowest, every
-scientific guess must transcend the evidence at the time available.
-
-
-Total Experience.
-
-The suggestion I venture to make here is that if we take a
-comprehensive view of certain two great groups of phenomena in nature,
-which may be termed universal in their extent, it is difficult to
-conceive that they are not causally connected in the sense that one
-is the universal antecedent of the other. On the one hand are found
-universal minute differences, not only between any pair of organisms,
-but of any two corresponding parts of any organism, even to the size
-and shape of each leaf on each plant. On the other is universal
-discontinuity of _total experience_ of all organisms. This term
-includes all the stimuli of use and environment to which an organism
-is exposed throughout its whole existence, and its response to them.
-It includes the whole succession of active and passive stimuli which
-begin with the formation of a zygote in higher forms, for example, and
-continue till the death or end of reproductive life of the individual.
-It stands for such stimuli as arise from _habitat_ on or in the
-earth, in various levels of salt or fresh water, in sea, lake, pool
-and river, and in the branches of trees, from _climate_, from degrees
-of _light_, _temperature_, _moisture_ and _wind_, from presence and
-activity of _enemies_ and _rivals_, from _supplies of food_, from
-_geographical_ and _topographical_ position. Such an enumeration of
-stimuli might be much extended if it would serve any purpose. But it is
-enough to say that the number of such stimuli, and the varying degrees
-in which these are received and responded to, have hardly any limit
-which we can conceive. It is a very different and harder task to find
-out the proportion in which such stimuli are advantageous, injurious
-or indifferent to the organisms, but it may be taken as certain that
-the vast majority are indifferent in the sense of producing structural
-change, and, that the advantageous stimuli transmit structural effects
-to offspring, is only a matter of very strong probability. If the above
-two groups of phenomena are not causally connected they are intertwined
-with remarkable closeness and perversity. This aspect of the “web of
-life” has received attention, and deserves more.
-
-
-Discontinuous Environments.
-
-Some reference must be made here to observations of Prof. Bateson in
-his work on variation. In the first place he makes a most valuable
-statement that “_the environment as the directing cause is essential
-to Lamarck’s theory and as the limiting cause is essential to the
-doctrine of Natural Selection_”[36] (which I venture to place in
-italics on account of its importance to all who seek the pathway of
-organic evolution) and points out also that “diversity of environment
-is thus the measure of diversity of specific form. Here then we meet
-the difficulty that diverse environments often shade into each other
-insensibly and form a continuous series.”[37] This is clearly true
-and important to the subjects he is discussing. But in regard to the
-conception with which I am here concerned, that of _total experience_
-of organisms, it must be remembered that there is no such thing as an
-environment apart from the living beings that it environs, and that
-from this point of view there is no such thing in the world of nature
-as a continuous environment. The environment of two amœbæ living under
-a cover-glass is, for them, far from continuous. In their infinitesimal
-existence the exact position they occupy in the environing drop of
-fluid, in which the proportion of their humble fare at one side of the
-cover-glass is not the same as that on the opposite side, renders
-their environments discontinuous, or different from that of another
-amœba occupying a position and “environment” which _we_ should consider
-identical. And this consideration applies to the other few “tropisms”
-which enter into their little lives. This statement may be difficult
-to prove, but it is a necessity of thought. An illustration may assist
-one in visualizing such discontinuity. A fly is seen crawling at its
-own pace up one of the great pillars of St. Paul’s Cathedral. It comes
-to one of the thin layers of cement worn down with age and so delicate
-that a man can just see it in a good light. The fly pauses, and passes
-into what is for it a chasm, with as much relative deliberation as the
-man would show in passing across a deep railway cutting. The number of
-pictures that could be made of cases corresponding to that of the amœba
-is incalculable. A few will suffice. Two plants of the common nettle
-are growing on the south side of a ditch in a lane, one rooted a foot
-higher than the other. The upper one receives throughout its life from
-wind and sun stimuli slightly different from those received by the
-lower, and from the soil slightly less moisture. These again receive
-stimuli very different from another pair on the northern side of the
-lane. Again in windy weather a clump of sycamores facing the south-west
-in England, and situated on the ridge of an eminence, will receive
-very different stimuli from a similar clump on the north-eastern slope
-of this eminence, and will demonstrate the fact, as to force of wind,
-by a marked slope to the North East. Even in either of the clumps the
-individual trees present varying degrees of slope according to their
-position. The total experience of these two clumps of sycamores and
-of any two in each clump is obviously different. In a windy situation
-you can tell in July which is the prevailing wind by noting the main
-inclination of the ears of corn in a field. Again two male sticklebacks
-in a pond will make nests for the eggs, there to be deposited, and one
-will choose a spot on the southern and another on the northern side of
-a little promontory of soil and stones at the edge of the pond. One
-will find ready for him materials for building his nest different from
-those of his rival, and he and his wife and family will receive for
-that season very different stimuli, and so will the stimuli differ in
-other phases of their existence in a pond occupying a few square yards.
-On a sandy bank in a garden facing south you may discover two little
-caves ingeniously hidden by a small opening, and in each of them you
-can see a toad. Though these are only a few feet apart one is more
-widely open to sun and wind than the other and one deeper than the
-other, and whatever the other activities of the two toads may be in
-their little shelters, they receive stimuli different in strength and
-number. On another bank in the same garden less exposed to view, and
-altogether more sheltered from sun and wind and enemies, a robin has
-built a well-hidden nest. If the six fledglings in the nest are watched
-when the mother is absent they are seen to occupy very different
-positions of comfort, pressure and warmth. When the mother-bird returns
-from marketing she is hardly impartial in the amount of food she
-puts into their open beaks. But the slight and perhaps unimportant
-inequality of their experiences as fledglings is nothing to that which
-follows when they fly abroad, and which continues to the end of their
-lives, the life of a robin being somewhere about ten years long. The
-differences of the _total experience_ of the six young robins is easy
-to picture. Again, surely, the total experience of two fleas on the
-body of one plague-rat must be for such small creatures of importance
-to their welfare, according as their respective “pitches” are on the
-abdomen, back or legs of the host. When the life-history of a human
-being is told in full the discontinuity of his total experience needs
-no proof. The proof is written large before our eyes. But, perhaps, one
-example may be given. There are two very eminent living writers, whose
-light has certainly for some years not been hidden under a bushel, Mr.
-Chesterton and Mr. George Bernard Shaw. We may be said to know them
-well. Leaving out of sight the Celtic strain claimed by one, and indeed
-all inherited differences, we see two men of perhaps equal ability,
-near of an age, both living in London, both living by their pen, both
-in easy circumstances. When one considers for a moment the different
-company these two men keep, their different and opposing outlook on
-life, their different and opposing forms of diet for their minds and
-bodies (I know which of the two diets of those men I would choose and
-with which of them I would prefer to be cast on a desert island) one
-can only say that the total experience of Mr. Chesterton differs from
-that of Mr. Shaw as cheese from chalk, which things, incidentally, are
-an allegory in the philosophy of life.
-
- [36] _Op. cit._ p. 6.
-
- [37] p. 5.
-
-The thought here briefly expressed falls well into line with Prof.
-Bateson’s statement that the directing cause of the environment is
-essential to the theory of Lamarck, and I do not hesitate to add to
-it the assertion that _all environment_, in the wide sense of total
-experience, _is discontinuous_. There are no such phenomena in total
-experience as unit-characters of allied forms, small variations are the
-rule. Without doubt a large proportion of the stimuli received by an
-organism are as figures written on a slate and at once wiped off. They
-are as the snows of yester year. The most they do is to contribute in
-their measure to the metabolism of the organism, being too numerous
-and minute to affect any structural change. In a higher form of life
-none but those which are frequently repeated in the individual and in
-succeeding generations can effect any structural response.
-
-
-Mould and Sieve.
-
-It will be remembered that a single example was given of a short-haired
-dog in which its common habit of lying was associated with a certain
-pattern of hair. This introduces and illustrates the very wide
-conception of a moulding process undergone by an organism. It is one
-familiar to biologists and very much so to Professor Thomson in his
-various writings. Not less is he an exponent of the metaphorical work
-of the sieve of natural selection. I therefore claim nothing new when,
-with the temerity of certain persons treading where others are said
-to fear to do so, I invent an inclusive term and propose to call the
-two fundamental factors of organic evolution _Plasto-diēthēsis_[38]
-in which the conceptions of mould and sieve are included and
-hyphenated. This word is no more proposed for its elegance than are
-_panmixia_, _amphimixis_ and _tetraplasty_, though perhaps it may be
-the etymological superior of one or more of these. It is at any rate
-inclusive and perhaps sufficiently audacious to assure the inventor of
-the title of Dr. Pangloss of controversial memory. But as hard words
-break no bones I have taken this risk and it would appear to be a
-convenient “conceptual counter” and even Professor Karl Pearson could
-not consistently forbid it. It has at any rate the merit of having a
-meaning clear to all friends and opponents alike of Lamarckism. It
-will be observed that the two words are placed in what I take to be
-their natural order as expressive of the Alpha and Omega of the story
-of organic evolution. The moulding process is claimed to precede that
-of the sieve, as physiology precedes anatomy and function structure,
-in that form of biological speculation which is held here to be the
-soundest.[39]
-
- [38] From the Greek. {Πλαστος from verb Πλαττειν to mould.
- {διηθειν to strain through.
-
- [39] The twin metaphor here chosen for the name of a complex natural
- process should be cleared a little of a certain obscurity of meaning.
- A mould is familiar to all in domestic and industrial matters, but
- there are two sides to the metaphorical conception. A plastic object
- may be moulded by the hand of man as in his ruder, but more laborious
- days, or it may be pressed into an artificial mould that he has
- made by means of his hands and tools. One of these we know in the
- rude pottery made by prehistoric man and the vessel of the potter
- described by Jeremiah the prophet. We know also those machine-made
- moulds, so accurate as to be fitted for the coinage of a nation and
- able to puzzle a clever coiner who tries to copy them. We know the
- rough hewing of the stone by the sculptor which follows his moulding
- of the clay. And in Sacred Writ we read of a double process when the
- Hebrews not content with their object of worship took the golden
- ear-rings of their women and Aaron “received them at their hand and
- fashioned it with a graving tool, after he had made it a _molten
- calf_.” But as no conception of a mould in biological matters, which
- connotes the rigid accuracy of the coiner’s mould, can represent the
- truth, the rougher and freer meaning of the term is here employed.
- A similar double meaning is implicit in the metaphor of the sieve,
- considered as a human utensil. I believe we owe this idea of a sieve
- to Professor Thomson, but am not sure on this point. But I have not
- been able to find any definition as to the way in which the sieve of
- natural selection is held to act. A sieve is of course for sifting
- substances, and the size of the mesh is adapted by us for the purpose
- we have in view. We may want a sieve to hold back for us the fit or
- good and allow the unfit or bad to pass through, for example wheat
- and chaff, or we may employ it to separate sand for our purposes from
- fine gravel. The former is of course the most common of the purposes
- for which a sieve is used. So here the comparison of personal
- selection with the action of a sieve agrees with this aspect of a
- sieve, the fit being retained and the unfit allowed to pass through,
- thus agreeing with that view of Spencer’s of the survival of the
- fittest which is held by most authorities to be more accurate than
- Darwin’s Natural Selection.
-
-So the banns between Lamarck and Darwin are published, not for the
-first time of asking, and who shall say that there is cause or just
-impediment why these two should not be joined together in holy
-matrimony?
-
-I conclude this chapter with a passage from the life of Columbus by
-Washington Irving which affords a fitting parallel from history in the
-higher development and union of two formerly hostile Kingdoms, and the
-moral of it is clear and simple. But as a forensic junior I beg to
-enter a _caveat_ to the effect that though the name of Columbus occurs
-no suggestion is made of the discovery of a New World.
-
-“It has been well observed of Ferdinand and Isabella that they lived
-together not like man and wife whose estates are in common, under the
-orders of the husband, but like two monarchs strictly allied. They had
-separate claims to sovereignty in virtue of their separate Kingdoms,
-and held separate councils. Yet they were so happily united by common
-views, common interests, and a great deference for each other, that
-this double administration never prevented a unity of purpose and
-action. All acts of sovereignty were executed in both their names; all
-public writings subscribed with both their signatures; their likenesses
-were stamped together on the public coin, and the royal seal displayed
-the united arms of Castile and Aragon.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V.
-
-METHOD OF PROOF.
-
-
-In a matter of scientific inquiry one cannot go far wrong if one
-follows the advice of Henri Poincaré, who lays down certain principles
-of method; four of these are the following:--
-
- (1) The most interesting facts are those which can be used several
- times, those which have a chance of recurring.
-
- (2) The facts which have a chance of recurring are simple facts.
-
- (3) Method is the selection of facts, and accordingly our first care
- must be to devise a method.
-
- (4) We should look for the cases in which the rule established stands
- the best chance of being found fault with.
-
-The groups of facts described in the succeeding chapters are in
-agreement with these principles in the main, and are perhaps like a
-dust heap for their intrinsic value. But one knows that before now
-among a good deal of _débris_ a rusty key has been found which has
-opened a cabinet containing certain treasures, and in the hands of
-someone else than the finder has produced useful results.
-
-The headings of the chapters describe the facts, and there is no
-need to enumerate them here. The first and largest group is studied
-according to a method which is in a measure applied to all the others.
-Most of them are external or superficial phenomena and accordingly are
-open to others beside the expert for observation and corroboration, or
-the reverse. The typical plan adopted is as follows: a large number
-of related phenomena are chosen, and the more prominent of these are
-observed and described. Keeping in mind the two plain issues laid down,
-the origin of initial modifications and their transmission, I have
-selected the facts because, especially such as those of the hair, they
-are very simple, of wide distribution in animals well known to us,
-such as the domestic horse and man, and none are brought forward which
-any other observer cannot study for himself if he has some anatomical
-and physiological knowledge, some training and care in recording
-observations. In most centres of population there are still left a good
-supply of horses in streets and stables, of preserved specimens in
-museums and living ones in zoological gardens, and of hairy young men
-who will hardly refuse a polite request to examine the minute hairs
-clothing their trunks and limbs. One has to pursue a certain amount
-of that study which may be called the sister of plant-ecology, that
-is, animal-ecology or the behaviour of animals at home. The student of
-these matters, it may be freely admitted, will complain, unless he has
-some hypothesis or line of thought to follow, that he has been set down
-in a valley in which the bones are very many and very dry. But, armed
-or primed with an hypothesis, he may find an affirmative answer to his
-question “Can these bones live?” Every group of natural phenomena,
-_without exception_, has some meaning for those who will interpret
-nature rather than bully and slight her, and whatever anointed king
-may claim sovereignty over it the humble fact cannot be denied that
-“whatever phenomenon is, _is_.”[40] Again I would refer to Howes’
-inspiring note: “We live by ideas; we advance by a knowledge of the
-facts; content to discover the meaning of phenomena, since the nature
-of things will be for ever beyond our grasp.”[41] The facts adduced
-are simple, have a chance of recurring and are widely distributed
-among multicellular animals--the botanists and plants can very well
-take care of themselves. I must once more state that I am attaching
-to the considered facts a value of a somewhat unusual kind--_their
-intrinsic unimportance_. For anyone who has had to encounter the
-skilful dialectics and counter-attacks of a well-equipped neo-Darwinian
-it is well that he should remember the maxim of Napoleon, “Be
-vulnerable nowhere.” It is necessary to show evidence for Lamarckian
-factors in which no degree of selective value, survival-value, can
-be seen by hostile sharp-shooter while he works in his trench. The
-main line of defence, or more correctly what Hindenburg would call
-“offensive-defence,” is therefore made to rest on the phenomena of
-hair-direction, which, I submit, are impregnable to the forces of
-selection, probably in all the hairy mammals, but certainly in that
-hairy animal called Man.
-
- [40] Jevons.
-
- [41] British Association of Science 1902. Zoological Section.
-
-
-Thesis.
-
-If these groups of phenomena were being studied apart from the
-hypothesis they support, a much more full treatment of all of them
-would be required, such as I have given to those of hair-direction in
-a book published in 1903 on _Direction of Hair in Animals and Man_.
-The limited thesis, however, here upheld is that the phenomena are
-produced by the factors of stimuli and response in the course of
-the total experience of the organism, that the essence of the matter
-is the production of initial modifications, that instances of these
-in well-known animals are produced before our eyes by ascertainable
-mechanical stimuli, and that, especially in those of hair-direction,
-experiment is adduced in proof of the thesis that some modifications
-are transmitted.
-
-
-Procedure.
-
-The order of proceedings may be tabulated thus:--
-
- (1) Observation of selected facts.
-
- (2) Evidence that certain of these are produced in the lifetime of
- the individual.
-
- (3) Evidence that among the facts of direction of hair and others
- there is to be seen an orderly evolution rather than a casual
- appearance of the changes noted.
-
- (4) An hypothesis as to their production.
-
- (5) Exclusion of selection as a possible cause of these, and of
- correlation as properly understood.
-
- (6) Experiment in verification of the Lamarckian interpretation of
- the phenomena.
-
-And here, before I hear some Prince Henry of the genus Weismann, Mendel
-or Gallio groan aloud: “This intolerable amount of sack,” I proceed to
-offer him a few loaves of home-made bread.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI.
-
-EVIDENCE FROM ARRANGEMENT OF HAIR.
-
-
-_Ex Uno Disce Omnes._
-
-The singular arrangement of hair on the forearm of man is the subject
-of some curious statements by Darwin, Wallace and Romanes, and these
-suggested to me twenty years ago the following line of thought. To many
-minds the text will appear a humble one, but it opens many avenues of
-inquiry.
-
-These three illustrious men are all more or less inaccurate and
-incomplete in their descriptions of the hair on man’s forearm, though
-Romanes[42] gives a drawing which supplements his written account.
-They looked upon it as a vestige of the pattern of hair on the forearm
-of existing anthropoid apes, especially the orang, in whom its
-fully-developed form was an adaptation governed by Natural Selection.
-Of the three, Wallace is the most uncompromising on behalf of this
-view, Romanes rather accepts it _en passant_, and Darwin in a long
-passage[43] adopts it with some reserve and his usual respect for the
-work of his great co-worker, as the most probable explanation of a fact
-which lay heavy on his scientific conscience. Indeed, for all these
-great men it was a _crux_, though Romanes, with his Lamarckian views,
-need not have found much difficulty with an alternative account of
-it.[44]
-
- [42] _Darwin and after Darwin_, Vol. 1, p. 90.
-
- [43] _The Descent of Man_, Chap. VI., p, 151.
-
- [44] I may remark that Darwin seems at an earlier date to have made a
- very curious suggestion in this connection, for Hartmann, in his work
- on Anthropoid Apes, p. 99, quotes him as saying: “We should, however,
- bear in mind that the attitude of an animal may perhaps be in part
- determined by the direction of the hair; and not the direction of the
- hair by the attitude,” a notion so obviously untenable that it does
- not appear in the second edition of _The Descent of Man_, 1896.
-
-At the time when these statements were made, the lineal ancestors of
-man were much more definite personages than they are now, as Arthur,
-the legendary Celtic hero, was formerly held to be an historical
-personage more than is the case now. These ancestors were generally
-believed then to be found among the four existing anthropoid apes.
-The picture of our ancestor among the apes, as given by Wallace, in
-connection with this state of the hair on his forearm, represents
-him as spending much of his time like the gorilla, who, according to
-Livingstone, “sits in pelting rain with his hands over his head.” He
-would no doubt find the thatch-like arrangement of the hair a tolerably
-efficient umbrella, but one may doubt very much if so clever a denizen
-of the tropics would fail to find under the great branches of trees, in
-a tropical forest, a better covering and one more like the roofs of our
-houses. But when we cannot find a roof to our heads we--and the orang
-or gorilla--naturally employ a substitute, and not otherwise. Be that
-as it may, it is doubtful if the thatch of his forearms would supply
-him with that survival value on which the theory of Selection depends,
-to say nothing of the fact that in its incipient stage the reversal of
-the slope of hair, inherited from the lemur stock, would be trivial and
-useless.
-
-But one must ask: “Did man’s Simian ancestor really loaf away so much
-of his time in this dull manner? and was the running-off of rain so
-frequent and imperative a need as to make him set to work to invent
-this special adaptation?”
-
-After some millions of years have passed since his day we are not in a
-position to go beyond speculations, and this one seems barely credible,
-moreover, it is quite unnecessary, as certain following facts will show.
-
-
-Steps of the Inquiry.
-
-Having expounded the text and its context, I would mention that in
-1897 I came across these views of biologists as to the very strange
-arrangement of hair on man’s forearm, and was struck with the
-inadequacy of the theory of Darwin, Wallace and Romanes to account for
-the state of things which every man can find, if he looks for it, on
-his own forearm. I examined a large number of apes and monkeys so as to
-test the theory, and the results were published in _Nature_, Vol. 55,
-under the title “Certain vestigial characters in Man.” Suffice it to
-say that from the evidence I brought forward one had to choose between
-two heresies: either to deny the Simian ancestry of man or to affirm
-the inheritance of some acquired characters; and I chose the latter.
-The choice of “evils” or heresies which had to be made then will serve
-as an introduction to all that follows.
-
-This article was followed by a paper at the Zoological Society of
-London on “The Hair-Slope in certain Typical Mammals,” and after this
-came a paper at the same Society, giving evidence and reason why
-certain patterns of hair in some mammals should rank as specific
-characters. Various other papers at the Anatomical Society of Great
-Britain and Ireland were read and published and others at the
-Zoological Society, in which different regions of the hairy coat of
-man and lower mammals were dealt with. In 1903 the whole subject of
-the Direction of Hair in Animals and Man was treated in a book freely
-illustrated.
-
-I then followed the advice of Horace and left the subject alone for
-nine years, during which time my further observations and reflections
-served but to confirm, except in two or three unimportant details, the
-results and conclusions in the book and papers of an earlier date.
-The connection between the habits of an animal and the distribution
-of its hairy coat were always cropping up, and I saw then and see now
-no possible explanation of the connection than that the former is the
-efficient cause of the latter.
-
-
-How the Hair is Arranged on the Forearm.
-
-Returning now to the text, the remarkable arrangement of hair on man’s
-forearm, attention may be directed to the accompanying figure of the
-forearm of a lemur, an ape and man, in which the extensor or back view
-of this limb-segment is shown, the heavy “war-arrows” being employed
-to direct the attention of the reader to the main lines in which the
-hair-streams flow. The front or flexor surfaces in the lemur and
-ape are not shown because they are precisely like the corresponding
-back surfaces, and the flexor surface in man is shown in the figure.
-The figures are so much like diagrams that a very little detailed
-description will suffice. For the examination of the hair on man’s
-forearm the best subject is a dark-haired youth, and it is easily
-traced, though in any hairy subject it can be shown up well by placing
-the forearm in water for a minute and allowing the water to drain
-off. The normal and congenital hair-slope on the forearm is then well
-displayed.
-
-On the front surface of man’s forearm the hairs point away from the
-elbow and divide in the middle of the surface into two streams, one
-passing to the outer and the other to the inner border in a downward
-gentle curve, and they join the streams of hair on the back surface. In
-this pattern there is nothing very peculiar, for it is shared by many
-monkeys.
-
-When the back surface is examined it is found to present an arrangement
-of the hair which is _unique_ among hairy mammals. The figure shows the
-eccentric course taken by the hair on the back surface. In the centre,
-exactly along the extensor border of the ulna, from the wrist to the
-point of the elbow, the hair-stream has been bold enough to turn
-straight _upwards_ in a narrow line, and it was here that our three
-great leaders saw their chance of claiming for Selection a tiny bit
-of territory, a kind of Duchy of Luxembourg between two great States,
-though, as I proceed to show, the claim is disallowed and untenable.
-
-[Illustration: Fig 1.--Arrangement of Hair on the Forearm.]
-
-In the ape the hairs of the forearm are much longer and thicker than
-those of man, and both on the front and back all point _from the wrist
-to the elbow_.
-
-In the lemur all the hairs point _from the elbow to the wrist_.
-
-In the products of Nature there are no freaks, or impish tricks
-performed, and it is not for nothing she does her work. Every one of
-them asks for and should receive an explanation consistent with fact
-and reason, and here comes in the need for studying, as one may, the
-broad outlines of man’s ancestry. His ancestor being now sought in an
-earlier and more generalized stock than that of the four genera of
-anthropoid apes known to us, the most instructive and safest line to
-take is to trace him back to the stock lemur, who remains to-day among
-the most Chinese or unchanging of known mammals. In his illuminating
-work, _Prehistoric Man and History_, Professor Scott Elliott adopts an
-excellent term, “lemur-monkey-man,” to sum up, without missing links,
-the long ancestry of man. I take the liberty of adapting this term more
-closely to the present inquiry and use that of _lemur-ape-man_ instead,
-for whatever may be the relation of man to present apes some ape-like
-ancestors enter into his genealogical tree.[45] For my purpose the
-monkey is less useful because his hair-slope differs so little from
-that of lemurs, whereas apes have made for themselves a very remarkable
-position as regards the hair of their forearms. Our series of animals
-for study is then well represented by the lemur-ape-man--hypothetical,
-necessary and serviceable. Through all the immense stretch of time
-occupied in this process of descent there has been ample opportunity
-for the lemur to change his fashion to that of the ape, and the latter
-to change to the present fashion of man.
-
- [45] This was written before the publication of Professor
- Woods-Jones’ book _Arboreal Man_.
-
-This simple arrangement of the lemur’s hair is common to that of all
-the more primitive long-bodied mammals, of which an otter is a good
-example, and I venture, greatly daring, to call this the normal slope
-of hair. Somewhere and somehow in the human tree there has appeared
-a total reversal of the lemur-type; the stock of apes acquired a new
-fashion, and gradually discarded altogether their ancient inheritance,
-beginning their innovation perhaps, with _Dryopithecus fontani_ in the
-Miocene Age.
-
-
-The Dynamics of Hair-Pattern.
-
-There are a few well-known facts which it is necessary to bear in mind
-if one is endeavouring to understand the mode of origin and order
-of the events before us. The hairy coat of a mammal is composed of
-individual hairs of varying length, colour and thickness, each being
-rooted in a tiny pit in the skin and growing from a papilla at its
-base. As the hair grows, its free end is pushed away from the papilla
-at the rate of one inch in two months. This is the rate in man’s hair,
-and it is probably greater in the case of lower mammals on account
-of the greater importance and physiological activity of their hairy
-coat than in man’s. But one inch in two months is a close enough
-calculation. Here, then, is a structure which grows throughout the
-whole life of the animal, and has to dispose itself somehow on the
-surface of the skin. It does this _in the line of least resistance_,
-and to trace this line is the Alpha and Omega of the present inquiry.
-
-There is a conception of much value in understanding the dynamics of
-the distribution of hair, and that is to view the hair of mammals as
-composed of certain streams. As in every illustration, this conception
-may be challenged because of some difference the critic may find
-between these streams and a stream of fluid. It certainly does not
-leave its bed as do the component parts of a river, a glacier or molten
-lava, for the base of the hair is fixed. But it will serve, and is
-at least not more open to objection than certain useful metaphors in
-biology as when the genealogy of man and animals is pictured as a tree,
-or the living things of the earth as a “web of life.” It is, then, as
-_streams moving at the rate of one inch in two months in the lines of
-least resistance_ that I propose to discuss the animal hair and its
-diverse patterns and offer no further apology for doing so. Just as
-in the cases of a stream of water with varying banks and rocks in its
-course, or a glacier with its mountain-sides and sinuous valleys, or a
-stream of lava with small projecting surfaces of a mountain, our stream
-of hair flows on, hindered only by adequate obstructions.
-
-Yet another conception from the region of metaphor must be mentioned.
-It is one which will commend itself to every mind which has been
-steeped in thoughts of warfare for five years. We are all soldiers now;
-we think in terms of military affairs. In the case of our hair-streams
-there are in many regions two forces directly opposed to one another,
-others in which no struggle has yet occurred, as, in the Great War,
-Italy was not at one period at open war with Germany.
-
-Between the opposing forces in our small battle-field of the hairy
-coat there have been waged battles to which those of Mukden, Verdun,
-the Somme and Arras, are not to be compared in point of time. They
-are but as one day to a thousand years. On one side of the conflict
-in our present chosen field the ancient primitive type of the lemur
-has remained entrenched for some millions of years, until there arose
-new forces in its descendants on the other side and this changed the
-war of positions into one of movement. It was indeed “a contemptible
-little army” which came forward to oppose the ancient barbarian
-forces of the lemur, long prepared and organised, and these new
-armies fought under the banner, Habit. In the slowly-formed patterns
-in many types of mammals we have records of the treaties made after
-these long struggles and the rectifications of frontier which became
-necessary. The critic may call these “battles of kites and crows,”
-and ask What war correspondents were allowed to describe them; but a
-battle, whether great or small, long or short, is important to the
-parties concerned, and it is open to us to “reconstruct” the facts of
-the battle as do the historians on their part, for example, Sir James
-Ramsay the battle of Agincourt--with tolerable verisimilitude. But in
-science, especially geological science, the process of reconstruction
-is much more ambitious and bold than any that is here attempted. Who
-has not been fascinated, if he has read Sir E. Ray Lankester’s work
-on Extinct Animals, by the skill and daring with which he conveys to
-us a vivid idea of the form and mode of life, with scanty data, of
-the extinct Moa of New Zealand, the great Pterodactyle, Pteranodon,
-or the Diprotodon of Owen--“the probable appearance in life” of these
-uncanny but very real inhabitants of the earth in days long past. How
-skilfully did Owen from a piece of bone seven inches long, sent to
-him by a gentleman in New Zealand sixty years ago, pronounce it to be
-a part of the thigh-bone of a bird like an ostrich, and then after a
-few years had passed, confirmed it by more bones of the skeleton, till
-the large Moa, extinguished 600 or 700 years ago by the Maoris, lived
-again before us--an historical personage; or how by the examination of
-the skull and most of its skeleton the giant marsupial from Australia,
-Diprotodon, was resuscitated and admired; or again, how from the bones
-of the arms, shoulder-girdle and fingers was built up the strange body
-of Pteranodon, the great flying dragon. All of which is the legitimate
-and approved business of biologists and palæontologists, and this
-digression is made here to show that my line of treatment of a little
-subject agrees with that in a greater one; nay, it even proceeds in
-its explanations of events on the ever valuable principle of Lyell in
-a still greater one without which to-day geology would be a thing of
-naught, that is, the principle of _explaining changes in the surface of
-the earth by reference to causes now in action_. The objection that one
-subject is very great and the other very small is not valid; for one as
-much as the other there are millions of years to be had for the asking.
-Who in these days hesitates to talk and try to think in millions?--tens
-of millions of men, millions of soldiers, millions upon millions of
-money, millions of bacteria in vaccines and millions of money belonging
-to other people disposed of by the new spendthrift Minister?
-
-
-From Lemur to Ape.
-
-Returning now to our Eocene lemur we must remind ourselves of the
-problem before his simple mind and those of his Simian descendants. How
-was he to change so greatly the direction of the hair on his forearm
-(Fig. 1) till it should turn right about face and imitate those great
-German “victories” of Hindenburg, well called Marshal Rückwarts? The
-problem lies open in the Figure and receiving no aid from Selection or
-survival of the fittest, in this little effort, he had to fall back on
-the eternal and tedious force of habit and use. I am afraid if here I
-were interrupted by some critic, more learned than wise, by a summary
-demand on the part of Selection for its share in the result, I should
-be tempted to reply with the word Φλυαρια employed by George Borrow,
-forbearing to give the translation of the reply as he gives it. Anyhow,
-it is a case in which to “listen politely and change the subject.”
-
-Here comes in the aspect of strife between primitive and new
-obstructing forces in a little hair-stream. The lemur lives in trees
-and carries on a stealthy nocturnal business, moving on all fours in
-quest of his daily bread, and no external force or new habit avails to
-modify the hair-slope on his forearms, and so it remains until some
-primitive form of monkey, gradually evolving into a primitive ape,
-brings into the family new habits and customs. Other men and other
-manners appear in the Miocene Age. Our supposed Dryopithecus fontani
-becomes more upright in his bodily, and perhaps his moral habits,
-and spends an increasing amount of his leisure time in the sitting
-posture; his hands are frequently grasping a bough as he sits and
-reflects, it may be in a man-ward direction, or, as is more likely, on
-his last meal of nuts and fruits. But he did not spend quite so much
-time as Wallace and others think in this futile attitude, for he knew
-in his way as much as the modern bachelor does, of making his posture
-comfortable and restful when he was not out at work, and he varied
-his plans by resting his forearms on his thigh, crouched up and cosy,
-and doubtless slept much in this attitude. All these bold departures
-from his lemur-ancestor’s habits had the necessary result of altering
-the slope of his hair on the forearms, which was now growing as long
-and coarse as we see it to-day in the orang. In course of milleniums
-the ancient forces yielded to those of the new armies, and the once
-normal slope became reversed in a way which shocked the conservative
-lemurs of his day. It requires little imagination to see how the
-lengthening thickening hairs on this limb-segment became changed in
-their direction by friction against the opposing surfaces of the
-thighs, by gravitation, and the frequent dripping of rain when they
-were held up to grasp a bough. Here then we see at work new forces of
-friction, pressure, gravitation and dripping of rain, turning endlessly
-and slowly the lemur-fashion into the ape-fashion, with unlimited time
-for their effectual action. In this stock of Man’s ancestry Selection
-was taking care of the individual and Habit of the details of his
-making--two truly harmonious partners.
-
-
-From Ape to Man.
-
-Another step, and a long one, has still to be taken from the
-ape-fashion to that of man. Bearing in mind that the lemur-fashion has
-been totally reversed by the ape it startles one to find that man in
-his modern fashion has largely reverted to that of the lemur on the
-front and sides of his forearm. This is clearly shown in Figure 1.
-There also you see graphically recorded in the hair of the extensor
-border of the ulna, a little _backward_ streak, a poor little legacy of
-fifty pounds from the fortunes of many thousands once possessed by the
-ape. From the present limited point of view, man is a veritable pauper,
-and his possessions in this limb-segment may with some irony well be
-called a “vestige.”
-
-Professor Scott-Elliott in his book, _Prehistoric Man and His Story_,
-p. 60, goes rather wide of the mark here in his graphic picture of our
-rude ancestor and his hard life. He gives too strongly the idea of
-him sitting asleep in raging gales, in driving rain which is neatly
-conducted by the thatch of his hair off his skin. As far as it goes
-this need not be questioned, as a matter of probability, but he states
-far too broadly “The hair on the arm, even of those civilised men who
-retain sufficient to trace the arrangement, turns down both upper
-and forearm to the elbow”[46]--true as to the upper arm, but only
-true of the forearm in a very narrow streak of hair over the extensor
-surface of the ulna. The fact is that in every human being, not too
-old, its course can be traced with a lens. He overlooks also from
-this protective point of view the fact that the ape or early man, in
-the position of rest he describes, would have very much the reverse
-of protection from the “lie” of the hair on his thighs, for this is
-towards the knee and is well calculated to catch the rain and conduct
-it carefully, or let it run, into his groins. So the protection theory
-(under the empire of Selection) is again in straits. But I must not
-forget my self-denying ordinance alluded to in the Preface, but will
-show how the ape fashion began to be modified into its present and
-probably final form in man. Still further changes in the simple habits
-of the earliest men became frequent, and fresh forces were organised in
-our mimic battlefield. Gravitation gradually ceased to act as the hairs
-became thinner and shorter. Friction and pressure changed their lines
-of incidence with the increasing tendency of man to assume the upright
-posture, for the surfaces exposed to pressure and friction were only
-affected when the extensor surface or back of the forearm rested on
-some supporting object, an attitude extremely common in man as we know
-him now. Then came the opportunity of the primitive barbarian host, the
-lemur fashion, by a prolonged counter-attack to recover on the greater
-part of the forearm the ground lost millions of years before by the
-ape, and then was engraved on the forearm of man the permanent treaty
-which we have before us to-day.
-
- [46] _Prehistoric Man and His Story_, p. 60
-
-This small and apparently trivial battle-ground has been described at
-what may seem undue length, but it is a miniature of the rise and fall
-of little empires such as here engage our attention, and I make no
-apology for this to the reader who has gone thus far with me, for, on
-the principle of _ex uno disce omnes_, all that follows in other areas
-of the hairy coat of mammals will be the clearer, and little repetition
-will be needed.
-
- NOTE.--Two terms have been used somewhat freely in this Introduction,
- “vestige” and “normal,” and a few remarks upon them are not out of
- place, for they are both somewhat ambiguous and apt to be carelessly
- employed.
-
- A vestige in biological writings is almost the exclusive property
- of the Pan-Selectionists, and no one can doubt that on the one
- hand it is a far more correct term than that of rudiment which
- Darwin employed so freely, on the other that they have a perfectly
- legitimate claim to it in a large number of obsolete structures of
- animal forms. But vestiges, footsteps, footprints, have another and
- equally correct meaning, even if less often thus employed, in the
- fact that a vestige or footprint may just as well be a relic of
- what the race and individuals have _done_, as a relic of what they
- have _retained_ in the way of possession, and I submit that the
- facts and arguments I have here advanced afford a valid claim to the
- term “vestige” in the results of certain _doings_ on the part of
- animals--as will appear later still more clearly.
-
- The term “normal” is a fine field for dialectics, but neither
- ordinary men nor scientific students can do their work without
- its use, and yet it would have been an intellectual treat to
- have heard how Huxley, for example, would have turned inside out
- any opponent who chose to employ it to his dissatisfaction. In a
- strictly-conducted tournament no evolutionary biologist would allow
- its use--to his adversary. A norm for him exists only as one of
- Professor Karl Pearson’s “conceptual counters,” a piece of mental
- shorthand or hardly more than a _pis aller_. Among the fundamental
- conceptions of organic evolution there is one which is almost a
- truism, the doctrine of Heraclitus, πἁντα ρε̑ι, the everlasting flux
- and change of Nature and her products. In strict logic, according
- to what we all now believe, there is no possible norm. All that one
- may do is to take stock at a certain epoch of evolution and label,
- for our own convenience, some group, or organism or structure as
- “normal”--and go on with our business, collecting some specimens,
- calling them type-specimens, and putting them in books or cases in
- the Natural History Museum--and then proceed to business.
-
- The biological teacher in his class room says he must live, he must
- have his tools for his work, to which the idle student replies under
- his breath, “I do not see the necessity,” but then few students
- are now idle, and this jibe does not sting any one! The examiner
- must have his normal human anatomy, and would ruthlessly plough
- any daring examinee who tried to sophisticate the meaning of the
- term “normal.” I have often been struck with what I must call the
- intellectual audacity of a most eminent leader in physical science
- and mathematics, who is not unlike a certain great Church, which
- grants nothing to her adversaries but is not averse from taking. In
- his _Grammar of Science_, written with a pen dipped in hydrochloric
- acid, Professor Karl Pearson four times over, and perhaps more,
- has the courage to call the human brain in this twentieth century
- “normal.” Has he never heard of the coming Superman of Mr. Bernard
- Shaw and other prophets? Thinking _sub specie aeternitatis_ has he
- here in the West, and at a certain small epoch of time, any right
- to call the human brain “normal”? I can only long that there may be
- more normal brains such as Professor Karl Pearson’s, and am almost
- inclined to echo the prayer of Moses, “Would God all the Lord’s
- people were [such] prophets”! These comments on the term “normal”
- imply no complaint against its use, indeed are a claim for it, and I
- deprecate very much that form of criticism known in boys’ schools,
- domestic circles, and among politicians as the _tu quoque_ reply,
- and I hope the few ambiguous terms used in this book will pass the
- censor, and help the reader.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII.
-
-THE EVOLUTION OF PATTERNS OF HAIR.
-
-
-Some attention must here be given to the supposed mode of formation of
-individual patterns of hair, that is to say, their evolution. So here
-one has to move among the fields of hypothesis, without which detached
-facts of nature are useless to science.
-
-The simplest pattern consists of a reversed area of hair appearing
-between two adjoining streams; the more complex are whorls, featherings
-and crests. No detailed description nor illustration of the former
-are required, but I have prepared a diagram to illustrate the latter
-(see p. 51.) (A) shows a whorl by itself; (B) a whorl, feathering and
-crest. The arrows at the sides indicate the direction of the adjoining
-hair-streams, the arrow in the centre of (B) the direction of the
-reversed flow of hair.
-
-An understanding of the dynamics of a hair-whorl leads quite simply
-to that of a feathering and crest, for the two latter are only the
-results of the further extension of the battle of forces concerned
-in the whorl itself, and the end of their conflict. A whorl marks a
-point in the stream of hair where two contending forces have come
-into collision; on the one hand the centrifugal force of growth from
-each hair-papilla, the rate of which has been described, and on the
-other a certain centripetal dynamic force which may be either that
-of localised _friction_, _pressure_, _gravitation_, or _muscular
-traction_, directly opposing or divergent. Thus conceived a whorl may
-be looked at symbolically as a written treaty between two nations,
-one of which has defeated the other, and actually as a proof that the
-contending centrifugal and centripetal forces are in the state called
-the balance of power. But when the centripetal force of some habitual
-action prevails over that of the original force of growth in the
-hair, a whorl becomes extended into a feathering, and the length of
-this, metaphorically speaking, corresponds with the duration of open
-fighting, and terminated by a sharp crest when another and a decisive
-battle has been fought. A crest may again be looked upon as a “treaty.”
-The whole process pictured here shows a battle followed by a treaty or
-truce (W) again a retreat (F) and a counter-attack (C) with a final
-treaty and peace.
-
-This hypothetical treatment, with addition of some metaphors, does not
-carry us far enough to leave it thus to the tender mercy of that class
-of critic who relies too much on the “argument from ignorance.” He
-tells us such a process as I have pictured may be true or not, and that
-no one can do more than leave the case open, and treat it like that of
-Jarndyce & Jarndyce where it would remain in Chancery till all of us
-concerned in the inquiry have returned to our dust. The critic might
-reasonably ask for experiments which will bear out the suggested views.
-But verification by calculated experiments is impossible, for, _ex
-hypothesi_, the variations or patterns which are described require long
-periods of time for their production. Such experiments being ruled out,
-the evidence in favour of the hypothesis must be sought in some region
-of the hairy coat of mammals where whorls, featherings and crests can
-be observed in all stages of their formation.
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 2.--A. Diagram of a whorl. B. Diagram of a whorl (W)
-a feathering (F) a crest (C).]
-
-
-The Side of the Horse’s Neck.
-
-The field chosen for observation is, from one point of view, the most
-remarkable among all the numerous regions in the great series of
-hair-clad mammals. The side of the neck in the domestic horse displays
-all degrees and forms of whorls, featherings and crests in such variety
-as to be almost bewildering. I must have examined many thousands of
-specimens of this valuable large mammal in reference to this state
-of things on the side of its neck, and can only regret that I have
-not kept any record of them as to number or quality, and I fear the
-opportunity for doing so will not return in this country. There are
-three reasons for this choice of field. In the _first_ place there is
-or was an extensive supply of the specimens for examination; in the
-_second_, the side of a horse’s neck is a region where no extraneous
-or artificial agents, such as harness, except a bridle, can operate,
-and therefore Nature and the animal’s habits have free play; in the
-_third_ the neck of a horse in its locomotive life is subject to
-powerful mechanical forces which are _constant_, literally speaking,
-while it walks, trots, canters or gallops. Here then, if anywhere, one
-may read the records, in indelible characters of hair patterns, the
-history of its active life and that of its ancestors, and here also one
-may reasonably expect to find these patterns in every possible stage
-of formation, from a mere rudiment to the most finished product in a
-whorl, feathering and crest--_and this is precisely what is found to
-exist_.
-
-Even an observer not acquainted with the anatomy of this region who
-watches closely a horse in action cannot fail to notice how at every
-step taken there is a marked jolt of the neck produced in the neck by
-the impact of its hoofs with the ground and in supporting its heavy
-skull. I have computed several times the number of jolts that the neck
-of a trotting horse sustains, in my numerous rides behind various
-horses, during many hundreds of miles, and have reckoned the number
-which occur in a horse trotting for an hour, at the usual rate at which
-a doctor travels. This is on the average 6,000, and of course the
-numbers of jolts in walking, cantering, and galloping vary according to
-these different paces. But a great deal more of movement of the head
-and neck is observed beside the jolt at every step. See how the animal
-tosses up its head, twists it to this and that side for the mere _joie
-de vivre_ when it is fresh, or, even when hindered by blinkers,[47] how
-he turns his head to look at every passing object in the road with his
-ancestral caution, how he will pass contemptuously a great horse-waggon
-or even now a villainous-looking motor lorry, but will peer at a beggar
-woman sitting beside the road, or a heap of stones, or a yapping cur!
-All this vivid muscular work of a horse’s head and neck hardly ceases
-while he is in action and at any rate not till he is dead beat, and
-the higher the courage and breeding of the horse the more frequent and
-brisk are his movements. Is it possible to conceive a region of the
-body of any large mammal where more numerous, varied, and powerful
-action of underlying muscles can be found playing their ceaseless
-tricks on the sober normal slope of hair in the skin which covers them?
-If there be any region approaching this I have not found it.
-
- [47] Blinkers ought long ago to have gone the way of bearing-reins
- for draught horses. If a riding horse does not need them, no more
- need a draught horse be thus insulted, for very little intelligence
- and patience on the part of their drivers would have educated their
- excellent brains into indifference towards startling objects.
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 3.--Superficial muscles concerned in the movements
-of the head and neck of the horse.]
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 4.--Deeper layer of the muscles concerned in the
-movements of the head and neck of the horse; the scapula removed.]
-
-The main facts of the anatomy of the horse’s neck must be referred
-to here, so that a better picture may be obtained as to the powerful
-forces which are found in conflict during the locomotive life of the
-animal. Fig. 3 shows the superficial layer of muscles concerned in
-the actions of its head and neck, and the manner in which adjoining
-muscles diverge from one another should be noted. Fig. 4 gives the
-deepest layer of neck-muscles, the shoulder-blade having been removed,
-and Fig. 5 the immensely strong _ligamentum nuchae_, of yellow
-elastic tissue, which extends from the base of the skull to the great
-projecting spinous process of the lowest cervical and second and third
-dorsal vertebræ.
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 5.--Ligaments and tendons supporting the head and
-neck of the horse.]
-
-There are here indeed great forces for conflict--_first_ a layer of
-strong superficial muscles, _second_ a layer of smaller muscles which
-has not been figured, _third_ a deep layer of muscles, and _fourth_ a
-powerful, widely-spread and strongly-attached mass of dense elastic
-tissue, adapted for supporting the head without muscular exertion, but
-by its elasticity allowing a downward jerk of the head and neck at
-every step. It is an exceedingly important structure for a domestic
-horse.
-
-
-The Normal Arrangement of Hair.
-
-So much for the active part played by a horse’s neck and head, and for
-the simpler anatomical facts of the region involved. Before proceeding
-to describe the results of these as seen in the hair, it is well to
-make sure of a point which a critic might raise. “How do you know,”
-says he, “that some of the variations in this highly variable region
-of the hair are not normal. What is the normal type here?” A very easy
-answer to this is found by studying, not only any Ungulate known,
-except the Gnu, but more particularly all wild Equidæ; and this reveals
-the fact that in all this series the normal slope of hair prevails
-here, that is to say, an even trend from head to shoulder. Variations
-in others, indeed, hardly exist, and I may add that the absence of
-variations here is a strong piece of negative evidence in my favour,
-for no Ungulate comes near the domestic horse for amount and activity
-of locomotion, which is indeed his _raison d’être_. He is the only
-one that has invented new patterns. But a little direct evidence
-can be brought which clinches this argument from inference based on
-ancestry. I made an examination, at the stables of Messrs. Tilling,
-at Peckham, of 100 consecutive specimens of hackney, for the purpose
-of ascertaining the proportion in that group of those that showed the
-normal slope on the neck to those with variations. In 62 of these the
-normal existed on both sides of the neck, 18 Normal on one side, and in
-the remaining 20 there were variations on both sides. If 100 specimens
-of horses contain 80 with one side and 62 with both normal the previous
-inference requires no further support.
-
-
-Fourteen Varieties.
-
-I have put together here, and described, fourteen out of a much larger
-number of the most instructive varieties of pattern that I have been
-able to collect during the course of many years and examination of
-several thousand horses. They comprise examples the mostly likely, as
-I think, to convey to the reader an adequate picture of the results of
-the strength, number and variety of mechanical forces in our present
-battle-field of hair. The diagrams almost speak for themselves, but a
-short written description will help to emphasise the salient points.
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 6.--Side of Neck of Horse.
-
-Normal type, hair-stream passing evenly in line of neck.--Bay hackney,
-examined 3rd May, 1904.]
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 7.--Side of Neck of Horse.
-
-Complete whorl with wide feathering which extends from base of the neck
-to the ear where it ends in a crest.--W.F.C.
-
-Brown hackney, examined 12th January, 1904.]
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 8.--Side of Neck of Horse.
-
-Offside, anterior portion of neck showing line of division, B to A,
-along upper border of sterno-mastoid muscle, normal arrangement from A
-to C.
-
-Grey pony, examined 15th December, 1903.]
-
-[Illustration: Fig 9.--Side of Neck in Horse.
-
-Near side, winter coat, showing normal arrangement from B to A, where a
-division begins and extends along upper border of sterno-mastoid muscle
-to base of neck.
-
-Brown hackney, examined 28th December, 1903.]
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 10.--Side of Neck of Horse.
-
-Line of division of streams curving upwards to the mane near the base
-of the neck.
-
-Chestnut cart horse, examined 9th December, 1903.]
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 11.--Side of Neck of Horse.
-
-Near side, line of division along the upper border of sterno-mastoid
-muscle diverted at C towards the mane.
-
-Bay cart horse, examined 11th December, 1903.]
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 12.--Side of Neck of Horse.
-
-Near side, at C upward curve towards mane.
-
-Brownish-yellow hackney, examined 18th August, 1903.
-
-The same horse as appears in Fig. 13.]
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 13.--Side of Neck of Horse--same specimen as in
-Fig. 12.
-
-Offside, fully developed whorl, feathering and crest W, F, C, lying
-along upper border of sterno-mastoid muscle. Two stages of formation of
-this form of pattern in one specimen.
-
-Brownish-yellow hackney, examined 18th August, 1903.]
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 14.--Side of Neck of Horse.
-
-Near side, whorl (W) in place of common line of division, with wide
-forward feathering to A, where the hair streams diverge sharply.
-
-Brown hackney, examined 19th November, 1903.]
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 15.--Side of Neck of Horse.
-
-Near side, showing (B to C^1) diversion of hair stream towards mane
-(W^1F^1C^1) whorl, feathering and crest; W^1 to W^2 stream in normal
-direction W^2 a second whorl.
-
-Chestnut cart horse, examined 1st January, 1904.]
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 16.--Side of Neck of Horse.
-
-Near side (W^1F^1C^1) showing whorl, feathering and crest along upper
-line of division (W^2F^2C^2) a second fully-formed whorl, feathering
-and crest, crossing both upper and lower lines of division, and
-ending at W^1. Grey pony, examined 23rd May, 1903.]
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 17.--Side of Neck of Horse.
-
-Near side (W^1F^1C^1) whorl, feathering and crest, fully-formed,
-cutting upper line of division at obtuse angle and a second whorl,
-feathering and crest (W^2F^2C^2) along anterior part of common line
-of division. Roan hackney, examined 7th November, 1903.]
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 18.--Side of Neck of Horse.
-
-Off side, simple whorl, behind ear at edge of mane.]
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 19.--Side of Neck of Horse.
-
-Simple whorl (W) at edge of mane midway between ears and base of neck.]
-
-There are pictured here the normal type, divergent hair-streams
-partially reversed, simple whorls in different regions, a whorl and
-feathering, whorls, featherings and crests, and these in several areas.
-It is a veritable portrait gallery in which is portrayed the earliest
-and latest stages of this family of fashions in hair on the horse’s
-neck. They are grouped mostly in pairs.
-
-Fig. 6 shows the normal slope and by its side Fig. 7 gives a view of
-the best specimen of a completed whorl, feathering and crest I have
-been able to examine, _the whole length of the neck being occupied by
-it_. So in this pair the normal and most extensive departure from it
-lie side by side.
-
-Fig. 8 shows the way in which two streams of hair close up to the ears
-begin to diverge. Fig. 9 a similar divergence towards the base of the
-neck.
-
-Fig. 10 gives not only a divergence, but a well-marked turn in the
-upper hair-stream and Fig. 11 the way in which this divergent turn of
-hair is being converted into a feathering.
-
-Fig. 12 presents a stream of hair still more twisted from its course
-than that of Fig. 10, and Fig. 13 a whorl going on to a feathering
-which loses itself, without coming to an abrupt stop in a crest which
-is the more usual course.
-
-Fig. 14 is a common type of whorl, feathering and crest in the most
-usual situation. Fig. 15 a rarer and more complicated instance of a
-simple whorl, a gap and then a whorl, feathering and crest in the same
-“critical area.”
-
-Fig. 16 and Fig. 17 are rare cases of irregularly placed double whorls,
-featherings and crests, and give evidence of unusually complicated
-traction of adjoining muscles underneath this battle-field of hair.
-
-Figs. 18 and 19 show a simple whorl, situated at the very edge of the
-mane, a very “critical” area because this looser and heavy part of the
-neck is very much subject to jolting during the horse’s action.
-
-I have little to add to the graphic evidence afforded by these
-pictures, each of which I observed noted and sketched as the bearers
-of them came before me during many years of a “Captain-Cuttle-like”
-disposal of some of my leisure. No clearer proof can be desired of
-the view here advanced, that habit or habitual muscular action, and
-jolting, is the cause of the varied patterns in this field, and that
-according to the Law of Parcimony no other is required, this canon
-of Occam being expressed more succinctly--_Neither more, nor more
-onerous causes are to be assumed than are necessary to account for the
-phenomena_.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII.
-
-CAN MUSCULAR ACTION CHANGE THE DIRECTION OF HAIR IN THE INDIVIDUAL?
-
-
-It might seem unnecessary to most persons who are good enough to follow
-this inquiry that the question asked above should receive an explicit
-answer. We all know, of course, how a man’s hair is said to stand on
-end in excessive states of horror or rage, and how a short-haired
-terrier’s back bristles at the sight of certain foes. But it is not so
-simple a matter to show that the direction of the hair is permanently
-changed. I submit that the persons I mention are right in their opinion
-for this work contains evidence throughout that muscular action beneath
-the skin is the efficient cause in many regions of the formation of
-hair patterns. But like Kirkpatrick when Bruce struck down the Red
-Comyn we had best “make sicker,” and give as much evidence of the
-affirmative question as any critic can demand.
-
-
-Hairs of Human Eyebrows.
-
-As in the previous chapter I chose an open and plain field for the
-evidence bearing on the formation of whorls and the like, so here I
-turn to one still more clear for him who runs to read. In these days
-old men are of less account than in earlier and simpler times, but I
-claim to have found “a new use for old men” as I had almost thought
-of calling this chapter. In this somewhat neglected group we have an
-almost unlimited number of specimens for examination, and in their
-eyebrows they furnish a valuable field for tracing some striking
-results of underlying muscular traction.
-
-Darwin made one of his few mistakes when he included among rudimentary
-and inherited structures[48] those few long hairs which are often seen
-in the eyebrows of man, looking upon them as representatives of those
-found in some species of macacus and the chimpanzee. That great and
-modest man was, I am sure, not in the habit of making much use of the
-looking-glass--not more than women who, as we know, rarely do such
-a thing. But if he did he would have observed in his own splendid
-frontal region and brows excellent examples of the phenomena which form
-the subject of this chapter. This I know, though I never saw him in
-the flesh, for it so happens that in the great volume published in the
-jubilee of The Origin, and called _Darwin and Modern Science_, two good
-photographs of him, at the ages of thirty-five and about seventy-one
-are reproduced. These both show, but the later one much more clearly,
-good examples of these long and not very ornamental aberrant hairs.
-Thirty-five years of arduous thought and work had told their tale on
-him and twisted from their normal paths the lengthening thickening
-hairs of his eyebrows.
-
- [48] _Descent of Man_, p. 19.
-
-Also, if he had looked a little beyond the eyebrows he would have seen
-some very deep wrinkles of the skin on his forehead and round his
-orbits. It is these two groups of facts, wrinkles and twisted, changed
-hairs of man’s eyebrows, which give the answer to the question “Can
-muscular action change the direction of hair in the individual?”
-
-In 1903 I drew the attention of the Anatomical Society of Great Britain
-and Ireland to these two groups of facts under the title “Notes on
-the Eyebrows of Man,” and presented some large drawings of individual
-elderly men of my acquaintance, and the present chapter is only an
-extension of that little piece of work.
-
-No area of the mammalian skin is so useful and easy to follow as this
-in answering the present question, for though the previous chapter
-supplied part of the answer in a very fruitful field, the proof still
-remained one of “tremendous probability” and not more. But in the
-frontal and superciliary region of man there is complete proof of the
-truth of the affirmative answer, as I shall show.
-
-Here again we must encounter our old friend the normal slope of hair.
-As I stated in 1903, “The normal arrangement of the hair on the
-eyebrows of a moderately hairy subject is as follows: in the middle
-line the hairs of the two sides tend to meet and form a somewhat
-confused group of hairs; passing away from the middle line the hairs
-assume a nearly sagittal direction, then become more sloped away, and
-a sharp change in the direction of the _frontal_ and _orbital_ streams
-brings the remaining hairs into that regular accurate arrangement of
-a united stream so characteristic of a hairy subject, and this passes
-along the superciliary ridge to the external angular process”--all of
-which can be seen at a glance by any one who looks closely enough, as
-with the eyes of a lover, for example, at the brows of a dark-haired
-maid or youth. In the young these hairs lie close to the skin, and with
-that very interesting group of persons we have no more to do here,
-except for one piece of practical advice to them which they will find
-at the end of the present chapter.
-
-
-Evidence from Artists.
-
-More than one kind of evidence may be brought forward in this case,
-and I propose to “put in” a certain class of witness that not the most
-acute cross-examining counsel, Daniel O’Connell, Hawkins, or even
-Sergeant Buzfuz, can shake. I pity that young man or woman to-day who
-has not mended several holes in his education by reading the books of
-Dickens and Lever in editions illustrated by the immortal Phiz. If I do
-no more for him by this passage than induce him to mend such holes I
-shall have been of some use to his mind. For my part I look upon Phiz
-as far superior to Hogarth or Cruikshank in the fidelity to nature of
-his drawings of the faces of his numerous characters, especially the
-old men. Look through _Dombey & Son_, _Bleak House_, _Pickwick Papers_,
-_Barnaby Rudge_, _Tom Burke_, _Jack Hinton_, _Harry Lorrequer_, _The
-O’Donohue_, and, perhaps best of all for the illustrations, _The
-Knight of Gwynne_. Examine, with a lens if necessary, the delicate way
-in which Phiz shows the projecting hairs on the eyebrows of his many
-elderly men, and note at the same time the truth to scientific fact
-which he shows in his _female_ characters, for only in the drawings
-of “Mrs. Gamp proposes a toast” and of Mrs. Pipchin in “Paul and
-Mrs. Pipchin,” and one or two doubtful instances, can I find that he
-represents even his elderly women with this feature of their eyebrow
-hairs. But see Captain Cuttle and Mr. Bunsby in “Solemn references to
-Mrs. Bunsby,” both with strongly-marked shelves of hair sticking out
-from the brows, Captain Cuttle in “The shadow in the little parlour,”
-one of the fat coachmen in “Mr. Weller and his friends drinking to
-Mr. Pell”--the sharp brush projecting from the brow of Bagnet in “Mr.
-Smallweed breaks the pipe of peace,” that of Vholes in “Attorney and
-Client, fortitude and impatience”--(the equally remarkable absence of
-this feature in Pecksniff, Chadband and Skimpole, men without character
-or feeling)--Gashford in “Lord George Gordon,” the fat figure in “The
-Gallant Vintner,” Pioche in “Minette in attendance on Pioche,” the
-courtier in “Louis XIV. and de Genchy,” “The death of Shaun,” the blind
-man in “Joe the mighty hunter,” the right hand figure in “Mr. O’Leary
-creating a sensation,” Sir Archibald Mc’Nab in “A fireside group,”
-“Roade’s return to O’Donoughue Castle,” Sandy Mc’Grane and Old Hickman
-in “Sandy expedites the doctor,” Daly in “Daly bestows a helmet on
-Bully Dodd,” the knight in “The Knight is taken Prisoner.”
-
-Another witness to the scientific facts of the frequent presence of
-these hairs on the eyebrows of elderly men, and the rarity of them in
-those of women, is the dear friend of our youth, our friend even to
-hoar hairs, the _Book of Nonsense_, by Edward Lear. Here in 110 vivid
-drawings of several hundred characters, each of them sketched with a
-few bold strokes, is inscribed again and again this peculiar feature.
-Look at the “Old man with a nose,” the “Old Man of th’Abruzzi,” the
-“Old man of Melrose,” the “Old man of Calcutta,” the “Old Person of
-Anerley,” the “Old Person of Chester,” all with strange and striking
-bushes of long hairs standing out from their brows. Again see how
-hardly one of the female characters shows a trace of it even in
-that most truculent “Grandmother of the Young Person of Smyrna” who
-threatened to burn her, though her vertical wrinkles are formidable,
-or in the remarkable face of the wife of the “Old Man of Peru.” The
-“Old Lady of Prague” shows it in a moderate degree. Support of this
-kind may be trivial, and so will the opposing counsel say is that of a
-burglar’s finger-prints, but, _quâ_ evidence, it is as strong as that
-which commits the criminal to a prison on this modern proof. No one can
-suppose that Phiz and Lear fifty or sixty years ago had a prophetic and
-treacherous insight into the harmless labours of a man in the year 1920
-who would exploit their labours to the advantage of his hypothesis,
-and that they faked their caricatures for such a purpose. This is the
-only alternative line for Sergeant Buzfuz to take unless he acknowledge
-the facts to be facts, and betake himself to abuse of the plaintiff’s
-attorney.
-
-
-Eyebrows Interpreted by Wrinkles.
-
-When one comes to the interpretation of the curious shapes taken by
-these hairs one is not left to inference, for Nature has put some
-indelible stamps on the forehead and round the orbits of the men
-examined. These are wrinkles which have been long in preparation and
-only begin to show themselves fully when the “evil days” have come, in
-the ’fifties, ’sixties and ’seventies.
-
-I will describe the wrinkles first, and then their results, with
-examples, in the numerous fashions of the hairs. Wrinkles are of two
-kinds, pathological and physiological, in other words the former are
-the results of degeneration and wasting of the subcutaneous fat and
-loss of its normal elasticity, and are found in the faces of nearly all
-men and women, with advancing age, and they are the subject of much
-distress in the fair sex and a good deal of “beauty doctoring.” The
-latter are the result of long-continued and repeated action of certain
-small muscles. The former are numerous, shallow and fine, the latter
-few and comparatively deep. The difference between elderly women and
-men in respect of the projecting hairs is not that men have many more
-physiological wrinkles, but that the hairs of women in this region do
-not stiffen and grow long nearly so much as those of men.
-
-There are three groups of wrinkles found on the human forehead and
-face, _vertical_, _arched_ or horizontal and _orbital_. This division
-of wrinkles is a natural one, for each group is produced by the action
-of different muscles, the _vertical_ by the corrugator muscle, which is
-a narrow band passing from under the frontalis muscle inwards, where it
-is attached to the bone between the two eyebrows; the _arched_ by the
-action of the frontalis muscle, one which moves the scalp and in doing
-so elevates the eyebrows; the _orbital_ by the elliptic orbicularis
-muscle which closes the eyelids. These muscles are shown in Fig. 20.
-
-_Vertical_ wrinkles are found in the central region of the forehead
-and sometimes occupy the middle line with a deep furrow, more often
-they are bilateral and symmetrical, near the inner fourth part of the
-eyebrow, and sometimes they are placed at different distances from the
-middle line.
-
-_Arched_ wrinkles extend over the forehead in a series of lines
-which are usually concentric with the curve of the eyebrows, but are
-sometimes nearly horizontal.
-
-_Orbital_ wrinkles may lie in a radiating plan all round the outer
-lower and inner borders of the orbit, and in some persons they are
-found lying over the curves of the orbicularis muscle itself.
-
-
-Some Examples.
-
-The variations in the long hairs of men’s eyebrows present some very
-singular tufts, and I have added below nine figures of certain cases
-examined and noted by myself, and these are, I hope, plain enough
-without any more detailed account than is given in the few words
-describing each.
-
-Unless one’s attention be specially directed to these aberrant hairs,
-which are extremely common, one would not expect that hairs could
-be so variously twisted by muscular action beneath them. You may
-see a tuft of long hair projecting from the plane of the eyebrows
-towards the inner end, looking like a small horn, and I have measured
-individual hairs in elderly persons and found many an inch in length
-and a few an inch and a half. Such a tuft gives a fierce look to the
-countenance if the hairs are bushy and plentiful. The celebrated Dr.
-Keate, the flogging Head of Eton, a fiery strenuous person, was noted
-for the extraordinary long horn of thick hair in his eyebrows, which
-he appeared to use as a supplementary finger to point to this or that
-object of his terrifying attention. You may also see a man with a great
-drooping curtain of hairs overhanging his eyes, half hiding the upper
-lids and eyes. Another will show at the outer end of the eyebrows a
-bristling bush of hairs turning upwards in the aggressive manner of
-Wilhelm II. of evil memory, or of Mr. Roosevelt in former times. Again
-the outer points of the eyebrow hairs may turn downwards like a cavalry
-moustache, or the hairs may stand out at right angles as a level shelf.
-The fashions of these “orbital moustaches” appear to be as numerous as
-those of the upper lip.
-
-
-A Conflict of Forces.
-
-If the eyebrows are studied in the light of the three muscles displayed
-in Fig. 20 it is seen to contain an interesting congeries of small
-forces in conflict. (1) The _frontalis_ moves the eyebrow directly
-upwards. I had a friend once about seventy years old who was a very
-vigorous, strong-willed man and he spoke with decision and energy. It
-was most interesting to watch how his frontalis muscle strongly and
-frequently contracted as he spoke and drew up his eyebrows so that one
-might, as it were, measure the strength of his expressed convictions
-by the rate of action of his _frontalis_ muscle! (2) The _corrugator_
-draws the skin of the eyebrow inwards to the middle line thus acting
-at a right angle to the line of the _frontalis_. (3) The _orbicularis_
-in the upper part directly opposes the action of the _frontalis_ and
-in the lower acts “on its own” in closing the lower lid. This little
-spot is a Hill 60, destroyed at the battle of Messines, and has been
-the scene of much fighting throughout life, and it bears abiding
-witness in the twists and curves of the long hairs to the severity
-of the struggles. These actions of the three contending muscles are
-involuntary and of a reflex character, and much employed in such habits
-as those of knitting the brows or in elevating or depressing them, all
-this being set going and controlled by cerebral action. Incidentally
-then the preponderance of one or more of these actions over others, as
-shown in the hair, is evidence, as far as it goes, of the disposition
-and character of the possessor. So that between the wrinkles and the
-twisted hairs of his brow the elderly man, and less so the woman,
-carries about an engraved statement, for his friends or enemies to
-read, of his natural disposition and his acquired habits, in a limited
-field--his written character!
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 20.
-
-Muscles surrounding orbit with lines of action. Left--muscles concerned
-in movements of parts round orbits. Right--lines of action of these
-muscles indicated by arrows.]
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 21.--C. B. _æt_ 81.
-
-_Hairs_: Thick and bushy eyebrows. At junction of outer and middle
-third of each side the thick hairs turn abruptly downwards in a tuft
-and cover the upper lid.
-
-_Wrinkles_: Arched and lateral fairly well-marked, one very deep,
-central and vertical wrinkle.]
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 22.--G. W. _æt_ 79.
-
-_Hairs_: On each side at junction of outer and middle thirds a definite
-wisp of hair turning upwards.
-
-_Wrinkles_: Arched and orbital well-marked, central wrinkles hardly
-visible.]
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 23.--F. F. _æt_ 57.
-
-_Hairs_: Left side two long hairs from 1 to 1-1/2 inches long, turned
-sharply up at outer end of eyebrow. Right side short hairs turned
-upwards.
-
-_Wrinkles_: Strongly marked, curved, orbital wrinkles round outer half
-of each orbit. No other wrinkles.]
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 24.--B. W. _æt_ 69.
-
-_Hairs_: on both sides, projecting tufts at junction of the middle
-and outer thirds of eyebrows, hairs an inch long. The outer fourth of
-surface bare of hair.
-
-_Wrinkles_: Vertical hardly visible. Arched wrinkles numerous and
-especially deep towards the temporal region.]
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 25.--T. R. _æt_ 57. Voluble talker, twitches
-eyebrows in talking.
-
-_Hairs_: Thick and stand out stiffly from eyebrows, turning slightly
-upwards in outer third--almost absent from inner third of surface.
-
-_Wrinkles_: Vertical faint; arched deep and long, equal on the two
-sides, orbital, on each side two groups of deep radiating wrinkles,
-beside many small lines.]
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 26.--A. P. _æt_ 63.
-
-_Hairs_: On each eyebrow at about the junction of the middle and outer
-third, there is a remarkable tuft measuring 1 to 1-1/2 inch projecting
-from plane of eyebrow somewhat upwards, scanty hair on outer third.
-
-_Wrinkles_: Smooth open forehead, with moderate-sized arched and
-orbital wrinkles. Vertical wrinkles hardly visible.]
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 27.--G. G. _æt_ 54.
-
-_Hairs_: Right eyebrow upward twist of hairs on outer half, left
-eyebrow hairs lie straight; project, on both sides, well away from
-plane of eyebrow.
-
-_Wrinkles_: Arched on right side more numerous and extending higher
-than on left. No vertical wrinkles.]
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 28.--R. N. _æt_ 65.
-
-_Hairs_: On right side hairs long and projecting nearly in horizontal
-direction, on left sharply turned up at inner end and rather less so at
-outer.
-
-_Wrinkles_: on right sides, three faint arched wrinkles, one vertical,
-short and small. On left, three deep arched wrinkles, one vertical,
-deep and long.]
-
-
-A Side-Issue.
-
-This conclusion brings me to the piece of gratuitous advice I offer
-to the unmarried reader. It will be more likely to appeal to the
-woman than the man, I believe. Let such an one who is contemplating
-matrimony make a short study of wrinkles and the long hairs if
-possible--unfortunately she cannot do this of her prospective mate if
-he be at all young, for neither of these features will be pronounced
-as yet. I recommend instead a study of the wrinkles and hairs of the
-father and mother and a deliberate summing-up of the evidence in this
-way. If she wishes to have a cheery, genial, hopeful companion in
-life like B. W. (Fig. 26) let her seek as many arched wrinkles in his
-parents as possible and avoid very deep vertical wrinkles. If she be
-herself of that disposition she will want a mate of different qualities
-and may venture on one whose balance of family wrinkles inclines to the
-vertical, _see_ Fig. 28, R. N. She can risk that, and perhaps get a
-more capable and strenuous comrade in life’s battle. But let her beware
-of him whose wrinkles are all of the vertical kind; for he will be
-thoughtful, moody, abstracted and not too good-tempered. I would rather
-myself join my fortunes to one who could claim a large share of arched
-wrinkles.
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 29.--B. F. _æt_ 52.
-
-_Hairs_: On both sides much twisted downwards, producing shelf over eye.
-
-_Wrinkles_: None on forehead; strongly-marked concentric orbital
-wrinkles on both sides.]
-
-After this digression, which follows logically on the facts and
-arguments of this chapter I am now in a position to affirm that
-_changes in the direction of the hair in the individual can be caused
-by muscular action_.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX.
-
-HABITS AND HAIR OF UNGULATES.
-
-
-Horses.
-
-The Ungulate order has been variously divided by zoologists, and is
-still said to be composed of two main sections, even-toed and odd-toed
-Ungulates, with the addition of a good many “outsiders” if one may use
-the term.
-
-These sections form two sub-orders, and the division suits my purpose
-here very well. I take the odd-toed sub-order of the Ungulata Vera
-first.
-
-
-Lessons from the Domestic Horse.
-
-The domestic horse is the only member of this section that requires
-detailed attention, and its value for studying the direction of the
-mammalian hair is great, on account of the immense number of specimens
-available, the quality and varied distribution of its hair, the size of
-the animal, and, most of all, our intimate knowledge of its habits of
-life for many thousands of years.
-
-Many volumes have been written by man about this, his best and second
-oldest friend among lower animals. His ancestry, his story as servant
-of man, his virtues, strength, speed, intelligence, his use for war and
-peace, his colour, varieties of breed and money value; his anatomy,
-physiology, pathology, his medicine and surgery have all been written
-by many able men. Indeed before the great revelation of what man can
-be and do that the great war has given us, many observers of mankind
-were prepared to adapt the saying of a French cynic and to declare:
-“The more I see of men the better I like horses.” Swift at any rate
-came near this in his bitter account of a voyage to the Houyhnhnms,
-which lasted sixteen years and seven months, towards the end of which
-he said: “For who can read of the virtues I have mentioned in the
-glorious Houyhnhnms without being ashamed of his own vices, when he
-considers himself as the reasoning governing animal of his country?”
-But in all these writings, even in that last striking book by Mr. Roger
-Pocock, _Horses_, little or no attention is given to the patterns of
-its coat from the point of view of science. I remember reading a
-paper on this subject many years ago before a distinguished company of
-veterinary surgeons, and though they had glanced at these patterns in
-a passing way, as peculiarities, no real knowledge of them nor attempt
-to understand them was shown by this body of experts. They were too
-“practical” for this view of things. I may remark here that many of the
-most vocal and active among us, and especially the Germans, have been
-overmuch disposed to study science _ad hoc_, for its commercial and
-military value, though here, as elsewhere one must be tolerant and each
-follow his own taste, seeking light, more light. One must live and let
-live.
-
-The horse does his work _coram publico_ in every street of every town,
-in fields, roads and race-courses, and displays on his hairy coat some
-graceful patterns which are at the same time subjects for scientific
-inquiry, and brands of his long servitude to man. I have examined many
-thousands of horses in some twenty years with never failing interest.
-Belonging to the large family of Equidæ, including _asses_, _zebras_
-and _quaggas_, he is the most highly-developed of them all. His habits
-first, and then the most notable of his hair-patterns must now be
-considered.
-
-
-Some Habits of the Horse.
-
-He has few habits which bear on the present subject, and of these his
-active habits of locomotion are far the most important. He has his
-share of passive habits, for he stands many hours a day, and often
-sleeps standing, and he does his share in lying down, though Mr. Roger
-Pocock says he takes no more than four hours’ sleep in this attitude.
-His rule in lying down is to “lie anyhow,” if one may so describe it,
-and thus his two passive attitudes of standing and lying, have little
-or no bearing on the questions before us. His glory is in his gallop,
-canter, trot and walk. His business is indeed a _going concern_ in
-more than one sense, perhaps in three. The world is moving fast in its
-old age, and some men are calculating how long it may take for him to
-become as nearly extinct as the _quagga_.
-
-With the clue given to this inquiry in Chapter VI. we need have
-little difficulty in tracing the manner in which his locomotive life,
-ancestral and personal, is engraved on his hairy coat. We shall bear in
-mind the _primitive direction of his hair_, _hair-streams_, _lines of
-least resistance_, and the powerful forces of _underlying traction_ of
-muscles, opposed or divergent.
-
-It is, of course, most convenient to examine a specimen with a
-fine, short coat rather than one with its wild and more shaggy hair
-remaining.
-
-The two regions where the play of great forces comes most powerfully
-into action during locomotion are round about the elbow-joint (which
-we should be disposed to call the shoulder) and the hip-joint, in
-which regions the range of extension and flexion, as well as the
-number of muscles engaged, is much greater than at any other part of
-the limbs. It is in the neighbourhood of these two regions that the
-most characteristic of all the patterns of hair are found, and the
-names given to the patterns (whorls, featherings and crests) in these
-critical areas are _Pectoral_ (Fig. 30) and _Inguinal_ (see Fig. 31)
-with a third (G, H, I, Fig. 31) which is called _Axillary_, and is not
-constantly present. The main muscles involved in Figs. 30, 31 are shown
-in Fig. 33. The _Frontal_ (Fig. 32) is another of the critical areas,
-_indirectly_ concerned in locomotion, and will be considered first.
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 30.--Front view of horse showing pectoral pattern
-A, B, C.]
-
-The _Frontal_ pattern forms the star on a horse’s forehead, often
-very noticeable when the hair of it is white. No detailed description
-is required if the illustration of it in Fig. 32 be studied. It is
-enough to point out that it lies at or very near the level of the eyes,
-sometimes a little above and sometimes a little below this, and there
-is occasionally a double whorl, the second lying above the normal one.
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 31.--Side-view of horse showing inguinal whorl,
-feathering and crest A, B, C, and axillary whorl, feathering and crest,
-G, H, I.]
-
-Fig. 32A shows the muscles of the fronto-nasal region of the horse
-and the manner in which the skin of this central region is pulled
-upon in divergent and opposing directions, by a long muscle, called
-the _Maxillaris_, downwards and outwards, by a small thick muscle,
-the _Corrugator_, inwards, by a deeper and more oblique muscle, the
-_Nasalis_, downwards and inwards, and a little more remotely by the
-_Temporal_ muscle, and the _intrinsic muscles of the mobile ears_.
-There are thus at least five muscles on each side, all pulling more
-or less against one another on this much-disturbed area of skin. The
-struggle has been long ago given up and a compromise arrived at which
-is registered in the frontal pattern.
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 32.--Frontal region of horse with frontal whorl
-(_a_); feathering (_b_); crest (_c_).]
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 32A.--Muscles of the fronto-nasal region of the
-horse.]
-
-Now if anyone doubts whether these comparatively small muscles act
-often or strongly enough to produce effects on the hair over them he
-need only consult Mr. Roger Pocock’s book to understand the story of
-this battle of small forces and its result on the hair.
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 33.--Side view of horse, showing chief superficial
-muscles.]
-
-In his wild state the horse is dependent to a remarkable degree
-to his sense of smell for his safety from foes (Pocock), and very
-much less so on his sight. Indeed that writer says his range of good
-vision is about six yards. At that range his sight is of great value
-to him for protection from certain of the dangers of his life, and we
-see in a domestic horse to-day the evidence of his past wild life by
-his rapid and keen glances at objects at the sides of the road, both
-when we ride and drive him. His _corrugator_ muscle must be almost
-constantly in action. But his sense of smell is the sling and stone
-with which he encounters his Goliaths before they can get near him, and
-he ceaselessly expands and draws up his flexible nostrils employing
-his _nasalis_ and his _maxillaris_ for snuffing the air. He has also
-much useful protection from his sense of hearing and we all know
-how those mobile ears of his are hardly ever at rest, pointing now
-forwards, now backwards, and again outwards, as he goes on his way. The
-degree of these movements is largely a matter of individual character
-and breeding. The case for a conflict of forces in this region is, I
-submit, fully made out, and it is easy to see that a radiating pattern
-of hair, such as there is in the simple whorl, is only the natural
-outcome of all this complex muscular action. The extension of the whorl
-upwards in the shape of a feathering which is sufficiently common,
-indicates that the struggle has been carried beyond the original
-battle-field by the muscles of the ears.
-
-The _pectoral_ (Fig. 30) pattern lies over the great fleshy masses
-formed by the pectoral muscles, which draw the fore-limbs upwards
-and inwards in conjunction with others in the actions of flexion and
-extension of these limbs. The patterns, A. B. C., are wide expansions
-of reversed hair beginning in the whorl (A), extending (B) upwards
-and terminated in a crest (C). This pattern is, like the frontal,
-invariably present in a domestic horse, and is shared by many other
-ungulates such as deer and antelopes, as mentioned in the appendix of a
-small book[49], I published in 1901. But in none is it so striking or
-definite as in the horse. The contractions of these pectoral muscles
-and their jolt at each step are easily observed in a trotting horse. It
-is interesting to compare this pattern on the horse’s pectoral region
-with what is found on the closely allied ass and mule. In the horse it
-is long and wide and never absent, and is especially well-developed in
-high-stepping horses whether cart-horses or others selected because of
-their high action in trotting. Its size, indeed, is a measure of the
-activity of the pectoral muscles and flexors of the fore-limb. In the
-ass it is often absent, and, when it is present, it is rudimentary;
-in the mule it is more frequently present than in the ass, but
-does not approach the pattern of the horse for size. These degrees
-of development in horse, ass and mule correspond closely with the
-locomotive habits of the three animals.
-
- [49] _Use-Inheritance._ A. & C. Black. _Direction of Hair._
-
-The _inguinal_ (Fig. 31) pattern is one which the most casual observer
-of a horse cannot fail to notice, and it is so graceful in its shape as
-to add to the many beauties of its possessor. But in spite of this no
-breeder of horses has ever taken this pattern as one of the “points” of
-the animal, so that here again selection, even of the artificial kind,
-has had no share in its development. It is but a by-product of the
-locomotive life of the horse, and a very ancient character, for it is
-present in Przewalski’s horse, a probable ancestor of Equus Caballus.
-A domestic horse without this pattern would be a freak of Nature. It
-occurs in _equus hemionus_, the Thibetan wild ass, but not in _zebras_
-or in the _quagga_.
-
-The inguinal pattern deserves rather more description than the two
-others. It is shown in Fig. 31 as A. B. C. and the muscles which
-produce it and govern its development are shown in Fig. 33. It starts
-in a whorl (A) at the fold of skin which passes from the lower part
-of the abdomen to the hind limb. This radiates and expands into
-a bilateral and symmetrical expansion shaped like the barbs of a
-feather. This proceeds upwards in the inguinal hollow in a direction
-which curves gently with the concavity forwards, dividing the trunk
-of the animal from the great rounded mass of muscle forming the hind
-quarters. It extends upwards to the level of the iliac crest where
-a projection covered by muscles can always be recognised, and over
-this “iliac crest” of the anatomist it terminates abruptly in a
-ridge or crest of its own, lying parallel with the long axis of the
-trunk. It is very pretty to see above it the hair-streams from the
-back of the animal breaking away like two currents of water on either
-side of an outstanding rock, the anterior passing with a wide curve
-forwards and downwards along the flank and the hinder one losing
-itself more gradually in the original course of the hair-streams of
-the hind-quarters. No illustration or verbal description gives so good
-a picture as one can get from inspection of the smooth coat of any
-well-developed domestic horse.
-
-When a few trotting horses are watched by an observer who bears
-in mind the accompanying pictures of the muscles and the inguinal
-pattern it can be seen at once how all the conditions are present for
-fulfilling a gradual change from a primitive slope of hair to these
-highly-developed patterns, if he has also followed the conclusion
-reached in Chapter I. that _muscular action can change the direction
-of hair in the individual_. If at the same time the degree and extent
-of the jolt which occurs here at every step be noted, it is seen to be
-sharply limited to the area covered by this pattern, and ceasing, as
-it does, abruptly and significantly at the level of the iliac crest.
-The forward range of the jolt, easily seen in a thin horse, is much
-wider than the backward, and marks out very closely the extent of the
-forward curve taken by the anterior hair-stream as it descends from
-the crest. One may also remark that there is a small but interesting
-point which one can see during or after a shower of rain, for then the
-flank of a horse presents a curious distribution of the moisture. At
-the very point where the forward stream joins the main stream from the
-thorax and abdomen a definite line of darker moist hair is to be seen
-and the moist-looking surface is limited to the stream of the trunk
-and separated from that of the flank. This line of demarcation clearly
-indicates the place where the _forward jolt_ terminates during rapid
-movement.
-
-
-The Domestic Ass and Mule.
-
-There are two closely related animals, the domestic ass and the mule,
-which ought to show this inguinal pattern if affinity and variation
-could be fairly invoked to account for it on the theory of selection.
-These are also animals whose mode of life is locomotive, but in a much
-less degree than the horse and their paces are quieter and less free
-in character. What then is found in them as to the size or persistence
-of this pattern? In the ass it is absent or nearly so (I have found
-one example of its presence), and in the mule it is variable and never
-occupies more than half the area of that in the horse. These facts
-agree closely with the hybrid character of the mule and the differing
-activities of the horse, mule and ass. The pattern in Przewalski’s
-horse is small and oval and resembles that of the mule. The _onager_
-(_equus asinus_), which is very much like these three domestic animals
-in form, has an inguinal pattern, much less in size indeed than that
-of the horse, but well-defined, and this fact is in keeping with its
-character for remarkable fleetness of foot and activity. The three
-zebras, Mountain, Grevy’s and Burchell’s, show no inguinal pattern,
-in spite of their _power_ of rapid locomotion and resemblance in size
-and form to the horse. Though they have that power they exercise it in
-their wild lives for their own sakes alone, in the intermittent way
-which is bound up with their habit of life, and not for the sake of
-man, as in the case of the horse.
-
-The pectoral and inguinal regions of the domestic horse are two of
-the most valuable fields in the mammalian body for studying the
-formation by muscular action of patterns of hair, for this animal is
-the locomotive animal _par excellence_. Here the process has been
-carried to the extreme limit, and these two are prominent examples
-among the characters to which I drew attention in a paper published in
-the _Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London_, “On proposed
-additions to the accepted systematic characters of certain Mammals,”
-June 9th, 1904, Vol. I. I am still of the opinion that they deserve
-“Flag rank,” though they have not yet been promoted. Be that as it may
-I think it may be well here to compare two animals belonging to the
-family Equidæ, the horse and zebra, which resemble one another very
-closely in form--in respect of these patterns.
-
-
-Horse and Zebra Compared.
-
-If a horse of the hackney type and a zebra were skinned and the bodies
-of the two animals then examined I suppose a competent anatomist
-would find some difficulty in distinguishing one from the other so
-closely do these two allied species of equidæ, one wild and the other
-domesticated, resemble one another in structure. But in this as in many
-other questions _form_ is not to be considered alone. The colouration
-of the two animals is strikingly different, but, in its humble way,
-the difference of their patterns of hair-arrangement is worthy of
-notice. The horse in different specimens chosen from a large group
-will exhibit patterns in the frontal, pectoral and inguinal regions
-constantly, and variably in less common regions, axillary, cervical
-and gluteal, that is to say, in six different areas. I have examined
-many zebras, living and dead, and find no constant pattern in the whole
-of its large surface of skin except an ill-developed frontal and a
-very small cervical one--_two in all_. The mere numerical difference
-is not the only important one, for the insignificance of the size of
-the two zebra patterns and the constancy and high development of many
-of those of the horse are not less significant from the present point
-of view. I submit that these two animals carry about with them on
-their hairy coats indubitable records of their personal and ancestral
-habits. Attention to the facts of a horse’s life and certain related
-and contrasted facts of the lives of other animals, of which the zebra
-may be taken as a type, will show the reasons why these patterns are to
-be looked upon as registers of long-past and present activities of the
-species concerned. The horse has been developed out of a wild plastic
-stock with some such ancestors as the wild horse of Przewalski, lately
-brought to Europe, by a process of selection by man during a thousand
-generations, first in its Central Asian cradle and later all over the
-civilized world. It has been as much _made by man_ for his purposes in
-locomotion as a locomotive engine has been made by him. The one has
-been produced in accordance with the laws of applied physics and the
-other by those of biology. His locomotive life has come to pass for
-the needs of higher, or at any rate more cunning creatures, who have
-availed themselves of the potentialities provided by Nature. The zebra
-in its habits differs from the horse in the simple, but fundamental
-point that the former lives the ordinary active life of a wild animal
-for its own needs of protection against foes and search for food, the
-latter has not only this activity of life in its organisation, but has,
-super-added to it by domestication, all the locomotive life of a beast
-of burden. The zebra presents few, if any, of those phenomena which I
-have often termed Animal Pedometers,[50] so characteristic of the hairy
-coat of the horse I am reverting here again to the region of metaphor
-for which I offer no excuse, but only a few remarks as to the use and
-value of that elusive method of illustration. Metaphor is a figure of
-speech or writing which consists in a transference of thought from
-one idea to another. It is, therefore, not a simple substitution of
-synonymous expressions, nor is it merely a simile. It is in hourly use
-in the speech and writing of common as well as highly educated persons,
-and adds much to the ease of communication among us of our thoughts
-upon subjects which rise somewhat above the level of mere statement of
-obvious facts. So long as metaphors are not abused by being used as
-arguments to prove some proposition, but only as illustrations of our
-meaning, we gain greatly by their legitimate use. It is not for nothing
-the well-drilled Press of Germany in their journals and its histrionic
-Emperor in his rhetorical outbursts, make extensive use of metaphors.
-We are everlastingly reading of Germany’s “biological necessity,” her
-“iron will to victory,” the “steel ring of field-grey heroes who guard
-her against a world of devils,” of her “brilliant second,” her “granite
-walls,” her “future on the water,” the “Admiral of the Atlantic,”
-“grasping the trident,” and so on in nearly every public utterance of
-her leaders. They know well their audience and employ these harmless,
-if often ridiculous, expressions with a definite and legitimate
-purpose, and are well qualified for creating the public opinion of a
-nation that dearly loves a phrase.
-
- [50] _Knowledge_, January, 1903.
-
-Well, this term, Animal Pedometers, is used here not for proving
-anything, but for the purpose of impressing on the mind of the reader
-the fact of certain patterns on the horse’s skin being intimately
-related to its locomotive life which, I hope I may assume, has been
-sufficiently demonstrated in this chapter. A pedometer is one of those
-works of men devised for his physical and mental advancement which are
-marked by a precision as well as purpose often absent from Nature’s
-handiwork. Just as a pedestrian, cyclist, or motorist carries with
-him his pedometer and tells you with some pride the number of miles
-he has “done” in a day or hour, so the horse displays _urbé et orbi_
-his rougher registers of the locomotive triumphs of his ancestors and
-himself, and these I call Animal Pedometers by way of metaphor, and
-patterns by way of fact.
-
-The less striking and rarer patterns of the horse’s hair have been
-fully described elsewhere,[51] and it would serve no useful end to
-refer to them at length, nor to multiply proofs of the position here
-maintained.
-
- [51] _Direction of Hair in Animals and Man._
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X.
-
-HABITS AND HAIR OF UNGULATES.
-
-
-Oxen.
-
-The even-toed section of hoofed animals is a much larger group than
-the odd-toed, and the difference may be illustrated by looking at the
-great work on Natural History by Lydekker. There are 273 pages given
-up to this group and only 112 to the odd-toed, and when we remember
-that there are contained in it the hippopotamus, all the pigs, oxen,
-sheep, goats, antelopes, camels, llamas, giraffes and deer, we can see
-that Lydekker was well justified in the great amount of space devoted
-to them. But we all have our different forms of _penchant_, and I
-propose to say very much less about this section than about the other
-represented by the domestic horse. It is well to claim the shelter
-of a great name in such an apportionment of interest, and Professor
-Poulton has given a clear precedent in his great book called _Essays
-on Evolution_. It contains 393 pages and even though the subject of
-the work is Evolution, he has given up 330 pages approximately, or
-five-sixths, of his space to insects. This can be gathered from a rough
-analysis of his various essays, and no one need blame a great biologist
-for having a _penchant_ for the subject he knows best, or a small one
-for writing of that he knows a little.
-
-The reason that the even-toed ungulates require less study from the
-present point of view is that they are so much more marked by the
-normal or primitive slope of hair than the previous group of Chapter
-IX. They demonstrate very widely and thoroughly the empire of the
-primitive or “barbarian” forces and so far are valuable witnesses of
-the negative kind. No case can well be proved to satisfaction by a
-large series of negatives, and this was the hopeless task Weismann set
-out to prove, when he staked his all on the non-inheritance of acquired
-characters--and failed. But negative evidence is of great value in
-supporting an hypothesis when it is found to be the precise complement
-to extensive positive evidence brought in favour of that hypothesis.
-That is the case in regard to the patterns of hair found on oxen,
-sheep, antelopes, gazelles and deer, to say nothing of hippopotami,
-pigs and llamas. There are some of these patterns described in the
-previous group which appear in this larger one, but for size,
-persistence and frequency they cannot be compared to those of the
-horse, who has, if I may so say, inherited all the family property in
-his own person and added to it.
-
-The variations in the present group are fully dealt with in the two
-earlier books already quoted,[52],[53], and I will not complicate this
-chapter by any further remarks on them.
-
- [52] _Op. cit._ _Use inheritance._
-
- [53] _Op. cit._ _Direction of Hair._
-
-
-Oxen.
-
-Of the numerous divisions of even-toed ungulates the oxen present the
-best cases for study of the various ways in which the hair is disposed,
-and among them the best as well as the most accessible is the domestic
-ox. Again we have a familiar friend of man and innumerable specimens
-for examination as in the case of the horse. So this chapter will, like
-the preceding one, resolve itself into the study of one typical animal,
-with whose habits of life we are intimately acquainted.
-
-Before describing the habits and hair of the domestic ox or cow, I
-would like to point out why I value so highly the negative evidence
-which consists in the comparative rarity of whorls, featherings and
-crests in even-toed ungulates. This brings us back to the general fact
-of the _raison d’être_ of the horse and his group on the one hand,
-and the ox and his numerous relatives on the other. There are deer,
-antelopes and gazelles which for a spurt would beat any horse and even
-the Thibetan wild ass, so I am not trying here to disparage the power
-of this graceful swift group in the matter of sprinting. But this term,
-however colloquial it may be, clearly marks off the powers and habits
-of deer, antelopes and gazelles from those of the horse, for, except
-when trying to escape from an enemy, no deer, antelope or gazelle
-is fool enough to sprint or even trot for mere pleasure or want of
-occupation, and certainly not in the service of man. Thus it comes to
-pass that animal pedometers are few and small in this second group of
-ungulates, and I submit this negative fact gives strong support to the
-views advanced throughout this volume.
-
-
-A Cow’s Habits.
-
-A cow is a very restful animal except when disturbed by extraneous
-causes, and the active habits of her life are of little interest here,
-the chief importance of her for study being the passive side of her
-life or small minor tricks. As a domestic animal she lives to eat--and
-be eaten and drunk--but her wild ancestors and relatives have had far
-from an easy life, though this (in them even) has not expressed itself
-in animal pedometers. But on her neck, back, flanks, legs and haunches
-the cow has some interesting specimens of areas where the normal
-hair-slope is reversed in accordance with her habits.
-
-The most striking of these is shown in Figs. 34 and 35, where the
-bare form of the animal is shown and the dark thick arrows are made
-paramount in order to make the remarkable arrangement of her hair along
-the back so clear, that little verbal description is needed.
-
-[Illustration: Figs. 34 and 35.
-
-(A) Side view of cow, showing arrangement of hair-streams on the back.
-(B) View of back of cow, showing the same.]
-
-Behind the level of the horns the normal or backward slope proceeds
-until the middle of the length of the neck is reached, when it
-encounters transversely a sharp upstanding crest and beyond this the
-hair is directly reversed from a point over the shoulders, and here
-a whorl is found. From this point the stream returns to its ancient
-and normal course and so passes to the tail. When the base of the tail
-is reached a very significant and apparently whimsical arrangement of
-the hair down the centre of the tail is observed. This consists in a
-line of stiff hairs which stand up at right angles to the surface of
-the tail, and it gradually passes into the normal again when the more
-muscular part of the tail is passed. I should add here that the crest
-and reversed hair on the back are common to many wild ungulates of
-this ruminant group, and a good example of it is seen in an antelope,
-Oryx Beisa, which I figured and described in a paper at the Zoological
-Society of London.
-
-Arrangements of its hair so audacious as these need explanation, and it
-is found in the mode of life of the cow. So large a part of its daily
-life is spent in the business of grazing with her muzzle close to the
-ground, during which the neck of the animal is constantly stretched
-downwards from the back at the level of the shoulders, that the skin,
-which is very loose in this and most other portions of its body, is
-dragged upon to allow of the extreme flexion of its neck. This traction
-is for all this time acting against the normal or backward slope of
-the hairs, and has given rise to this victory of a new force through a
-thousand generations. It is equally clear that a mechanical explanation
-of the line of erect hairs on the first nine or twelve inches of the
-tail is forthcoming, for one has only to watch a cow standing on a hot
-day, undergoing her torment of flies, to see it writ large. Very strong
-little muscles are found at the base of the tail, those along the more
-free portion becoming smaller and smaller until they disappear towards
-the tip. These give a powerful flicking action to the long heavy tail
-and I once made some observations as to this on a number of cows which
-were grazing in summer on a comparatively cool wind-swept hillside
-in the western end of the Isle of Wight. I watched several cows on
-different occasions and found that one would flick her tail 348 times
-and another 1082 times per hour. Giving these cows an eight hours’
-working day, “working” for their living in grazing and ruminating by
-turns, one gains a vivid idea of the number of times per diem these
-powerful muscles of the tail contract. If we call it a day of four
-hours of grazing and four of ruminating, for the sake of argument, we
-get 1392 to 4328 flicks of the tail each day in the time of flies,
-leaving out of account the casual flicks in which she would indulge
-when flies were not tormenting her. It is hardly necessary to point out
-how the underlying muscles would drag upon the skin of the tail over
-them and gradually reverse more or less the “lie” of the hairs. They
-have not formed into a feathering or complete reversal, but have come
-near to it.
-
-Further down the haunches of the cow there is on each side at the back
-of the thigh a curving reversed area of hair which turns upwards and
-towards the middle line. This is the place where the tail as it swings
-from side to side sweeps over the limb and brushes upwards the hair of
-the thigh towards which it is swinging. So that the activity of the
-tail is responsible for another of the patterns in which the cow’s hair
-is arranged.
-
-The lower segment of the hind leg exhibits one more reversed area of
-hair due to the cow’s habit of lying on the ground slightly inclined to
-one side, for the more comfortable disposing of her limbs, the effect
-of this attitude being seen in the manner in which the hair on the back
-of the leg turns inwards.
-
-On the dewlaps and flanks are certain variable curls and turns of hair
-produced by the frequent twitchings of a muscle situated just under the
-skin called the “Fly Shaker” or _panniculus carnosus_. This muscle is
-seen any day in the carcase of an ox hanging up in a butcher’s shop,
-and it is interesting to notice the fact that it is distributed over
-only the lower half of the flank, for the purpose of shaking off flies
-from a region which the tail does not reach efficiently. None of this
-sheet of muscle is found within the effective range of the cow’s light
-artillery, as on the haunches or hinder portion of the spine. This sums
-up the equipment of patterns of hair on the species of this group of
-ungulates, which is more adorned with them than any I have examined,
-and it will be admitted that compared with those of the horse, it
-is a poor exhibition, but one which it is easy to understand if the
-fundamental principles of this inquiry are kept in mind.
-
-
-Light Occupations of the Cow.
-
-I watched lately a little act of this drama among a herd of cows on
-the Stray at Harrogate during a hot day. There were 105 of them and
-this was what they were doing all day--some were browsing with their
-muzzles close to the ground, their necks making a considerable angle
-with the line of their trunks, others standing stock still with their
-heads raised at a level with the body, gazing vacantly into space,
-others lying on the grass more advanced in the strenuous work of their
-day, ruminating with head level, also gazing at nothing in particular,
-with their bodies gently rolled to one side, their fore legs doubled
-straight under them and their hind legs planted to one or other
-side, and a fourth group still nearer the end of the cycle of work,
-lying with their chins resting on the ground. When this cycle was
-completed the stages would again be begun, continued and ended. They
-were flapping their wide ears in various directions, and twitching
-endlessly the skin of the flanks and dewlaps with their fly shakers.
-This large group afforded, if one may so describe it, a cinematographic
-picture of the lives of countless generations of this conservative
-animal. Conservative as she is, I doubt not that in the long-past
-ages her quiet though persistent habits had once a battle to wage for
-the production of even these mild innovations that I have described.
-These present fashions must have been well developed three thousand
-five hundred years ago and have adorned that “calf, tender and good,”
-which Abraham in the plains of Mamre fetched for the midday meal of his
-visitors.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI.
-
-HABITS AND HAIR OF CARNIVORES.
-
-
-Cats.
-
-Another large and important order of hair-clad mammals must now be
-considered, and the same course as in the case of the ungulates will be
-followed; the two leading families of Felidæ and Canidæ will be taken,
-and a type of each examined in reference to its hair-distribution.
-Lydekker gives about 100 pages to the cats and 80 to the dogs, so from
-the point of view of general biology there seems little to choose
-between them. The bears, racoons, weasel tribe, seals and walruses may
-be put out of account. They are painfully old-fashioned or Normal as to
-the arrangement of their hair.
-
-First things first is always a good rule, and there is little doubt
-where we ought to begin among the families and species Carnivores.
-Among Felidæ one cannot unfortunately choose the harmless necessary
-cat of tiles, areas, firesides and ladies’ laps, to say nothing of
-those lovers of cats like Huxley who would never eject his cat from
-his armchair if she had been there before him. It is true that we know
-much of her daily and nightly mode of life--many of us too much--and in
-that respect one could set to work with confidence in interpreting her
-hair patterns, but on account of her long and thick coat we can only
-speculate what patterns or innovations of her family uniform she might
-have devised; but here we are not concerned with romance or the “might
-have beens.” It will be remarked that one perforce unconsciously calls
-the domestic cat “she” as sailors do their ships. I understand that in
-Somersetshire they call everything of their common life “he” except
-the tom-cat who is always “she.” The reasons for the use of genders in
-different creatures would be an interesting little study.
-
-
-Lion.
-
-The King of Beasts will, therefore, be the hero of this chapter.
-Lydekker tells us that the lion, like many heroes of antiquity who are
-no heroes to their valets, in spite of his character for grandeur,
-nobility and courage, has been subjected to the merciless higher
-criticism of modern travellers, Selous, Livingstone, and others, and
-he has been shown up as cowardly by nature and mean in his general
-conduct. It remains for some learned scholar to whitewash the hyæna, as
-someone has done for Caesar Borgia, and to put him in the place of the
-lion. But Lydekker does not admit that this disparagement of the lion
-goes very far. He _is_ the King of Beasts by grandeur of appearance,
-strength and ferocity.
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 36.--Lioness, showing by arrows the direction of
-hair-streams on muzzle, parting from one another at the level of the
-orbits.]
-
-The lion’s skin is covered by close fine hair, except in certain
-seasons in cold climates, and is easily studied. There are three
-regions where this representative cat has departed from the Primitive
-mammalian slope of hair, and the figure of a lioness shows two of
-these, the peculiar _downward_ trend of hair on the muzzle and the
-whorl on the shoulder. Fig. 37 shows the third, A C, on the middle of
-the back as well as the whorls at D.
-
-
-Snout of the Cats
-
-The muzzle of all the cats is very short and broad, and at the level
-of the orbits shows a peculiar reversal of the hair from the rest of
-the head, for instead of being like that of a dog in which the hair
-slopes all the way _upwards_ from the tip of the snout to the rest of
-the head, it breaks away from this normal type and passes in a uniform
-close stream to the edge of the wet muzzle. The arrows in Fig. 36 show
-this change. One asks at once the reason for such an unexpected trend
-of the hair on a small area, when the carnivores in other groups have
-a uniform slope towards the head from their more pointed muzzles. The
-cats have discarded the earlier family pattern and for a reason which
-does credit to their self-respect. Very few naturalists know, or have
-described so well the meticulous care which animals take of their
-coats, as Miss Frances Pitt did in the _National Review_, where she
-gave a delightful account of “How Animals Clean Themselves.” The toilet
-of the lion she did not discuss, perhaps for prudential reasons. Her
-account dealt chiefly with a number of small hairy mammals and lower
-forms of life. Watch a dog cleaning his coat and you will see the
-ingenious way in which he pushes his head and body forward as he lies
-on some rough surface such as grass, or our best drawing-room mat. _He_
-can thus clean his snout and other parts, but no cat adopts so rough
-and ready a method. We know how long and how scrupulously she licks her
-fur to clean it in the parts she can reach and cleans her head with her
-paws. But with such a broad snout as she and the larger cats possess
-she cannot clean the short surface of it in the manner of the dog. So
-she “dresses” this little surface in a special way of rubbing it from
-the neighbourhood of her eyes _forward_ with her paws. And so we may
-assume does the chieftain of her clan finish off this little bit of
-his toilet. We are so much accustomed to dwell on the naturally clean
-habits of a domestic cat that without such an account as Miss Frances
-Pitt has given we should have hesitated to transfer the character for
-personal cleanliness from the domesticated to the wild cat. If this be
-not the sole reason for the course of the hair-stream I have described,
-I am at a loss to imagine any other.
-
-
-Lion’s Neck.
-
-On each side of the lion’s neck where it joins the shoulder there is
-a well-developed whorl, and this as a rule is extended forwards into
-a feathering (Figs. 36 and 37), and ends in a crest on the lower part
-of the side of the neck. It is common also in tigers and leopards.
-This is, as elsewhere, a record of strong and oft-repeated action in
-powerful muscles which lie beneath it, and bears witness to the great
-functional activity of the fore-limbs as compared with the hind-limbs
-in these three formidable cats. It is not an animal pedometer, but may
-perhaps be termed an _ergograph_.
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 37.--Back of Lion, showing reversed area of hair
-with whorl at A. Feathering B. Crest C.]
-
-
-Lion’s Back.
-
-The strange pattern of reversed hair (Fig. 37) is much the most notable
-of the three peculiarities found on the lion’s skin. It consists of a
-whorl (A) lying over the lumbar region in the middle line which expands
-into a very broad feathering (B) and terminates in a crest (C) a short
-distance behind the level of the shoulders. This is not found in any
-of the numerous short-haired Felidæ that I have examined, and it is a
-feature which demands explanation. I know no other mammal, ungulate or
-carnivore, that has any pattern resembling this; indeed, if one were
-to photograph the pattern in question and a few inches of the skin
-surrounding it, and be told that it came from the back of a mammal
-one could not doubt that it was a hall-mark of the King of Beasts. It
-would not produce that thrill of intense interest which we felt at
-the meeting on 7th May, 1901, at the Zoological Society of London,
-when from a water colour sketch and three pieces of skin taken from
-the body of a hitherto unknown mammal, Sir Harry Johnston proceeded
-to reconstruct the Okapi, at first dubbed knight, as a member of the
-Equidæ, but later promoted downwards to the Giraffidæ. But one could do
-no less, with some knowledge of the hair of mammals, than reconstruct
-from such a photograph a large, powerful and ferocious carnivore, and
-where but in the lion can the greatest example of those attributes be
-found? I say this advisedly, for this remarkable pattern of the lion’s
-back is as much a stamp of his moral or mental quality as the Inguinal
-Pedometer is of the locomotive _rôle_ in life of _equus caballus_.
-
-I hear the sharp voice of the critic here, “Come, come, you may have
-shown reason for the latter, but how on earth do mental and moral
-qualities of an animal come into your scheme?” Well, we have in this
-pattern of the lion’s back to deal with a unique phenomenon for the
-production of which neither pressure, nor friction, nor gravitation,
-nor underlying muscular traction will account. Nevertheless, it is
-a result of muscular action of a rare kind. Who does not know the
-striking appearance of the hair along the centre of a short-haired
-dog when he bristles up with rage or fear, or both combined, at the
-sight of a foe? This common event has its own mechanical cause, though
-it is one strictly governed by the mental and moral qualities of
-the dog, and we see the vivid proof before us of the action of the
-minute _arrectores pili_, in this particular region of the dog. It is
-precisely in the same situation that the special pattern of the lion’s
-hair is found. It is not for nothing that Nature has provided every
-tiny hair of the mammalian skin with that insignificant little band of
-muscle which lies within the hair-pit, and is attached to the sloping
-hair on its posterior side, and thus when it contracts serves to drag
-it into an erect position. I refrain from discussing what may be held
-to be the survival value, under the theory of selection, of this power
-of the _arrectores pili_ to confer on the possessor an added appearance
-of ferocity and general frightfulness. This is quite a likely
-explanation of the presence of these little muscles. Be that as it may
-the _modus operandi_ of the reversed hair which has become fixed on the
-lion’s back is made clear, theory of origin apart. And I submit that
-the presence of it in this region in this animal _is_ a stamp of his
-persistently ferocious nature, as much as the various peculiarities of
-arrangement of hair on man’s eyebrows in a previous chapter are of the
-mental and moral habits of the individual man. As rulers of old used,
-in their genial fashion, to brand a supposed or actual criminal on his
-shoulder or forehead, so is the lion branded with an hereditary mark of
-his nature and the past life of himself and his ancestors. I doubt not
-that if short-haired terriers were living a wild life among numerous
-foes their bristling hair would have become fixed in a similar fashion.
-I would only here draw the attention of the reader to the fact that
-this reversed area of hair on the lion’s back cannot be held to add to
-the general frightfulness of the possessor. It would be invisible to
-an approaching foe, as it lies hidden behind the great head and mane.
-This pattern on the lion’s back will be referred to later in a somewhat
-different connection.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII.
-
-HABITS AND HAIR OF CARNIVORES.
-
-
-Dogs.
-
-Among the canidæ one is able to select a type with whose habits of
-life we are more familiar than any other, Canis Familiaris, as he is
-affectionately called, the companion of man his master, and faithful
-guardian--often unto death. Professor Scott Elliott gives reason to
-think that the dog was the first animal tamed by man, and that he was
-descended from some wild jackal-like form, probably crossed by the
-wolf. The dog is then aptly called by Huxley, the brother of the wolf,
-who has been changed by the intelligence of man into the guardian of
-the flock. It seems that in his rudimentary stage of domestication he
-was an unofficial scavenger among the habitations of neolithic man,
-as the pariah is in the East to-day, and that little acts of kindness
-towards his offspring on the part of those early men and women were
-the first dawnings of a friendship of thousands of years. It is a long
-story from the slinking jackal to the bloodhound, mastiff, St. Bernard,
-staghound, collie and terrier of to-day, and one which reflects much
-credit on both parties to this friendship, just as do those other
-long friendships between servant and master, of which we still see
-a few examples. Living with us as he does the dog and his habits
-of life are an open book: he is then all the better for my humble
-purpose here. I would refer again to the curious use of the gender
-which we unconsciously apply to the dog. It is no longer “she,” but
-“he.” When a dog is looking a little unfriendly how we always try to
-wheedle him with “Poor old fellow,” and so on, as a matter of course,
-assuming his masculine character. James Payn pointed out once a little
-point which proves how good a comrade we have in the dog, when he
-reminds us of the cautious approach we usually make to a cat, and the
-“hail-fellow-well-met” tone we adopt towards the dog, rolling him over
-and using kindly opprobrious terms, such as friends among schoolboys
-hurl at one another when they are on the best of terms. A fox-terrier
-is, perhaps, the most human of all the numerous types evolved through
-the skill of man, and it is a smooth-coated specimen of this variety
-which I will examine now as to what his hairy coat can tell us of his
-habits.
-
-
-Some of the Dog’s Habits.
-
-His attitudes which bear on this question are all of the passive order.
-His locomotion is so fitful and different from that of the horse that
-we shall find on his coat no animal pedometers.
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 38.--Gluteal region of dog, showing whorls over the
-tuberosities of the ischia.]
-
-His passive attitudes consist of standing, sitting and lying. He stands
-little, sits more, and lies for a great part of each day. The standing
-habit has, of course, no influence upon his hair. In sitting he rests
-the chief weight of his body on the rounded, bursa-covered surfaces of
-his tuberosities of the ischium, in which there is nothing peculiar to
-himself. His fore legs are planted nearly upright on the ground and his
-hind legs doubled under him or projecting slightly to one or other
-side, as we saw in the case of the cow. The fore legs are obviously
-in no way affected as to the direction of the hair in the sitting
-posture, and the hind legs, being doubled up and subject to the direct
-downward weight of the body, are also free from the _sliding pressure_,
-which we shall see affects the fore limb when the dog lies prone. Thus
-of the three supports, fore legs, hind legs and tuberosities of the
-ischium, two are necessarily unaffected in their patterns of hair. The
-anatomical conditions of his tuberosities are very different in this
-respect. They are covered with a large slippery bursa just beneath
-the thick skin, and the slightest movement of this alert and restless
-animal, even of his head, conveys to this region a small change of
-position. He is virtually like a sick person on a water or air cushion,
-and we all know how very small movements of the body are felt in a
-slight stirring of the supported parts by these. The effect of this
-is that the hair over these bursæ is seldom at rest from external or
-extraneous forces, to say nothing of its own imperious constant growth
-of one inch in two months. In Fig. 38 one sees the hair-stream curving
-round the buttocks towards the region of these bursæ, and trying to
-reach the middle line. It meets with so much opposition that the very
-conditions for producing a reversed area are present and the result is
-just what one would expect to find. The pattern is formed exactly over
-the bursæ limited to this area, and it does not expand anywhere because
-there is no need for it to do so. So when one observes on the surface
-just below the tail a pattern, often in a black-and-tan terrier marked
-by a tan patch of hair, one reads the record of the long time spent by
-the dog in sitting as he meditates on some fresh or past escapade of “A
-Dog’s Day.”
-
-The statement just made that the hind leg does not share in the effects
-of pressure is not strictly correct; it applies to the _leg_ properly
-so called. But the upper part of the thigh exhibits a very clear
-reversal of hair due to the weight of the body acting here against the
-streams from the side of the thigh, which are seen endeavouring to make
-their way to the inner side. They are arrested by a long ridge of hair
-which marks the obstacle presented by the weight of the body acting
-here. This completes the story of the way in which sitting affects the
-hair of the dog, and is shown in Fig. 38.
-
-
-Lying Attitude.
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 39.--Foreleg of domestic dog, showing reversed hair
-on under surface, which rests on the ground in lying posture.]
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 40.--Showing chest of domestic dog, with reversed
-area of hair on each side.]
-
-There are four attitudes adopted by the dog in lying. In the first,
-when he sleeps he lies stretched out on his side on some surface, with
-his limbs projected nearly straight out, and in the second, he curls
-himself up in _his_ armchair in a cosy, rounded posture. But in both
-these attitudes there is no such sliding pressure as will affect in
-any way the direction of his hair. In two other favourite attitudes
-it is far otherwise. When he lies prone he plants his fore limbs out
-before his chest and either raises his head to the level of his trunk
-or rests it on his fore paws. Each of these attitudes contributes to
-a very well-marked change of the hair on the under surface of his fore
-arms, to use a convenient human term, one which carries us back to the
-story of man and the apes when their fore arms were discussed. On this
-surface, from the mechanical conditions involved, a new force, that of
-_sliding pressure_, comes into play. The skin here is very loose, as
-indeed it is in the greater part of his body, which may almost be said
-to form one large subcutaneous bursa. The weight of the fore part of
-his body and head acts _downwards and forwards_, and thus opposes the
-normal or downward course of the hair on the limb, such as one sees on
-the upper surface of his fore arm. The resultant of these two forces
-has the effect of acting against the normal slope, and a reversed
-direction of the hair is produced very much like that which is seen
-in many monkeys and in a small area in man. This is shown in Fig. 39,
-which appeared in the small book[54], to which reference has been made,
-and it is confined to the part of the limb where the sliding pressure
-is seen to act. In this feature again there is a record of his resting
-habits, and, of course, the time he spends in the fourth attitude with
-his chin resting on his fore paws contributes its share, the mechanical
-conditions being similar.
-
- [54] _Use-Inheritance._
-
-This fourth attitude brings in another force of its own towards the
-“make-up” of the dog’s patterns of hair. When lying with his head
-supported on his paws the lower part of his chest is closely applied to
-the upper or flexor surface of the fore legs, and the long-continued
-pressure of the latter against the downward or normal streams of hair
-on the chest leads to its slope being reversed. This is shown in two
-wide patterns of the whorl, feathering and crest, Fig. 40, resembling
-closely the corresponding patterns on the chest of a horse. I had
-the opportunity many years ago of examining in the Capitol Museum at
-Rome two fine sculptures of Molossian hounds, when these matters of
-hair-arrangement were occupying my attention, and was much struck with
-the fidelity with which the ancient sculptor reproduced such small
-facts as the reversed areas of hair in a dog. Phiz himself was not
-more true to Nature in his delineation of the projecting hairs on the
-human eyebrows. It should be added that the reversed hair in question
-occupies only that part of the chest which is in contact with the fore
-limb. If one cannot reckon any animal pedometers, to the credit of the
-domestic dog I think one may fairly and metaphorically say that his
-hairy coat gives an accurate mould of his habits.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII.
-
-HABITS AND HAIR OF PRIMATES.
-
-
-In spite of the satires of Swift we may not cavil at the natural pride
-which has led man, Homo Sapiens, as he also calls himself, to confer
-boldly on himself, and his lineal ancestors at any rate, the name of
-Primates. This large and highest group of hair-clad mammals includes
-broadly and somewhat loosely lemurs, monkeys, apes and man. The last
-has not lost his hairy endowment, though it is sadly curtailed, and it
-is well to remember that, except on the palms of the hands, the soles
-of the feet and the terminal rows of phalanges of fingers and toes, man
-_is_ a hair-clad mammal. Shakespeare calls him “paragon of animals,”
-and Huxley “head of the sentient world,” and no reasonable person will
-attempt to improve upon such pregnant tributes to his greatness. I
-desire only to adhere that _quâ animal_ he is the best of all for my
-humble purpose of historian of the chequered course of the mammalian
-hair, better even than the domestic horse. His hair varies from a coat
-so fine as to need a lens for the discovery of the separate hairs, to a
-truly Simian profusion of thick and long hair such as that of the Ainu
-or hairy aborigines of Japan.
-
-
-Hair and Habits of Man.
-
-The streams of his hair demonstrate two important facts about man:
-first _what he has been_; secondly _what he has done_, that is to
-say, his ancestry and habits of life, through an immense stretch of
-time. These stories in hair are the culmination of a large number of
-characters inherited and acquired, and their study in two selected
-regions of lemurs, apes and man will be pursued in this chapter on the
-lines which I laid down in Chapter VI. I have thought it well not to
-give any connected account of the rest of his hairy covering so as to
-concentrate attention on the two simplest and most striking regions.
-The charts of his hair-streams and those of the lemur and ape have been
-described with sufficient fulness elsewhere,[55] and no cartographer
-has hitherto sought to improve upon them.
-
- [55] _Direction of Hair in Animals and Man._
-
-The back and the front surfaces of the trunk afford the two best and
-most instructive fields of study, for the forces which act upon them
-are of a simple kind, and may be traced upwards from the lemurs to man
-as in the case of the forearms. The three drawings (Fig. 41) represent
-the backs of a lemur, chimpanzee and man, most of the details of the
-hair being omitted and their place taken by thick dark arrows which
-show the line of the different hair-streams. This diagrammatic method
-will make any misunderstanding of the main facts impossible.
-
-The lemur has on the back of its neck a forward or headward slope
-of hair and this passes on to the head itself, and on the back of
-the trunk, as the arrows show, there is no departure from the normal
-arrangement of the lower mammals. The lemur, therefore, requires
-neither further description nor explanation.
-
-The ape shows no material change in this region from the arrangement of
-its lemur or monkey ancestor, in spite of the greater proportion of its
-life which is spent in the upright posture; indeed, this is what one
-would expect.
-
-
-Hair of the Back of Man.
-
-When the hair on the back of man is examined a remarkable change from
-the patterns of any of his known or supposed ancestors is found. It is
-by no means easy to trace the course of the hairs on the human back. A
-young, hairy and dark-haired person gives much the best field, and a
-lens may be necessary. In older subjects the hair is often so much worn
-away by friction that the direction can no longer be followed. Suffice
-it to say that the examination, though somewhat difficult, can well be
-carried out if the proper conditions are observed; and that it bears
-out the results which have come from the corresponding examination of
-infants. _The arrangement is congenital._
-
-From the neck the hair passes on each side nearly downwards, and in
-the middle directly downwards in a narrow stream between the two
-muscular borders of the vertebral furrows, and continues in this
-normal direction to the end of the spinal region. It will be seen
-that below the two upper arrows there are three levels of arrows, the
-first with one, the second with two, and the third with one, on each
-side of the surface of the back. At the level of the shoulder-joints
-the side-streams curve upwards towards the spine and join the central
-stream; at the second the direction is rather more upwards before it
-curves inwards and downwards to the vertebral furrow; at the third the
-streams curve slightly upwards and towards the middle-line and coalesce
-with the other streams. The contrast between the straight, simple
-slope of the hair on the lemur’s and ape’s back, and that of man is
-very great. In the latter the side-streams make an angle of 45° or
-less with the axis of the spine and _this arrangement is unique among
-mammals_. It will be, therefore, necessary to inquire into its history
-and causation, for it goes far towards reversing the well-established
-and accredited pattern of apes, monkeys and lemurs. If the reader will
-carry his mind back to the arrangement of hair on man’s forearm he will
-see that it exhibits some features analogous to those on the back of
-man. In the forearm there is that curious little stream on the extensor
-surface which may be looked upon as a relic from the ape-stock, but
-in the rest of that limb-segment man has boldly gone back, beyond the
-ape, to an arrangement found in the lemur; and in the case of the back
-of man there is the small primitive area down the vertebral furrow and
-an entirely novel arrangement on each side such as might startle the
-leaders of animal fashions in hair.
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 41.--Arrangement of hair on the back of
-lemur--chimpanzee--man.]
-
-The question at once arises: “How has this change come to pass?” In the
-case of the strange arrangement on man’s forearms I have shown that the
-Pan-Selectionist thought he detected there one of his particular kinds
-of vestige. He cannot find any such here. I can conceive a biologist
-making play with Heredity, Variation and Selection in the case of an
-ape, monkey, or lemur whose hairs are long and thick and functionally
-very active. _There_ he might make use of the well-known “argument from
-ignorance,” and maintain that we cannot be sure that such and such
-factors might not have survival-value, but I defy the most hardy among
-the Pan-Selectionist High Command to put in that plea in connection
-with the fine short hairs of man which even require a lens for their
-detection; they have little value as a protection of the skin from
-friction; their arrangement has none. And if some leader did attempt
-this task I doubt if the most docile Prussian would not rebel against
-the statement that the withdrawal in question was “according to plan.”
-My purpose, however, in this book being to build up and not to pull
-down, I must perforce show a reasonable and better explanation of a
-remarkable little fact.
-
-
-Passive Habits.
-
-The habits of man concerned in the _modus operandi_ of this change are
-passive, and two in number; that of sitting with his back against some
-supporting object, and of lying in sleep with his head more or less
-raised on a pillow or its equivalent. In contrast with man, lemurs
-and apes inhabit trees during their many hours of rest, and I doubt
-if the number of hours thus spent by these and other wild animals
-to that spent in active exercise is less than three to one, so that
-their attitudes of rest would, if calculated to do so, contribute much
-towards any change occurring in the patterns of hair. But, seeing
-that the ape-fashion is similar to that of the lemur, and that this
-normal arrangement is calculated only to be confirmed by the action of
-gravity and the dripping of rain, and that they do not greatly indulge
-themselves, if at all, in their equivalent for man’s armchairs, nothing
-else would be expected in the hairy covering of their backs than what
-we find.
-
-The increasing tendency to the upright position in Eoanthropus Dawsoni
-and Pithecanthropus Erectus to say nothing of the men of Cromagnon--led
-man to use as supports for his back the walls of his rough caves which
-he had adopted as dwellings instead of the branches of trees and the
-nests of the ape. He no longer affected entirely those hardy habits
-of sitting without support for his back that were _de rigueur_ in his
-ancestors, who probably looked upon him with as much disapproval as
-certain erect old ladies of the old school display towards the use of
-easy chairs by the rising generation. Wearied with the struggle for
-food, and against his savage rivals, he rested his back against the
-sides of his rude abode. When he slept in this attitude the relaxation
-of his voluntary muscles allowed mechanical forces to come into action
-which tended to oppose the downward trend of the hair. We know from our
-own experience that when sitting asleep with our backs supported there
-always occurs a certain amount of sinking down of the trunk. In this
-attitude are present, then, such conditions of the back and its hairy
-covering as give rise to mechanical forces which would interfere with
-the direction of the hair. These are, a heavy body, tending to slip
-downwards slightly while resting against a fixed surface, a growing
-tissue easily diverted from its normal course, and many hours spent in
-the attitude in question.
-
-The effects of these conditions increased with the increasing tendency
-of developing man to attend to his bodily comfort.
-
-But man spends also on the average at least a third of his whole
-existence lying in sleep with his head on a pillow of some kind,
-perhaps the skull of a _Felis Groeneveldtii_ in the case of
-Pithecanthropus Erectus, and other such better objects, as he made more
-study of the art of being comfortable. Those who know much of children
-and sick persons and have watched them in sleep know that the habit
-of lying on one or other side prevails largely over that of lying on
-the back. The head being more or less raised by a pillow, the human
-sleeper, even when lying on his back and more so when lying on his
-side, is in a potentially and actually sliding position, a fact well
-known to most persons from their own experience. It is easy to see
-how such conditions are tending for a third of a man’s whole life to
-reverse in some degree the direction of his hair and how they act as we
-saw in the case of the sitting posture. But the very common _lateral_
-position in sleep contributes its own peculiar share in pushing the
-hair towards the spine, ceasing to do so only when the prominent
-muscular border of the vertebral furrow is reached. I think it will
-escape no careful observer of these simple facts of man’s resting life,
-who also notes the remarkable course of the arrows on his back, that
-the facts and their present explanation fit one another like a Chubb
-lock and its key. The only alternative suggestion of the facts is that
-some being with diabolic power has been at work and laying a trap for
-poor human biologists in the 20th century A.D.
-
-In confirmation of this process I would refer to an example which
-agrees very closely with the above explanation. I knew an invalid
-suffering from pleurisy and lung-disease who was much confined to bed,
-spending much of his time propped high up on pillows. He had long dark
-hair on his back and I was often struck, when examining him, with
-the remarkable way in which the hairs were dragged upon so that they
-pointed nearly in a vertical _upward_ direction. Here was a little
-instance of an undesigned experiment in the dynamics of hair.
-
-
-Hair of the Chest.
-
-In the hair-streams on the chest of our chosen three, lemur, ape and
-man, there are also some remarkable contrasts in the course they take.
-Fig. 42 shows these in a vivid manner. Precisely as in the case of the
-hair on the backs of lemurs, apes and man, we find on the chest of
-those three types a normal direction on the two lower ancestors and an
-entirely novel arrangement in man; the former, therefore, will need no
-verbal description.
-
-Man, the ever bold explorer and innovator has initiated on his chest,
-as on his back, a fashion in hair unknown in any of the primates. He
-is, in respect of his hair on these two regions, _sui generis_. On
-the chest there is a critical area extending across the sternum at
-the level of the second rib from a whorl which is found on each side
-somewhat above the nipples. This is not less an ancient battle-field
-than the Border which separated England and Scotland, and it has been
-the site of its little conflicts, more especially _north_ of the
-Border, corresponding to those of the wild days of Border warfare of
-which Scottish history is full.
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 42.--Arrangement of hair on the chest of
-lemur--chimpanzee--man.]
-
-At this level of the chest two streams of hair are _directly_ opposed
-to one another. That which covers the chest below the dividing line
-maintains in true old English style its conservative fashion and passes
-downwards as in the ape and lemur. The more independent or Scottish
-stream goes upwards on its way to the neck, the side streams passing
-somewhat outwards towards the side of the neck, the central upwards and
-inwards, converging gently on to the front of the neck. The arrows in
-the figure show this very clearly. On the front of the neck the stream
-pursues its upward way until it meets the downward flowing stream
-from the lower jaw, and the _junction_ of these two streams lies over
-the level of the upper border of the larynx in front, winding gently
-outwards and upwards to the surface just below the lobes of the ears.
-The opposition of the two streams in the neck is very familiar, as a
-piece of practical experience, to those who shave, for it affords a
-decided little resistance to the razor as it is drawn downwards, and
-many persons change the position of the razor in consequence of it,
-without troubling their heads with any scientific reason for the fact.
-
-These are the facts of the distribution of hair on man’s chest, but
-what is the interpretation? I would remark here that in my former
-book[56] I gave what seemed to be then the best reason for it, but
-further reflection on the matter has shown me that it was incorrect and
-inadequate. I refer to this and one or two other corrections of earlier
-views in a later chapter.
-
- [56] _Direction of Hair_, pp. 88–93.
-
-
-Interpretation of Records.
-
-In discussing such a striking little fact as the one in question, an
-illustration may serve as an introduction. From the glaciers of Mont
-St. Gothard two great rivers take their rise. The eastern side of its
-slopes gives rise to the Rhine, which flows in a northerly direction
-to the Lake of Constance, the western to the Rhone, whence it pursues
-a south-westerly course to the Lake of Geneva. No geographer would
-doubt that certain physical features of the country were to be sought
-in accounting for the contrary courses of two rivers arising from a
-comparatively small region, and he finds it by a simple study of the
-topography concerned. By similar methods we must ascertain why from our
-little Mont St. Gothard at the level of the second rib, two streams of
-hair separate and pursue nearly opposite directions.
-
-A little knowledge of the superficial anatomy of the chest and neck
-throws some light at once on the problem. It so happens that if one
-made a simple map of these hair streams, and at the side of it a
-drawing of the platysma myoides muscle, it could not fail to strike
-one that the correspondence of the surfaces occupied by the two
-phenomena was very significant. It is going too far to say that the
-correspondence is complete, but it is so nearly so that one may fairly
-say that the reversed stream of hair which begins at the second rib
-and goes up the neck, lies over the platysma muscle. The stream of
-hair does not extend up to the lower part of the face and lower jaw,
-it does not cover the outlying portion of the platysma on the side of
-the neck and it begins on the chest a little above the rather uncertain
-origin of the platysma fibres from the fascia of the chest. But the
-correspondence of its surface with the main part, or about five-sixths
-of the platysma, is most suggestive.
-
-This muscle is one of the subdermal sheets that are found in many
-mammals, and though it is not a continuation or descendant of the
-fly-shaker or panniculus carnosus, which is often referred to in these
-pages, it is an analogous feature of man. It is _closely attached_
-at its lower part to the skin over it and more loosely at its upper.
-It has various functions attributed to it, as I will mention later;
-but there is one effect of its action which is very evident in a thin
-person, that is to say, it wrinkles the skin over it in a vertical
-direction. This it does, whatever else it may do.
-
-
-Struggles of the Platysma.
-
-In interpreting this novel hair stream of man’s chest and neck we are
-again brought into an atmosphere of struggle of forces. Something has
-occurred in the course of man’s descent from the ape to interfere very
-sharply with the course of the hair; and certainly if there be anything
-in organisms that Heredity, Variation and Selection are unable to do
-(even when adorned with capital letters, to make them, as Huxley said,
-“like grenadiers with bearskins,” appear much finer fellows than they
-are), it is to provide in this reversed stream of hair on man’s chest
-some cunning “adaptation” to his needs. Selection will not serve; but I
-think use and habit will. There can be little, if any, doubt that the
-frequent and active contractions of the platysma muscle in the course
-of man’s life are the efficient cause of the change of arrangement of
-hair from a downward simian to an upward human slope. To this opinion
-the anatomist will promptly reply: “Ah! I have thee there, friend
-Lamarckian; are there not any number of apes and monkeys that also
-have an active and efficient platysma?” Undoubtedly there are, and I
-give here, through the kindness of Professor Keith, a short account
-of that muscle in simiadæ. It is taken from an unpublished work of his
-on _The Myology of the Catarrhini--a Study in Evolution_. The account
-may be only interesting to the professed anatomist, but the conclusions
-in the summary bear closely on the present problem. I give the exact
-words from Chapter II., pp. 472, 479. The simian forms examined are
-_semnopithecus_, _gorilla_, _chimpanzee_, _orang_, _gibbon_, _macacus_,
-_cercopitheci_, _cynocephali_. “_Summary_: Every gradation is found
-between the cynocephalic and human forms. The evolution lies in the
-disappearance of the supra-trapezial origin and the superficial
-labio-mental insertion. The opposite nuchal and mental angles of a
-trapezoidal sheet are obliterated and a rhomboidal figure is left. The
-change may be seen step by step through the _macaci_, _semnopitheci_,
-_hylobates_, _troglodytes_ and the _orang_ to Man.
-
-“The maxillary insertion in man is more extensive than the others, and
-the insertion is more distinctly demarcated from the quadratus menti
-origin. But slips between the two muscles are not uncommon.
-
-“The sub-mental interdigitation occurs frequently in man, and although
-its extent varies in the other Catarrhini it is always present.
-
-“The upper nuchal fibres, being cut loose in the higher members of
-the orthorachitial group from their primary origin, became aberrant
-in their behaviour. Auriculo-labial slips, slips of union with the
-zygomatici, or simulating a _risorius_, or a relapse to the primitive
-medial dorsal origin and connection with the occipito-auricular muscles
-may occur in man as in the others.
-
-“Fasciculation of the muscle may occur in man and the _troglodytes_.
-
-“That the functions of this muscle are indefinite is shown by the
-numerous individual and generic variations. But that its presence is
-essential may be judged by its persistence. It may depress the angle of
-the mouth or the lower jaw, or help to flex the head upon the chest, or
-help to empty the laryngeal air-sac if it be present. But as a matter
-of fact all these functions are otherwise provided for. When tense it
-protects the deep part of the neck somewhat, and it is usually active
-in temper. The axillary part of the same sheet in the _cynomorphæ_
-offers a similar puzzle as regards its functions.”
-
-We have it thus on the highest authority that the platysma muscle is
-active and persistent in a large series of monkeys, apes and man. But
-the whole work has for its sub-title, “A Study in Evolution,” and
-in the story of the platysma there is a picture of its progressive
-development to that of man. There is evidence in the above account
-of the muscle that a structure is found in monkeys and man which
-might operate on the overlying streams of hair in any of these animal
-forms--or might not--in accordance with the conception of struggle
-between opposing forces which I have kept in view all through this
-volume.
-
-It is evident that in all animals below man the platysma has not
-achieved any victory by its action over the streams of hair on the
-chest and neck, and to my mind it is equally evident that in the case
-of man it has carried through a very manifest “turning-movement.” It
-will be objected, quite properly, that this is a matter of opinion,
-and the pertinent question will be asked, “How do you account for the
-absence of this reversed hair-pattern in apes and monkeys and its
-absence in man, both having an efficient platysma muscle?”
-
-The essence of a struggle is that it ends with the victory of one
-adversary over the other, and as the race is not always to the swift
-nor the battle to the strong, there is of necessity some uncertainty
-as to the result of any struggle. The factors of time as well as of
-overwhelming force are required for most of the victories of man over
-man, and it is not less so in the victories of habit over ancestry in
-the direction of hair, as I have repeatedly shown. The required time
-is clearly at one’s disposal for this victory, and the “overwhelming
-force” of habit and use is purely a question of the degree of
-repetition and the efficiency of the contractions of the platysma, and
-its greater use in man than in apes and monkeys. The uses to which it
-was put in the lower forms not having been sufficiently overwhelming
-for victory, no change in them has been shown. The cumulative effects
-of the actions of a developing platysma in man, under the guiding
-influence of his more complex habits of life, have turned the scale in
-favour of the reinforced forces of habit, and the direction of the hair
-becomes reversed nearly all over the area covering the muscle.
-
-We must consider all the forces engaged in this struggle for mastery on
-the neck and chest of man, and remember on one hand the power of the
-normal slope of hair, the greater difficulty of altering the direction
-of the thick long hairs of monkeys and apes, and their relatively
-long resting hours; and on the other the shorter and finer hairs of
-man and the increasing efficiency of his platysma muscle in varied
-actions. Professor Keith mentions four functions of the platysma: that
-of _depressing the angle of the mouth and lower jaw, helping to flex
-the head upon the chest_, and to _empty the laryngeal air-sac_, and
-_protecting the deep parts of the neck when it is tense_--adding the
-significant comment that “it is usually active in temper”--I presume
-this to mean bad temper!
-
-Leaving out of account the emptying of the laryngeal air-sac, is it not
-evident that the remaining three actions of the platysma are very much
-more exerted in the case of man with all the numerous occupations and
-movements of his head and neck, in obedience to his higher brain, than
-in the apes, monkeys and lemurs, endowed with a fitful activity, with
-fewer and less variable movements of their head, and long, long hours
-spent in their particular form of meditation?
-
-So, when the muscular sheet, which, as I have said, is _closely
-attached to the skin of the chest and more loosely to that of the
-neck_, contracts and becomes shortened between its origin on the
-chest to its insertion in the face and jaw, it gives a most obvious
-pull on the skin over it and wrinkles it vertically in a manner which
-will strike any thin person who contracts it voluntarily before a
-looking-glass. The connection shown between the action of the platysma
-muscle and the change of hair is so close that it can hardly be
-questioned that one is the cause of the other. If it be not proved to
-demonstration it is “tremendously probable” and the connection falls
-into line with the previous demonstrated cases.
-
-I must add here a remark suggested by the views of man’s descent put
-forward since this was written. The claim that man has changed the
-direction of his hair on his back and chest by use and habit owing to
-altered modes of life is not dependent on the simian theory of his
-descent. The change to his present patterns on those two regions from
-those of any “active arboreal pioneer” among insectivores is just as
-striking and is open to the same line of explanation.
-
-It would serve no useful purpose here to travel further over the varied
-streams of hair on the body of man.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV.
-
-MISCELLANEOUS EXAMPLES.
-
-
-In this chapter a few of the rarer examples of hair-clad mammals which
-present remarkable changes at critical areas of their hairy coats
-may be considered with advantage. I have chosen six, of which three
-appeared in my former book.
-
-
-The Giraffe.
-
-The two drawings of a giraffe, Figs. 43 and 44 were made for me for the
-purpose of illustrating one of its habits and two of its peculiarities
-of arrangement of its hair. This stately creature is the tallest known
-animal and is the sole representative of its ancient family, more
-common in the days when giants abounded. Its range is becoming more
-limited and its enemies not less dangerous, and it is expected in the
-course of some years to add to the number of the recently-extinct
-creatures.
-
-
-Habits.
-
-Living mainly in dry sandy regions giraffes find their food exclusively
-in leaves plucked from trees, and are said by some authorities to exist
-for a long period without drinking, but an interesting account quoted
-by Lydekker from Selous should be mentioned here. Selous writes that
-on a certain occasion he reached camp “a little before sundown, just
-in time to see three tall, graceful giraffes issue from the forest a
-little distance beyond, and stalk across the intervening flat, swishing
-their long tails to and fro, on their way down to the water. It is a
-curious sight to watch these long-legged animals drinking, and one that
-I have had several opportunities of enjoying. Though their necks are
-long, they are not sufficiently so to enable them to reach the water
-without straddling their legs wide apart. In doing this, they sometimes
-place one foot in front, and the other as far back as possible, and
-then by a series of little jerks widen the distance between the two,
-until they succeed in getting their mouths down to the water; sometimes
-they sprawl their legs out sideways in a similar manner.” Lydekker
-adds that this position has to be assumed not only when drinking,
-but likewise when the animal desires to pick up a leaf from the ground
-or on the rare occasions when it grazes. This habit so graphically
-described is the one which alone concerns my subject. The patterns of
-hair peculiar to the giraffe need a short description.
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 43.--Giraffe showing at A and B, hair-patterns of
-a remarkable kind at the place where the main movements of the neck
-occur.]
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 44.--Giraffe in the act of drinking or browsing off
-the ground.]
-
-
-Hair Patterns.
-
-Fig. 43 shows a whorl (B) at the side of the neck on a level with the
-prominent spines of the seventh cervical and first dorsal vertebræ. It
-lies exactly over a spot which may be well called a “critical area,”
-for an important hinge of the whole mechanism of the giraffe’s great
-neck is situated here. Though the remarkable length of its neck is
-intimately associated with its daily needs for protection against
-enemies and the supply of food from high-placed branches of trees, it
-forms a real obstacle to the less important need of obtaining water
-to drink or food from the ground as Selous and Lydekker show. The
-protective value of the neck is picturesquely described by Mr. Beddard
-when he speaks of it as the giraffe’s watch-tower, whence its keen
-eyesight surveys the surrounding country for its enemies. But its
-attitude in drinking, Fig. 44, gives a vivid idea of the play of forces
-which takes place at the great hinge between the neck and the trunk,
-and at this point the whorl has been produced on the skin in the course
-of its laborious efforts to supply itself with water. The absence of
-any other whorl or reversed hair on the whole of its neck and trunk is
-most significant from the point of view of the dynamics of hair.
-
-The second departure from the normal direction of hair is found on
-the prominent portion of the spine, and it lies over this hinge-area.
-In Fig. 44 is shown the mane proceeding along the whole of the neck
-in the normal downward direction, and the arrows indicate the way in
-which it becomes suddenly reversed at the critical point and the lowest
-portion of the mane stands up and points upwards. This change is shown
-by the two arrows whose points meet one another, and the facts of its
-occurrence, here and nowhere else, at once suggest that the habit which
-produced the whorl on the side of the neck has also contributed to the
-change in the direction of the mane. The pattern here is precisely of
-the same order as that of the cow’s neck which we saw to be caused by
-its habit of browsing off the ground.
-
-
-Bongo--Tragelaphus euryceros.
-
-This West African antelope is a forest-dwelling species, about which
-little is known as to its habit of life, though its form and anatomy
-are well described by Lydekker. It has a powerful chest, long and
-strong horns, and short hoofs, and it is shown in Fig. 45 with its
-large pectoral whorl, feathering and crest, in which it strongly
-resembles the domestic horse. One may be allowed here, as exact
-knowledge is wanting, to point out that “reconstruction” of its habits
-may be reasonably attempted along the lines laid down in these pages.
-It is doubtful if any large mammal could possess so powerful a fore-end
-with very muscular forelimbs, highly-developed pectoral patterns and
-short strong hoofs without being a very fleet animal much accustomed to
-relying upon its speed for its protection, and if a greater knowledge
-of it be obtained in the future it is highly probable that this
-prediction will be verified. Part of its habitat is described as the
-Ashkankolu Mountains, a region where speed would be of great value.
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 45.--Bongo. Showing on the strong muscular chest,
-well-formed pectoral patterns.]
-
-
-Kiang--Thibetan Wild Ass.
-
-This member of the Equidæ is shown in Fig. 46 and there is an excellent
-specimen of it at South Kensington. I have chosen it because it is very
-unusual among others of its family in the possession of an inguinal
-and axillary whorl, feathering and crest. No other than the domestic
-horse that I have examined shows these patterns. They are nearly as
-well developed as in the horse, and require no special description. It
-lives in high altitudes up to fourteen thousand feet, and travels often
-in large herds, its food being composed of the various woody plants
-of these dry and barren regions. Lydekker says that it “is remarkable
-for its fleetness and its capacity for getting over rough and stony
-ground at a great pace.” From these facts one can gather that a large
-portion of its working day would be spent in rapid locomotion from
-place to place in search of its sparse food-supplies and in avoiding
-enemies--two paramount objects of its existence which are pictured in
-the two animal pedometers displayed on its hairy coat.
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 46.--Kiang. Side view showing inguinal (W F C) and
-axillary (W F C) patterns.]
-
-
-Llama--L.
-
-I refer here to the true llama or domesticated form of the genus Llama,
-of which the vicunha and huanaco are the existing wild species. In the
-stirring time when a handful of Spanish Conquistadores under Pizarro
-conquered and trampled upon the ancient civilisation of the Incas this
-useful animal was employed to an immense extent as a beast of burden.
-Lydekker says that at the time of the Conquest of Peru it was estimated
-that three hundred thousand llamas were employed in the mines of
-Potosi alone. Prescott gives an excellent account of the use of this
-animal in his _Conquest of Peru_. They were valued highly for their
-strength and sureness of foot which were much needed in their long and
-rugged journeys over the great passes of the Cordilleras, as well as
-for the excellence of their flesh.
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 47.--Fore foot of llama shown from behind (A) and
-from side (B) with whorls of hair and reversed areas on each side.]
-
-The only region of a llama’s body which is of interest in the present
-inquiry is the fore-foot, figured in Fig. 47. It presents a very
-remarkable arrangement of hair on its under surface, just above the
-double hoof and spongy pad at the joint above the hoof. This is
-found on each side towards the outer border of the hollow region,
-and consists of a whorl from which the hairs radiate in a reversed
-direction towards the upper part and transversely across the rest
-of the hollow. Prescott speaks of “its spongy hoof, armed with a
-claw or pointed talon to enable it to secure hold on the ice,” and
-adds that “it never requires to be shod.” If one reflects upon the
-ceaseless action during rough and slippery locomotion of this animal
-throughout its working life on mountain passes, on rough stony paths
-and ice-covered places, one can have no doubt of the reason why this
-particular joint, so greatly used in maintaining a foothold, should
-have acquired on this sheltered portion of its hair an animal pedometer.
-
-
-The Parti-coloured Bear--Æluropus Melanoleucus.
-
-This is a rare and peculiar form of the family of Ursidæ about which I
-made a statement some years ago at the Zoological Society of London.
-It is a “stocky” animal with a small head and broad short muzzle, a
-feature to which it has no right according to its affinities. It is not
-a member of the high-class Felidæ whose special prerogative it is to
-wear their hair on a short broad muzzle in a _downward_ direction as
-I showed in Chapter XI. Being a more _bourgeois_ creature than a cat
-it has offended against such sumptuary laws as may exist in the animal
-kingdom.
-
-Its hair ought to be worn in the proper backward or upward slope such
-as other bears, dogs and small carnivores display.
-
-In my former note I modestly proposed an alternative suggestion to the
-one I now offer, of this aberrant and strange bit of hair-country,
-and this was that it was correlated with the broad short snout. As I
-have remarked before this word “correlated” is used so loosely as to
-mean almost anything the user likes, and it is, in my opinion, a fine
-source of confusion of thought. Undoubtedly this shape of the muzzle
-of the Parti-coloured Bear is linked somehow with the arrangement
-of its hair on that region. But it is hardly to be imagined that
-a direct reversal of hair from the proper bear-type, that is to say
-from the mouth to the head, would be produced by the mere broadening
-of the muzzle on account of some adaptation to its altering life. The
-link surely is of a different nature, and analogous to that of the
-corresponding surface in the lion and other cats, and that the cleaning
-of its fur on the snout is done in feline and not in ursine fashion,
-that is to say forwards, and that the breadth of muzzle is the reason
-for the change of method.
-
-
-Two-Toed Sloth--Cholæpus didactylus.
-
-This weird creature is one of a decaying family whom naturalists, with
-needless and frank brutality, called toothless. The term is neither
-exact nor polite. It is very much as if one were to call a person
-“toothless” whose front teeth had been knocked out, but whose remaining
-teeth were good and useful. But it represents so important a taxonomic
-character that one must allow for what seems bad manners on the part
-of zoological leaders who are, as a rule, full of the milk of human
-kindness, and seldom in these days quarrel even among themselves,
-adopting the motto _nihil animalium alienum a me puto_.
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 48.--Two-toed sloth, showing action of gravity upon
-the long thick hairs.]
-
-The sloths form an excellent example of the action of gravity upon long
-thick hairs, and the Fig. 48 given will explain this. They are New
-World animals, though indeed they have what we call an “Old World”
-look, and are truly ancient. They spend the larger part of their
-time upside down in the manner represented in the drawings. They are
-arboreal and nocturnal animals that come down to earth in search of
-food when things are quieter below, and will wander for considerable
-distances, walking slowly on the outer borders of their feet and the
-feet turned in.
-
-These being the few facts of their lives which concern the present
-subject one comes, as usual, to interpretation. These tree-sloths are
-descended from an older form that inhabited the ground, so that the
-present mode of life, which is so largely arboreal, has been acquired
-by dint of long years of struggle and adaptation to bitter needs.
-It seems hardly reasonable to call in the aid of selection for the
-production of its singular disposition of hair though that factor ruled
-in the production of its arboreal habit. It is almost flying in the
-face of common sense to attribute this upward, or downward (according
-to one’s point of view) singular arrangement to anything but the
-effects of gravity upon its long hairs. If it be not so, it looks a
-remarkable likely solution of this small problem.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV.
-
-EXPERIMENTAL.
-
-
-About ten years ago I began an investigation into the results of the
-application by man to the domestic horse of various forms of harness,
-desiring to find out if these results were capable of being transmitted
-from one generation to another. In 1908 I had not got very far, but
-thought it well to bring before the Zoological Society of London the
-results observed up to that time and read a paper entitled, “Some
-observations on the effects of Pressure upon the Direction of Hair
-in Mammals.” It was kindly received, but was not published in their
-proceedings, as it appeared to the Publication Committee a paper more
-suited to “another place,” presumably those of a veterinary society.
-It was illustrated by the two figures I give here of a horse in full
-harness, and another with the chief results as to changes of the
-direction of hair, or new patterns, displayed on its coat.
-
-
-Progress of Inquiry.
-
-Being disposed to think that the investigation could be carried
-further, I proceeded to look about for any examples in horses which
-might show the transmission of these artificial results to their
-descendants, and had to wait awhile before I could see which of the
-regions affected by the pressure of harness were likely to afford the
-required phenomena. These were in due time forthcoming, and will form
-the chief subject of the present chapter. I look upon them as cases of
-an _undesigned experiment_ and will describe them later.
-
-In the present stage of science all hypotheses must be submitted to
-the test of experiment before they can enter the charmed circle of
-natural laws. For this reason one must endeavour to apply the test of
-experiment to the hypothesis before us.
-
-
-The Nature of Experiment.
-
-Hitherto I have gone no further than the region of experience and
-observation, from which, Jevons says, “all knowledge proceeds.” There
-has been abundance of observation of phenomena in this quest and I
-have ventured even on hypothesis. Experiment is shortly defined by
-Jevons as _observation plus alteration of conditions_. He points out
-that when we make an experiment we more or less influence the events
-which we observe, as when we bring together certain substances under
-various conditions of temperature, pressure, electric disturbance or
-chemical action and so on, and then record the changes observed; and,
-that experiment may be of two kinds, experiments of simple fact and
-experiments of quantity. It is unnecessary here to describe all the
-rigorous rules that the man of science so rightly imposes upon himself
-before he claims to have proved his hypothesis, merely adding that
-among others he requires, Exclusion of Indifferent Circumstances,
-Simplification of Experiments, Removal of Usual Conditions,
-Removal of Interference of Unsuspected Conditions, Blind or Test
-Experiments, Negative Results of Experiment, and he lays down the
-limits of experiment. Those who have not for themselves investigated
-some scientific problem may learn from this statement some of the
-difficulties of the work of scientific men and will not fail to respect
-and admire the caution, patience and honesty of the scientific worker,
-and will perhaps feel the more gratitude to a class of men by whose
-self-denying labours they live and move and have their being in a
-modern state, and by whose discoveries, thus established, they are
-frequently preserved from premature death.
-
-
-Experiments for the Present Purpose.
-
-Now in the matter of experiment for the proof of the thesis that
-changes in the habits of an animal _cause_ the changes observed in
-their hair, it is at once seen that, _ex hypothesi_, no one can impose
-and work with such calculated conditions as are ordained by experiment,
-strictly so-called. The action of a habit is a slow process and the
-movement of a hair is slow; moreover the lifetime of a man is too short
-and that of a horse, for example, too long to allow of any individual
-experimenter applying artificial pressure through many generations of
-horses, so as to be able to verify his assertion that the effects of
-artificial pressure do what is claimed, and that these effects are
-transmitted from one generation of horses to another. One can conceive
-a calculated experiment of the kind made with numerous individual rats,
-and successive generations, but it is hardly likely that effectual
-pressure could be applied to the hairy coats of such small and elusive
-mammals as would serve to test the hypothesis.
-
-
-Undesigned Experiments.
-
-We are thrown back, then, on such experiments as may be provided
-for us by the uncalculated operations of man through many ages.
-This class I call undesigned experiments and have had more to say
-about numerous examples of these in another place.[57] Using the
-term experiment broadly we see many occurrences which consist in an
-accidental observation of a fact, and Jevons mentions five of these
-which have led to organised results in science--the double refraction
-in Iceland spar by Erasmus Bartholinus, the twitching of a frog’s leg
-under stimuli by Galvani, the light reflected from distant windows
-with a double-refracting substance by Malus, the form of a vertebra
-by Oken, and the peculiar appearance of a solution of quinine by Sir
-John Herschel. But he notes something further than this, that is,
-the way in which astronomers make the earth’s orbit the basis of a
-well-arranged _natural experiment_. He says further that “Nature has
-made no experiment at all for us within historical times” among animals
-living in a state of nature, allowing at the same time that man has
-made an approach to experiment in his domestication of many animals.
-Huxley himself kept an open mind until the last as to the validity of
-Natural Selection in the Origin of Species, because of the fact that
-races which are sterile together have not yet been produced by human
-cultivation, for example, the sterility of mules, the human product of
-the jackass and the mare. I allude to this to show that such a result,
-if effected, would have constituted a valuable experiment in biology in
-favour of Natural Selection.
-
- [57] _Contemporary Review_, June 1917.
-
-
-Harness on Horses.
-
-Man has, however, been carrying on unconsciously throughout a great
-stretch of time an experiment upon the hair on the coat of a horse
-by the use of harness. This is an old story and its rudiments are
-mentioned by Professor Scott Elliott.[58] He states that the men of
-Cromagnon are believed by a high authority as to their rock-paintings
-to have depicted some marks which represent rude harness of some kind,
-though he himself expresses doubt on the matter. He also quotes the
-same authority for the figures made by the Madelenians as having found
-signs which can be interpreted as halters or even bridles. Be this as
-it may, we need not carry our search for the use of harness to this
-hoary antiquity, but know well from history that for many thousands
-of years man has been employing harness on his friend and servant,
-thus making the essential conditions for an experiment of which he and
-his servant were alike unconscious, that is to say, he influenced a
-growing living structure, the horse’s hair, by the artificial force of
-pressure, applied to the coat at various points. These varied from age
-to age as to fashion and material, and the present full development of
-harness of a draught horse was probably slow in coming.
-
- [58] _Prehistoric Man and His Story._ G. F. Scott Elliott, 1916,
- pp. 169, 206.
-
-
-Examples of the Effects of Pressure.
-
-Looking at the figures of a horse harnessed, and another without
-harness, Figs. 49 and 50, one sees on the latter eight different
-regions where patterns of hair, not found in the horse normally, are
-displayed. They are as follows:--
-
- A. The under surface of the neck. Pattern due to the collar.
-
- B. The hamstring region. Pattern due to the kicking
- strap.
-
- C. The hollow corresponding to Pattern due to strap of
- what we should call the saddle.
- armpit.
-
- D. The coccygeal or tail-region. Pattern due to the crupper.
-
- E. The side of the neck. Pattern due to the reins.
-
- F. The shoulder. Pattern due to the shaft.
-
- G. The side of the face. Pattern due to strap of
- head stall.
-
- H. The border of the neck _under_ Pattern due to collar.
- the collar.
-
-All these aberrations from the normal are rare except the first
-(A), and all are based on the observation and drawing of individual
-specimens which I brought before the Zoological Society and the details
-of which are given in a note on page 129. The rarer seven examples are
-described because taken together they show what the pressure of harness
-_can_ do at certain points where its pressure is adequate, and they
-are all situated where they might be expected if such a force could
-effect hair-changes, and there are _none of them found on areas where
-neither pressure nor underlying muscular traction_ can act efficiently.
-Thus in many thousands of horses I have never seen a hair-pattern on
-the middle of the flank or the under surface of the abdomen or the
-middle of the back or gluteal region or on the fore or hind legs. This
-negative evidence is of great importance, and must be taken for what it
-is worth. I may venture to remind the reader that every one of these
-phenomena is an artificial product of man’s treatment of the horse.
-They come thus under the category of undesigned experiments.
-
-The only one of the eight artificial patterns, which as a rule are in
-the form of a whorl feathering and crest, that needs, further close
-attention is the pattern A, produced on the under surface of the
-horse’s neck by the collar, and this will be examined separately.
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 49.--Domestic horse, fully harnessed.]
-
-
-The Selected Example--Ventral Surface of Horse’s Neck.
-
-If I set out to convince a doubting opponent that these things are
-as I assert, three conditions may at once be laid down. First, it
-must be shown that the patterns found here are not part of a normal
-arrangement. Second, that they are produced by pressure of the harness.
-Third, that examples of them be forthcoming in young horses never
-exposed to the action of harness.
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 50.--Side view of domestic horse, showing eight
-areas of reversed hair, A, B, C, D, E, F, G, H, all of which were
-situated under portions of the harness.
-
-B. Pattern on hamstring region, under the breeching.
-
- Examined 24th December, 1907. Roan hackney, recently clipped,
- showed on the offside on the hamstring region, a reversed area
- of hair proceeding vertically upwards and ending in a crest, in
- the position where the breeching rubs during locomotion. Thirteen
- cases examined, other twelve similar.
-
-C. Pattern on lower axillary region, under belly-band.
-
- Examined 4th March, 1907. Small grey hackney with reversed area of
- hair in lower axillary region, with also a crest nearly horizontal
- lying along upper part of this area under the belly-band. Eight
- cases examined, the other seven similar.
-
-D. Pattern on tail region.
-
- Examined 29th November, 1907. Bay hackney, on each side of base of
- tail where the crupper rubs during locomotion, is a wide reversed
- area of hair five to six inches long, in which the hairs were
- arranged at a right angle with the axis of the spine on the upper
- border and feathering out on the lower border into the general
- stream of hair. Three cases examined, two others similar.
-
-E. Pattern on side of neck under the position of the reins.
-
- Examined 21st December, 1907. Small mouse-coloured hackney recently
- clipped. On the offside of the neck where the reins rubbed against
- the neck there was a wide reversed area of hair with a well-marked
- crest in front. Five cases in all examined, the four others
- similar.
-
-F. Pattern on shoulder.
-
- Examined 15th September, 1905. Bay cart-horse, reversed area lying
- nearly horizontal under the shaft of the cart; hairs formed into a
- whorl, feathering and crest lying posteriorly--pattern four inches
- in length, on near side only. One case only examined.
-
-G. Pattern on side of face.
-
- Examined 25th May, 1905. Grey hackney with wide reversed area of
- hair along side of face ending above in oblique crest, under a
- strap of the headstall, on the offside only. Two cases examined,
- the other similar.
-
-H. Pattern on border of the neck under the collar.
-
- Examined 28th September, 1906. Bay cart-horse. On near side under
- the collar which was lifted up while the horse was resting, the
- hairs at the border of the neck were formed into a large whorl.
- One case only examined.]
-
-_First._ The normal arrangement of hair on the under surface of the
-horse’s neck shows an even stream passing from the head to the chest,
-where it is interrupted by the pectoral patterns, and during that
-course resembles precisely the other normal streams in this and other
-mammals.
-
-The opponent asks, “How do you know this is the normal slope, and
-that the patterns you describe are not normal, and what you describe
-as normal is not a variation?” This is a perfectly proper and timely
-question and can only be answered fully by examination of and noting a
-large number of draught horses.
-
-
-The Normal Arrangement on the Ventral Surface of the Horse’s Neck.
-
-This examination has been made in a number of specimens large enough
-to satisfy the most exacting opponent. In all, 748 were examined
-as to the hair on the under surface of the neck and 338 of these
-presented the normal arrangement and 411 showed patterns of various
-kinds ranging from a trifling reversed area two to three inches long
-on one side of the middle line, to a finely-formed whorl, feathering
-and crest occupying the whole of the surface where the collar is able
-to reach. These two limits are shown side by side in the figures. I
-should add that among the 411 which I term abnormal, for the sake of
-clear contrast, the number of varieties of pattern were numerous and
-bewildering.
-
-
-Cart Horses.
-
-A very significant result followed from a special examination of
-300 cart horses, as distinguished from hackneys. These showed the
-astonishing number of 277 specimens of what I call the abnormal and
-only 23 of the normal type. This special group in no way weakens the
-force of the larger study of 748, for the 300 cart horses are included
-in it, and, if removed, would have left the normal specimens in the
-hackney or general group very much more numerous. Looking at the cart
-horses, which are specimens of a highly-specialised breed for heavy
-draught purposes, one may assert with some confidence that, _for them_,
-the normal pattern of the hackney is becoming their abnormal. It must
-be remembered that these great creatures with large muscular necks are
-during most of their time of work pulling hard against the collar,
-and the very conditions required for making patterns of hair through
-pressure of harness are present in a remarkable degree. It is indeed an
-_undesigned experiment within an experiment_.
-
-
-Analogy.
-
-In addition to these statistics which may be taken as conclusive on
-this question of the normal arrangement, I must point out that it is
-against all reason, and analogy from _all other_ mammals, to doubt that
-the normal arrangement is as I describe it. No hair-clad mammal either
-within the family of the Equidæ, or without, has any other arrangement
-on the under surface of its neck than what is here shown to be the
-normal one--a uniform uninterrupted slope from the head to the chest.
-There is also a feature of this greatly variegated piece of the horse’s
-coat under its neck, and that is that it is so highly variegated
-with diversity of pattern as to make it unlike any normal or natural
-structure or character in any animal. _That_ is not the way Nature does
-her normal work. It would be impossible to give illustrations of many
-of the patterns here found, though I have notes and sketches of a large
-number taken from the examination of thousands of specimens; so I have
-selected eight (Figs. 51, 52, 53, 54, 55, 56, 57 and 58) of the best
-representatives of these and the details of each are given under each
-figure.
-
-
-Effects of Pressure by Harness.
-
-_Second._--The next stage of the inquiry demands that one should show
-the patterns to be due to pressure.
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 51.--Roan cart horse, examined 25th September,
-1914. On left side of middle line of the under surface of the neck a
-short reversed area three inches long, lying vertically--none on the
-right side.]
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 52.--Grey cart horse examined 25th September,
-1914. Long central feathering (F) proceeding vertically upwards in
-middle line of neck from whorl (W) and ending in a crest (C) at the
-upper limit of region, through which the collar can move in active
-locomotion.]
-
-In the accompanying drawings the under surface of the neck and the
-chest of each horse is shown with the collar in place, the centre
-portion of which is cut out so as to show the arrangement of hair
-beneath, and some of the varieties are seen to extend for several
-inches above it. In considering this process one ought to watch the way
-in which the collar of a horse, as a rule, is seen to move up and down
-as he trots, for in most cases, except in cart-horses, the collar fits
-very loosely and is easily jolted upwards. This will explain why the
-patterns often extend upwards above the proper position of the collar,
-but it must also be remembered that _never_ have I found a pattern
-higher up in the middle of the neck than a loose collar can reach when
-jolted. (Close to the lower jaw there is a whorl or pattern often found
-which belongs to a different category, and is not to be confused with
-the patterns in question.)
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 53.--Brown hackney, examined 9th October, 1914.
-Small reversed area of hair lying under collar in middle line of under
-surface of neck, passing vertically upwards three inches long, in
-central position.]
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 54.--Brown cart horse, examined 25th October, 1914.
-Whorl, feathering and crest (W F C) in middle line of under surface of
-neck, beginning below where the collar should lie in usual position.]
-
-In the conditions described there is present exactly that frequent
-pressure of a moving body against the growing hair, which is requisite
-to produce changes in its direction, as well as the more fixed pressure
-of the collar when it is fitting firmly against the lower part of the
-neck.
-
-By way of confirmation of the view that this is the _modus operandi_
-one has only to point to the other seven regions shown in Figs. 49 and
-50, in which the connection between the pressure of harness and the
-production of a new pattern is beyond all doubt one of cause and effect.
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 55.--Brown cart horse, examined 25th October, 1914.
-Whorl, feathering and crest (W F C) in middle line of under surface of
-neck beginning underneath collar and proceeding vertically upwards for
-six inches.]
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 56.--Bright bay pony, examined 29th October, 1914.
-Very muscular neck. On under surface on each side a wide curving stream
-of hair passing towards middle line and joining in a central upward
-stream ending above in a tuft (T).]
-
-
-The Proof of Transmission of Pattern.
-
-_Third._--To show that the effects produced by pressure in one
-generation are sometimes inherited by its descendants it is necessary
-to examine a few examples of young horses who have never borne the yoke
-as yet.
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 57.--Brown hackney, examined 29th October, 1914.
-On under surface of neck beneath the lowest portion of an ill-fitting
-collar, a wide area of reversed hair on each side coalescing in a
-central upward stream.]
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 58.--Brown hackney engaged in drawing a low Swiss
-cart, with loose collar low on neck. Examined at the Croix in Jura
-mountains, 24th September, 1912. On lower surface of neck under the
-collar three reversed areas observed; one central (F), two (W, C)
-central and similar; all three showing a whorl, feathering and crest:
-central area placed vertically, lateral ones slightly oblique. _A very
-rare condition._]
-
-I examined some mares of the farm-horse type with their foals in a
-field at Radley in 1915 with the following results. All the mothers
-showed the common reversed area or pattern on the under surfaces of
-their necks. Of the five foals all but one showed clear evidence, even
-in their thick young coats, of a similar pattern, the fifth had none.
-I also noted two similar examples in a field at Harrogate in the same
-year and both the mothers and the foals showed the usual pattern;
-and again at Radley in 1918 four more foals, one of them 24 hours
-old, who all showed this reversed area. Here then are ten examples
-of undoubted transmission of the effects of pressure by harness in
-subjects so young as to be still suckled by their dams, and, of course,
-never themselves touched by such pressure. I submit that even one such
-unmistakable example would be enough to prove the case, and that the
-necessary conditions of a rigorous undesigned experiment by man have
-been fulfilled.
-
-
-Objections.
-
-At the end of this chapter which concludes the facts of the case I
-think it may serve to make the position a little clearer if I state
-objections which have been or might be raised.
-
-It will not escape the mind of any person who has followed critically
-this process of inquiry, that in Chapter VII, where the immense variety
-of the patterns found on the side of the horse’s neck are described,
-there is an apparent resemblance between them and those on the ventral
-or under surface of the neck. The former were shown to be due to
-natural forces, those of sustained and repeated underlying muscular
-traction of muscles and jolting of the neck in locomotion; whereas
-in this chapter a considerable number of patterns have been brought
-forward and pictured on the under surface, and these are attributed to
-artificial pressure from harness. The reasonable objection is raised,
-“Why should the former be considered natural and the latter artificial
-in their origin?”
-
-The answer to this is supplied by a consideration of the muscles shown
-in the two contrasted regions. In Figs. 3, 4 and 5, the muscles of the
-side of the neck are shown to be remarkably _strong and numerous_ (in
-three layers), and _diverging in their directions_. In the muscles of
-the under surface of the neck of the horse, see Fig. 12, the muscles
-of the two sides shown are nearly parallel and no conflict of opposing
-or diverging muscles can well take place in this “debateable land.”
-If there were much divergent or opposing action going on it would, of
-course, produce the effects on the hair towards the _upper_ part of the
-neck, where the muscles tend to diverge more and more as they pass to
-the head, and I have stated above that not a single instance in many
-thousands of horses has been found above the level where a loose collar
-ceases to rub when jolted upwards. This is very conclusive on the
-matter of diverging or opposing muscular action.
-
-Then again the jolting in locomotion, which, in the case of the side of
-the neck is probably more effectual in producing changes of hair than
-even muscular traction, is almost absent from the under surfaces, as
-can be learned from careful watching of the motion of a horse.
-
-Another reason which meets this objection very fully is that I have
-shown that 300 cart horses presented 277 of their number with reversed
-areas of patterns in the middle line of the under surface of the neck
-and these thick-necked animals are just those in which the collar is
-closely applied to the front of the neck in their heavy draught work,
-thus rubbing almost incessantly against the lie of the hair. In the
-thinner necks of the hackneys there are comparatively few indeed of the
-patterns found here and their collars as a rule fit very loosely and
-badly, and these frequently show a jolting up and down _clear of the
-neck_, which is seldom if ever present in a well-formed cart horse.
-
-Further proof of this is shown by the simple fact that it is _under the
-collar and within its range of movement_ that the changes of hair are
-produced.
-
-No artificial pressure such as that of a collar is exerted on the
-parts of the side of the neck where the patterns are found; so I would
-submit that these two selected and much-disturbed areas owe their
-hair-patterns to two wholly different forms of mechanical cause.
-
-I referred in the Preface to an important criticism of my earlier book
-on _The Direction of Hair in Animals and Man_, and will now treat this
-in some degree of detail. It is from the pen of an eminent American
-biologist, then Miss Inez L. Whipple,[59] now Mrs. Wilder Harris, and
-it is a careful, independent and thoughtful contribution from one who
-by her studies in this field and in the study of the mammalian palm and
-sole is widely known, and as widely respected.
-
- [59] _Science_, 23rd September, 1904. New York.
-
-Miss Whipple refers on page 403 to certain whorls and featherings on
-the backs of the lion, ox, giraffe and larger antelopes, which I then
-attributed to the action of the _panniculus carnosus_ in shaking off
-flies. I am free to confess that the action then invoked by me was
-inadequate and incorrect and the explanations now given of them in
-Chapters X. and XI. on the ox and the lion, I think, are less open to
-criticism.
-
-Again on page 404 she mentions the view formerly expressed as to the
-cause of the reversal of hair on the chest of man. This, also, I have
-reconsidered fully in Chapter XIII. where the action of the platysma
-muscle is held to be the cause of that remarkable reversal.
-
-On page 403 the mistake I made in calling the reversed area over the
-ischial tuberosity of the ischium in a dog a whorl is pointed out. This
-is corrected in Chapter VI. on the Dogs.
-
-These three are the only errors of any importance that I acknowledge
-at once. A certain number of minor points are questioned in the
-Review, and the theoretical portion is strongly criticised. It would
-be irrelevant to the main purpose of a book which is limited to the
-subject of Habit and Hair Direction in Animals to introduce some of
-the more debateable branches of the subject of the former book, such
-as tufts, the direction of the hair on the mole, the classification of
-the hair-streams of the mammalian body into primitive, those modified
-by morphological change, and those due to use and habit. This last is a
-very wide subject and is far beyond the present limits.
-
-I freely make another acknowledgment. The whole of the subject of the
-Direction of Hair in Animals and Man was taken up _ad hoc_, that is to
-say, for the purpose of testing the unpopular doctrine of Lamarckism.
-If this be an offence against the highest spirit of science, I can but
-accept the charge with a sigh, and go on, “faint yet pursuing.” There
-is consolation in finding that increased study of a subject is bringing
-order out of chaos, even if the field be small and the immediate crop
-poor.
-
-The following are some of the objections raised to the theoretical part
-of the book:--
-
-The most serious charge against my interpretation of the mode of
-formation of patterns (whorls and tufts) is that there is a lack of
-harmony between my preliminary statement that whorls are due to motor
-or muscular causes and a subsequent explanation of some of them as
-due to external pressure. I did not state then as clearly as I do now
-in many passages in the present chapters that for pattern production
-there may be at least four causes: _friction_, _pressure_, _gravity_,
-_underlying muscular traction_, and that whorls and featherings may,
-of course, arise from some other external force acting on the hair
-at the decisive point of struggle, just as well as from the more
-common cause--muscular traction on the skin. I think in this region
-of the Review and where she deals with Selection, she shows signs of
-that scientific monism which is still affecting many of our great
-biologists, that is to say, they desire a world-empire in evolution
-for the great factor of Selection, and will stretch their arguments
-considerably to save its face. This is shown in the Review on page 406
-where a very thin plea is put in on behalf of adaptation and Selection
-in regard to hair-directions, as in man’s minute hairs, which cannot be
-seriously maintained. That earth is stopped!
-
-Darwin’s open-minded dualism in this matter of the factors of evolution
-appeals to me at any rate more than the jealous attitude of Weismann
-and his eminent adherents.
-
-Miss Whipple is less determined than I am in claiming for Selection
-the cause of the primitive slope of hair in mammals. It is the only
-conceivable arrangement that could exist for the advantage of the
-primitive forms in their simple life, and is, I submit, as much a
-matter of adaptation to needs governed by Selection as the possession
-of a dermal covering itself.
-
-One more point, which, I think, is a small one and a fair one to raise,
-is worthy of a few remarks. Miss Whipple states that before variations
-in hair-direction can be logically attributed to external forces
-(giving the instance of the human scalp) “it should be shown that a
-change in the direction of the external, more or less wiry portion
-of the hair produces a change in the direction of the follicle.” As
-it happens, this change is easily seen in the case of the reversed
-hairs of the human forearm, if the hair be dark and the skin thin.
-The essence of the theory that dragging on the skin by muscular
-traction causes the hair to change its direction is that the relatively
-important portion within the hair-pit is pulled here or there according
-to the incidence of the prevailing force. But it is, to my mind, very
-clear that much repeated friction or pressure or gravity acting on the
-external and longer portion of the hair must, in course of time, drag
-the portion buried in the skin with it and so change its direction.
-These two portions of a hair cannot be arbitrarily separated. Shortly,
-one may say that the push of a force is as evident as the pull. A
-similar change in the direction of the buried part of a tree-trunk from
-a prevailing wind can be traced.
-
-The last point is that I “omit to explain the mechanical process by
-which divergent muscular action could affect hair-direction.” This is
-well answered in the chapter on “Can muscular action in the individual
-change the direction of the hair?” for there it is shown by numerous
-examples in the human eyebrow that the muscles underneath the hairs
-which are embedded in the true skin for a tangible depth, _do_ play
-havoc with the normal arrangement of hair, as the conflict proceeds,
-the resultant “pull” being actually engraved, signed and sealed by
-physiological wrinkles of the forehead and face.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI.
-
-FIRST SUMMARY.
-
-
-A large body of facts and an adequate proportion of reasoning have been
-brought together in the preceding chapters. As far as I understand the
-proceedings in a court of law, the business of arriving at results or,
-as they are there called, verdicts, consists in collecting as many as
-possible of the facts which bear on the case, these are sifted and
-verified, or the reverse, a certain reasoning on them is carried on;
-on this the verdict rests. This case before the court is of a civil,
-not a criminal nature, and it is a claim made to a certain _derelict
-property_, that is to say, the honour of forming patterns on the
-hair of animals, claimed by Use and Habit. The facts concerned have
-never been disputed, possibly because they were not thought worth the
-trouble, but they have the singular merit of being open to almost any
-educated person for confirmation or correction, and the reasoning is
-certainly not profound, though I think it is cogent. In seeking a
-result in such a cause, or verdict, one claimant might content himself
-with an arrest of judgment, another that judgment should go by default,
-and a third would claim proof. It is with the last I desire to stand.
-
-_In one word the claim is that of causation._
-
-Now no one can deny that between the groups of phenomena, habits and
-hair-patterns there is an evident relation; but the question may still
-arise, “What is the link between them?” I have just said that the facts
-are unquestioned; substantially they are unquestionable, and they are
-open to the charge that they belong to the dust-heaps of science, that
-they are, biologically speaking, such as used to engage the attention
-of Nicodemus Boffin. Perhaps they are. Of course if they were just
-collected haphazard and treated like a big collection of little shells
-in a cabinet, without reference to their natural order, they would
-possess no evidential value even if they were pretty, for so long as
-a natural fact remains without its suited interpretation, so long it
-belongs not to science. Hear Jevons: “Whatever is, is, and no natural
-fact is unworthy of study for the purpose of its interpretation.”[60]
-Hear also Sir E. Ray Lankester: “That only is entitled to the name
-of science which can be described as knowledge of causes or knowledge
-of the order of Nature.”[61] Fortified by the authority of a great
-logician and a great biologist I proceed to claim proof of causation.
-The stages of the case may be summed up as follows:
-
- 1. It has been shown that during the lifetime of an individual,
- muscular action can change the direction of the hair. Chapter VIII.
-
- 2. Undesigned experiment has shown that changes in the direction of
- the hair, mechanically produced in the individual, are sometimes
- transmitted to the descendants. Chapter XV.
-
- 3. In all the selected examples adequate and ascertainable causes
- have been demonstrated.
-
- 4. The changes of hair described, with hardly an exception,
- cannot be conceived as resulting from the factors of organic
- evolution--heredity, variation, adaptation and selection--indeed no
- serious attempt has been made to connect them in any way with utility.
-
- [60] Jevons, _Principles of Science_, p. 269.
-
- [61] E. Ray Lankester. _Advancement of Science_, p. 7.
-
-
-Causation.
-
-For my sins, the most obvious of which is that I made an unfortunate
-choice of my first birthday, I had to learn up the dreary pages of
-Mill’s _Logic_ and those of other philosophers, for the pleasure of
-taking a medical degree, and was reduced to that orthodox state of
-mind in which one was forbidden to suppose that, in the world around
-where common men and women, every day and all day, are tracing causes
-for the occurrences they see on every hand, there was anything at work
-which could be truly called a cause. It was but natural to fall into
-the nihilism of the Mill and Karl Pearson school. Having neither the
-knowledge nor the hardihood to discern that their bewildering notions
-of causation could be gainsaid, I had to remain submissive and as
-much contented as possible with their views of an elusive subject.
-This state of passive resistance was not relieved until I had the
-great advantage of reading a valuable book by the late Dr. Mercier
-on Causation, which seems to have let some fresh air into the musty
-doctrines of the orthodox and autocratic philosophers. No one who has
-read this work can doubt that after all there is such a process as
-causation, and that to find a cause for events is not merely a pursuit
-of the vulgar, but a duty of scientific persons.
-
-Mill appears to have given eighteen different accounts of causation
-and to have contradicted himself over and over again in his works
-dealing with this puzzle, devised mainly by Hume and himself; and his
-successors, such as Dr. Mc’Taggart, the Hon. Bertrand Russell of “Dog
-Fight” fame, Mr. Welton and Prof. Karl Pearson, have only got as far
-as to reduce the number of his definitions and put his views into more
-modern, but equally misleading terms. Without any disparagement of
-their other claims to respect and admiration, one may venture to throw
-overboard this school of philosophers when considering causation, and
-one may walk and talk in a clearer atmosphere.
-
-The subjects here considered are cause, effect, result, reason,
-evidence and proof, and all can be seen to enter into my small thesis.
-They may then be defined, according to Dr. Mercier, as follows:--
-
- 1. A cause is an action, or cessation of action, connected with a
- sequent change or accompanying unchange, in the thing acted on, or
- more shortly for my purpose _a cause is an action upon a thing_.
-
- 2. An effect is a change connected with a preceding action.
-
- 3. In reference to causation a reason means the cause of an unchange.
-
- 4. A result is the changed state that is left when an effect has been
- produced.
-
- 5. Evidence is of three kinds: evidence of sense, evidence of reason
- and evidence of hearsay.
-
- 6. Proof is evidence inconsistent with an alternative to the
- assertion.
-
-I turn now to the aid given to the case before the jury, and must show
-how Dr. Mercier’s definitions establish it.
-
-The cause of the changes described is the action of certain new habits
-on a living growing structure of the mammalian body.
-
-The effect is the change connected with the preceding change of habit.
-
-The result is the changed direction of hair, in other words, new
-patterns, left when the new habits have been produced, and have been
-long enough in operation.
-
-The reason for the unchanges observed in many instances is the
-primitive force of the normal direction of growth of the hair.
-
-The proof of the thesis is that the changes described in the hair--the
-evidence--is inconsistent with an alternative assertion.
-
-
-To Some Critics.
-
-It may save time and trouble if replies are given in anticipation
-to certain classes of critics. I refer of course to those who are
-well-informed in their branch of knowledge.
-
-To those of high authority and learning, those who ride on white asses
-and that sit in judgment, who may seek to throw the case into chancery,
-saying, “This will never do, it contradicts current biological
-opinion.” I can only meekly reply that current or orthodox opinion
-is frequently wrong, or (shall I say) seldom right, and that the
-history of human thought is strewn with examples which may justify my
-impertinent reply.
-
-To another who says, “I daresay you are right in your claim, but there
-are too many metaphors,” I would suggest that, so long as metaphors are
-not used as arguments, the more metaphors--within limits--the clearer
-the meaning of the statement.
-
-To him who grudgingly allows, “I think you have proved your case--but
-what does it prove?” I reply that it proves what it set out to prove,
-no more and no less, and it is an integral part of proof of a larger
-claim. And if he further grumble that these matters have no interest
-for him, one may ask him to live and let live. “What have I now done in
-comparison of you, is not the gleaning of your grapes of great Ephraim
-better than the vintage of this little Abiezer?”
-
-To the man who reads the preface and the headings of the chapters,
-glances at the illustrations, detects one split infinitive, two
-misspellings and three errors of punctuation, goes home to tea and
-writes his opinion--it may suffice to remind him of “that curious
-mental state which looks past problems without seeing them.”
-
-I will conclude this section with a parable.
-
-In the year 1788 Arthur Young in his travels through France visited the
-desolate region of the Landes. “Wastes, wastes, wastes!” was his lament
-over neglected Brittany, and no less could he say of the Landes, at
-that time a miserable tract of low ground, bordering the Bay of Biscay.
-Plantations, the sinking of wells, drainage and irrigation began to fix
-the unstable sands, making fruitful the marsh, creating a healthful
-climate and a fertile soil. Early in the 19th century the land here
-was sold _au son de la voix_, that is to say, the accepted standard
-of measurement was _the compass of the human lungs_. The stretch of
-ground reached by a man’s voice sold for a few francs. Crops replaced
-the scanty herbage of the salt marsh, and a familiar characteristic of
-the landscape, the shepherd on stilts, was seen no more. Six hundred
-thousand hectares of Landes planted with sea pines produced resin to
-the annual value of fifteen million francs, and through these trees
-also was achieved a climatic revolution, and it is this district which
-is now a department of a great and well-ordered State.[62]
-
- [62] From Arthur Young’s _Travels in France during the years_ 1788,
- 1789, with introduction by M. Betham Edwards.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII.
-
-VARIETIES OF EPIDERMIS.
-
-
-Passing now to the smaller trenches of the front line I have chosen as
-the first of them a small study of the varieties of epidermis found
-in mammals. With the exception of aquatic mammals so few of this, the
-greatest vertebrate class, are not clothed with hair that it is only
-on the comparatively hairless body of man, with its third of a million
-fine hairs, that the varieties of epidermis can be broadly studied.
-Much of this chapter will resolve itself into a consideration of the
-palmar and plantar surfaces of certain mammals, where no hairy covering
-obscures the operation of stimulus and response.
-
-I assume that the foregoing phenomena of hair-direction have chosen
-and raised on his shield their own king. But here I must ask of the
-succeeding groups when they say, “I am, Sir, under the King, in some
-authority,” the question, “Under which King, Bezonian, speak or die”--
-
- Shall it be Darwin’s Personal Selection?
- Roux’s Cellular or Histonal Selection?
- Wallace’s and Romanes’ Sexual Selection?
- Weismann’s Germinal Selection?
- The rule of Mendel?
- Selection of mutations according to de Vries?
- Or shall it be the barbarian king _Plasto-diēthēsis_?
-
-Which indeed of the seven kings will they choose, if I may thus
-personify them? I may, perhaps, urge on them the mild and tolerant
-rule of Lamarck and Darwin rather than that of the other anointed
-sovereigns, hoping this cannot be taken as an attempt to influence the
-jury through the Press in a case which is still _sub judice_.
-
-
-Stimuli and Response.
-
-The skin over the trunk and limbs of man is exposed to stimuli of
-pressure, friction, heat, cold and wind in very different degrees,
-according to the part which it covers. I do not here refer to nocuous,
-or so-called noci-cipient stimuli, as being too casual in their
-incidence for the question in hand. Broadly the ventral surface of
-the neck and trunk differ much, in respect of the qualities of their
-epidermis, from the dorsal. The skin over the former is softer, thinner
-and more flexible than the latter, which is in adult life thick, hard
-and with larger openings of the sebaceous glands. As the two main
-layers of the skin are so closely united it is impossible to state
-any general rule as to the parts played in this manufacture by the
-epidermis and dermis respectively. Altogether the skin from the dorsal
-surfaces of mammals provides a much denser fabric than the latter, and
-different qualities of leather are obtained from different regions.
-Corresponding differences of texture are found on the extensor and
-flexor surfaces of the limbs, especially on the hands and feet. In the
-course of his long evolution from a hairy stock, whether simian as we
-thought yesterday, or a lower one as Professor Woods Jones suggests
-to-day, these dorsal surfaces of neck, trunk and extensor surfaces of
-limbs have been exposed through countless generations of men to vastly
-more stimuli of friction, pressure, and response, than those of the
-ventral and flexor regions. As man’s hairy covering diminished, through
-some mysterious and at present unrecognised cause, these stimuli became
-increasingly potent in producing a tissue denser than that of the more
-protected ventral parts where all forms of these stimuli are slight. I
-do not claim that this was a phenomenon that began with man, for in a
-measure it was present in those forms which preceded him, and in many
-related mammals under the cover of their hairy covering.
-
-When we remember, or conceive what a large portion of each of his
-24-hours even in his earliest form throughout life man must have spent,
-as he still does, in lying on his back or sides, and in sitting with
-his back against a supporting object, and with his gluteal and ischial
-regions pressed hard against whatever seat he has selected in cave
-or drawing-room, we need not travel far in thought to understand how
-great has been the preponderance of stimuli from friction and pressure
-on the dorsal and extensor surfaces over those on the ventral and
-flexor--and here comes in our familiar “total experience” with stimulus
-and response spread over a vast stretch of time. It must be borne in
-mind that from the facts of the case a very large number of individual
-men and women were exposed to similar, but not the same stimuli at each
-stage of the process involved. It is matter of common knowledge that
-not only on the palm and sole of man, but on regions where the skin
-is not specialised in that remarkable manner that is found in those
-regions, but also in others, that increased pressure and friction will
-very soon cause a harder and thicker growth of epidermis, as on the
-skin over a projecting bone in club-foot, over the shoulder where a
-weight is constantly carried, on the knuckles of many manual workers,
-and over the patellæ of a devout Roman Catholic, as I have often seen.
-
-On the other hand what conditions more calculated to thin and soften
-the skin could exist than those operating on the ventral and flexor
-surfaces, axillæ, groins, external genitals and the bends of the elbow
-and knee-joints, where pressure, with little friction and greater
-warmth and moisture prevails? I need do no more than ask which is the
-more reasonable of the two forthcoming explanations of such phenomena,
-on the one hand that they are adapted _for_, and on the other adapted
-_by_ this experience? I doubt if at any stage of the long process
-this slow manufacture of differing fabrics ever conferred on man any
-survival value or better matrimonial prospects. At any period or stage
-which I have supposed it can only be claimed for the results on the
-skin that they did _not_ cause the animal to pass through the meshes of
-the sieve, and theoretically might be classed among the _indifferent_
-modifications, even if they added a little to the comfort of their
-possessor.
-
-
-Skin of Palm and Sole.
-
-One can examine in more detail the remarkable form of skin which is
-found to cover the palmar and plantar surfaces in many mammals. It is
-highly specialised and appears in many degrees of efficiency for the
-purposes, or uses, of walking and climbing, grasping and discrimination
-of objects. With two or three insignificant exceptions these are the
-only regions even of man’s body where hairs do not grow in the normal
-state, and in most other mammals hair is absent from the component
-parts or pads, which correspond to our palms and soles. In the absence
-of hairs and sebaceous glands and the presence of as many as 320
-sweat-glands to the square centimetre, and especially the papillary
-ridges, the mammalian hand and foot present a fruitful field for study.
-They have been studied by none more earnestly and thoroughly than Dr.
-H. Wilder Harris and Mrs. Wilder Harris (_née_ Inez Whipple). This
-small area of skin as an organ for grasping and discrimination has
-been studied by persons from different, but not conflicting points of
-view. Time would fail me even to mention these, but I would recall
-here one aspect of the matter, that is the name given to it by these
-eminent authorities, Friction Skin. I think I do them no injustice, nay
-even honour, when I claim them as allies for us “Old Contemptibles”
-in the struggle, Lamarck _v._ Darwin in respect of these characters
-of the “mammalian chiridium.” This is a term employed by them for the
-hand and foot of all mammals, and is very convenient for descriptive
-purposes. From this point of view this organ has been produced from
-more generalised ancestral structures by reason of friction and
-pressure, and not for the purpose of resisting them, at least in their
-initial stages--again, adapted _by_ and not adapted _for_ meeting those
-forces. There are other views of the matter held by Pan-Selectionists,
-notably that of Dr. Hepburn, in regard to the papillary ridges. He
-would, as I gather, treat them as primarily induced, by selection, for
-the better grasping of objects cylindrical or more or less globular.
-I have referred elsewhere[63] at some length to this in a book
-describing the examination of the hands and feet of eighty-six species
-of mammals. The varieties of epidermis were divided into the smooth,
-corrugated, scaly, nodular, hairy, rod-like and ridge-covered forms,
-also four mixed varieties, such as corrugated with coarse transverse
-ridges on the digits, corrugated with papillary ridges, nodular with
-papillary ridges, and hairy with coarse transverse ridges and smooth
-pads. Of these the species with smooth epidermis and hair are few and
-unimportant, and the largest group examined was that of the Primates,
-thirty in all, in which papillary ridges were always present. It is
-highly probable that the causes of these modifications of the epidermis
-in diverse groups of animals could be traced to the habits and modes of
-life of each, but I make no attempt here to do this. It is also matter
-for inquiry, upon which no agreement has apparently been reached, how
-it came to pass that man has virtually lost his hairy coat, and in
-regard to the palms and soles of animals, what may be the reason that
-so few have any hair on them, and why man has no sebaceous glands, but
-has very numerous sweat-glands in these regions.
-
- [63] _The Sense of Touch in Mammals and Birds._ A. & C. Black, 1907.
-
-This is all of great interest, and possibly some day the Mendelians
-will solve for us the mysteries thereof. But here I need only ask how
-it would have been possible for hairs to grow, or, if growing, not
-to be promptly worn away on a surface used by animals from monotreme
-to man for walking-pads, and by most of them also for grasping and
-discrimination between objects as well. We are so familiar with the
-thickening of the skin on the hands of manual workers and on the feet
-of those who walk much, to say nothing of what we call a “corn,” from
-pressure of tight boots, that we are in danger of forgetting that the
-protecting skin over the hands and feet of animals was of necessity
-adjusted in a crude way to the measure and kind of walking in past ages
-and in all levels of life, and that it is maintained in that adjusted
-condition by the use, or disuse, of each life. Another familiar example
-is that of knee-pads, as in the gnu and other ungulates. Some such
-process it is legitimate to assume whether it be reckoned backwards
-to monotremes or later levels of life-forms. We see then before our
-eyes how this living tissue becomes adapted in varied ways by response
-to the stimuli of friction and pressure, and the modifications thus
-slowly effected must, one would suppose, be transmitted to offspring
-ultimately from the original groups with which the process began,
-when by frequent repetition small changes of structure have arisen at
-last. I acknowledge the limited force of the answer, that this picture
-involves the continuance in each succeeding generation of the stimuli
-which initiated the changes, but the fact remains that _ex hypothesi_
-the changes are there, written in tablets of animal tissue, and that
-the making-up of an organism in course of many ages is not and cannot
-be conceived as being governed alone by the “tyranny,” even in the
-_good_ Greek sense of that word, of rigid unit-characters.
-
-In the assumed process the correcting force of the Lamarckian
-drill-sergeant is always at hand, as it superintends the construction
-of tissues and parts, and I doubt if even Professor Thomson will here
-interpose the difficulty of “correlation with useful characters,”
-for the only important functions which are invoked as the invariable
-antecedent of these structures are the elementary habits of walking,
-climbing or grasping objects in certain different ways, and without
-these habits or functions there would be neither lemur, monkey nor
-man to interest the mind of a biologist from Mars. As I am desirous
-of condensing such replies as I can make to certain opinions of
-opponents and objections, I will remind the reader that Professor
-Bateson in the _Jubilee Volume_ of 1909, pp. 100, 101, uses a metaphor
-to illustrate his view that among the facts of nature we meet certain
-definite structures and patterns in which we ought not, if desiring
-rightly to interpret them, to expect to find _purposefulness_. He says:
-“Such things are, as often as not, I suspect rather of the nature of
-tool-marks, mere incidents of manufacture, benefiting their possessor
-not more than the wire-marks in a sheet of paper, or the ribbing on the
-bottom of an oriental plate renders these objects more attractive in
-our eyes.” Metaphors are both indispensable and delightful, they are
-the very salt of scientific and other sober writings, but they have a
-rather “slim” way of betraying their employers. They express at times
-the truth too well, and at others when vague and inaccurate lead the
-reader right astray. Thinking of this metaphor of tool marks I was in a
-modern church the other day and saw just before me a stone pillar the
-pediment of which was marked with oblique parallel marks of a mason’s
-tool. Here then there were marks left by a human hand at some date or
-other and by means of some tool or other. I know one may not reason by
-an analogy from inorganic to organic phenomena in which the push and
-force of life is in full blast, and that inheritance in the former is
-ruled out; but, taking the metaphor seriously, you have to account for
-the appearance of the ribbing of paper and the mason’s marks on the
-stone. To call them “by-products” or “tool marks” or _obiter facta_,
-or by any suggestive name, does not advance the reply to the question,
-“Whence came this great multitude?” If I were unwary enough to be here
-trying to attack Selection and to respond to the invitation of the more
-learned arachnida to walk into his parlour with a scheme of organic
-evolution for him to demolish at his leisure, I should have to enter
-upon the question of adaptation, specific difference and perhaps other
-great disputed doctrines. But, knowing my own limits, and desiring to
-keep to the self-imposed limits of the title of this book, I again
-plead that I am here contending, as all through it, for the origin
-of initial modifications by use and habit, and for nothing else. No
-one who reads of the immense amount of research and learning that are
-being carried on by the students of Mendelism and Mutationism can fail
-to admire them. But, as I have remarked before, these are systems of
-thought which in the main deal with characters by distribution or
-“unpacking,” as it is called. Such a process of course leads to new
-characters by amphimixis, and no one of whom I know denies it. Such
-work is concerned with fresh views of the origin of species, but with
-lamentable cowardice, or humility, I leave all that great sphere to
-those who are incomparably more fit for it, and just seek to mind my
-own business.
-
-In subsequent chapters on modifications and their origin I shall not
-need to repeat these observations.
-
-
-Some Chosen Examples of Palms and Soles.
-
-The facts then of a few selected examples of the palms and soles of
-mammals are shortly these.
-
-A heavy, burrowing animal, the _earth wolf_ of the Cape, has a very
-smooth, hard epidermis covering its foot-pads and is thus a generalised
-structure which I have found in no other animal.
-
-The common _mole_ which uses its broad strong fore-feet like a pair
-of spades, and depends chiefly for discrimination of its habitat on
-the delicate sensory nerve-endings of its snout, has a hard nodular
-skin which is much less developed on the hind feet than the fore feet,
-the latter being less active tools. It has no papillary ridges, in
-accordance with this fact, and is a very efficient miner that never
-practises ca’ canny, as we know to our cost when we go out in the
-morning and find great heaps of soft earth thrown up in the line of its
-advance from its base or fortress. Such a mode of life lends itself
-remarkably to the kind of skin on its feet, and this is _now_ at any
-rate adapted _to_ its environment.
-
-The _capybara_ is a large, heavily-built rodent, and has rather a
-smooth epidermis not specially thick, with long and efficient papillæ
-of the corium shown in microscopical sections. Being largely aquatic in
-its habitat, and given to frequenting marshy ground and to enjoying as
-much sleep as it can manage, it depends a good deal for discrimination
-of objects on its sensitive corium, and its epidermis is not much
-specialised for, or by friction and pressure in walking. It does not
-acquire by reason of stimuli and response any unnecessary tools.
-
-With this may be classed the _echidna_ or Australian ant-eater which
-has sparse hairs set on a hard and slightly corrugated epidermis, and,
-being mainly a nocturnal animal and living a secluded life, it does not
-walk much or far in its stealthy pursuit of worms and insects, and the
-stimuli of friction or pressure encountered by it are few.
-
-A similar condition is found on the feet of many small carnivores.
-
-Animals with scales on their feet, which are held to constitute the
-earliest stage of the Primate modification of papillary ridges are such
-as the _potoroo_, _wallaby_, _kangaroo_ and _giant ant-eater_. Such
-scales register a long, long series of stimuli of friction and pressure
-in these and their ancestors, in a level of life before any delicate
-discrimination of surfaces came into operation.
-
-The nodular form of skin is present in the Canadian _tree porcupine_,
-where rough nodules cluster closely on the surface of both feet, and
-it is a significant fact that it shares with the American _opossum_
-the peculiarity of nodules on the ventral surface of the powerful
-prehensile tail. This adaptation tends to efficiency in its arboreal
-life, and may well have been produced by infinitely small degrees of
-response in structure in the course of a long evolution.
-
-The _rabbit_ alone have I found with rod-like projections of the
-epidermic cells, among which are set in dense order the soft, long,
-delicate hairs and which thus conduce to its wonderful power of
-treading on sharp objects without injury. We thus see the inner meaning
-of dear old Brer Rabbit’s jeer of triumph to Brer Fox, “Born and bred
-in a brier bush.” This adaptation might be an unit-character segregated
-from the ancestral stock of the Leporidæ, or it might not, but at any
-rate the rabbit leads a life in which its walking or running is no
-more prominent or frequent than is a good “run” on the part of a hunter
-which pursues the hare with his beagles, and one may say at least
-this--that its mode of life has _not_ produced a hard rough nodular
-surface on its feet by stimuli of pressure and friction and response.
-
-One may observe that there’s a divinity doth shape our ends, rough
-hew them as we may, even if some objection be taken to the present
-view of rough-hewing of parts of our organism on the ground of its
-piecemeal character, rather than dealing with the organism as a whole.
-To which it may be replied that the Mendelians give high support to the
-piecemeal study of the profound subject of genetics, and further that
-the business here is to look separately and simply at a few selected
-attributes of parts of an organism, and see how they _began_ to grow
-big enough to avoid passing through the meshes of the sieve.
-
-The foregoing examples of animals in which papillary ridges are absent
-have been given not in their zoological order, nor as representative
-of a great many groups, but as taken from the eighty-six species I
-examined myself. The following belong to the same series, but all
-present papillary ridges in an ascending scale towards perfection in
-man.
-
-
-Examples of Ridge-covered Palms and Soles.
-
-The common _hedgehog_ though a burrowing animal like the _mole_ is
-not always underground as his distant relative is. He is not always
-mining and though of ancient lineage he is a “slacker” compared with
-the mole, hibernating for months, and spending also much time in his
-nest and prowling slowly about above ground for insects. He has thus
-acquired his somewhat indifferent epidermis that one finds, but with
-the addition of sparse papillary ridges. It is the species among this
-list with the fewest of these tactile structures, for there are but
-three or four separate ridges on six of the ten digits, and radiating
-groups on only three of all the palmar and plantar pads. So _quâ_ touch
-it is ill-equipped, though it has adapted a higher form of tool than
-the rabbit.
-
-The common _squirrel_, that sits much and walks mainly on branches
-of trees just as much as it needs to do, has an epidermis little
-differentiated, and one which is corrugated with scanty papillary
-ridges on the palmar and plantar pads, and none on the digits.
-
-The _squirrel-like phalanger_ which flies always more or less downwards
-by a kind of parachute-arrangement has most of its palmar and plantar
-skin covered with papillary ridges encroaching upon its corrugated
-areas, and a response to more delicate tactile experience has been thus
-produced by its intermittent performance of ordinary progression.
-
-_Azara’s opossum_ presents about as large a part of the surface covered
-with nodules as with papillary ridges, the latter highly-developed for
-an animal so low, zoologically-speaking, but one in which delicate
-discrimination is much practised.
-
-The _kinkajou_, another arboreal animal which walks about on trees more
-than it uses its feet for prehension, trusting much to its prehensile
-tail, shows its corrugated epidermis and papillary ridges developed in
-about equal proportions.
-
-These five mammals thus show that the stimuli of pressure and friction
-and the response to them are being complicated by the addition of the
-more delicate tactile organs known as papillary ridges, and these,
-perhaps, in a secondary way are becoming useful in preventing friction.
-But I must not omit to point out that, _quâ_ prevention of slipping,
-the few sparse papillary ridges of the _hedgehog_, _squirrel_,
-_kinkajou_ and _flying-phalanger_, especially those on the extreme tips
-of the digits, could have no effect in this prevention and no survival
-value. It is otherwise when they are developed in large areas as in the
-succeeding groups.
-
-
-Primates.
-
-All the thirty species of Primates possessed papillary ridges to such
-an extent that only small areas of the palmar and plantar skin of the
-lemurs showed any other than these remarkable characters. It is so much
-a property of the Primate hand and foot to possess these that it might
-be almost made a matter of ordinal rank belonging to the Primates, were
-it not that a few stray lower mammals also possess it.
-
-The _black-headed lemur_ is the lowest Primate examined and it is
-characterised by highly developed patterns of ridges on the palm
-and sole, and these are interspersed with nodules on the regions
-less exposed to pressure. The complexity of the patterns of another,
-the _ring-tailed lemur_, is greater still. Now these nodules are
-distinguished from the rough undifferentiated nodules of lower forms,
-such as the Canadian _tree-porcupine_, and from the scales in others.
-When examined with a lens the separate nodules show small groups of
-papillary ridges two, three or four on each nodule, arranged in a
-direction parallel to those of neighbouring nodules. They are in fact
-papillary ridges in embryo, and shortly above this lemur-stage in
-the ascent of animal life they are merged into papillary ridges in
-patterns. All this is well told at length by Dr. and Mrs. H. Wilder
-Harris. I refer to it here because the disappearance of the rough,
-plain, nodular or corrugated epidermis in mammals is coincident with
-increasing activity and intelligence in forms who employ or acquire
-a more delicate sense of touch in their hands and feet. The cruder
-response of structure to stimuli of friction and pressure, evident in
-the lower forms, is abandoned in the higher, as tactile delicacy in
-prehension comes more into play. Here, for example, may be a subtle
-case of the co-operation of the mould and sieve in action.
-
-From this lemur-level the degree of development in the Primate palm and
-sole rises and falls, but always advances through the _lemuroidea_,
-_monkeys_ and _anthropoid apes_ to man. No attempt at the tracing of
-the lineage is made here, and from the present limited point of view
-little remains to be said about different Primates. Only two of those
-examined will be briefly referred to, the _slow loris_ and man.
-
-The _slow loris_ shares with many monkeys and apes a very soft moist
-skin of the palm and sole, and in this and other refinements of this
-region it is much beyond many more intelligent, active and higher
-Primates. I have never had social intercourse with a _loris_, but
-I have shaken the friendly little hand of a _chimpanzee_ with a
-combination of pleasure, mild shock and perhaps memories of my own
-palms in the more nervous moments of early life. It is a strange,
-cool, soft and damp surface, but the sensation conveyed by the skin
-of a _loris_ lately dead show that in life it is a wonderfully
-sensitive and tender structure. The whole of the palm and sole is
-covered with well-developed patterns of papillary ridges especially
-on the palmar and plantar pads. No trace of old-fashioned nodules,
-scales or corrugation is to be found. The structures due to stimuli
-of friction and pressure in its ancestors have disappeared for ever
-from this specialised and small group, and we may fairly hold, in
-accordance with the law of conservation of energy, that the past is
-somehow enwrapped in the present in the strange hands and feet of
-the _loris_. The adaptations of the hand and foot of the _loris_ are
-most obviously now of value to it in its wary and dangerous life in
-the branches of trees, but are equally unfitted for that higher life
-which, in his case, consists in going lower down, on the ground. The
-extraordinary deliberate life of the _loris_ has been often described.
-As he moves from place to place on a branch, fixing one limb before he
-moves another, much as we do in going up a ladder, he is subjected much
-to the stimuli of pressure, but hardly at all to those of friction.
-He sets us a good example of leaving nothing to chance. Thus his soft
-sensitive skin suits well his mode of progression, but he would find
-the harder, rougher skin of an African baboon very inferior for the
-purpose. Here, indeed, I have ventured on the edge of Tom Tiddler’s
-ground, and the Pan-Selectionist or Mendelian will make a grab at me
-so that I escape with just the loss of a portion of clothing. After
-escaping I have only to observe to him as to the adaptations of a
-_loris’s_ hand and foot that in human life, of which we know a little,
-one can in a measure forecast what a man will be like if we are told
-on reliable authority what he and his ancestors have _not_ done in the
-way of muscular or cerebral output, without information as to what he
-has done. This is too obvious, but also too complex to prove here by
-numerous illustrations and it may be left as a mere suggestion as to
-the past life of the _loris_ and his ancestors for many generations. He
-has _not_ walked in the ordinary method of terrestrial mammals, he has
-always moved very slowly about the branches of trees, he sleeps most
-of the day in a hollow of a tree, curled up like a ball, and his home
-is in moist, tropical regions. No habits and conditions of life could
-be better calculated to soften and moisten the skin over his palms and
-soles or expose it less to stimuli of friction, while even those of
-pressure in his tenacious grasp of boughs are decidedly intermittent.
-Unless one may assume the appearance in the distant past of some
-unit-character of soft, moist skin in this and other Primates, it seems
-difficult to refuse the Lamarckian claim of long, long absence of
-effectual stimuli of friction and equally long presence of enervating
-“negative” conditions. Proof of such a view is, of course, wanting.
-
-
-Palm and Sole of Man.
-
-The palm of man’s hand is a miracle of adaptations for touch and
-grasping, but has lost most of the coarse structure formed in response
-to stimuli of pressure and friction which we saw were common in lower
-mammals. This indeed he shares with most simian forms. The skin of
-our hands is now very much what we make it and responds very soon to
-fresh positive or passive conditions. The horny, cracked epidermis on
-palm and digit of the old sailor may be contrasted with the soft and
-flexible and pale surface of his twin-brother, the bank clerk, who is
-of studious habits and has neither the vice of gardening nor golf. If
-one compares the hand of the ordinary maid with that of her mistress
-the difference is striking. But if one compares the hand of that
-mistress with that of her spinster sister who has lain for twenty years
-in bed or on a couch, the difference is equally significant. Indeed the
-sofa-and-bed-ridden invalid, of whom I knew a few once, but who have
-gone out of fashion, gives the observer some useful thoughts as to the
-why and wherefore of the strange skin of the hands of the _slow loris_
-previously referred to. And if he be disposed also to the pleasant
-pursuit of moralizing at the expense of others he will feel led to
-reflect over harshly on the invalid and compare her outlook on life
-with that of the _loris_. Even in this concrete case of the hand of an
-invalid there may be evidence of positive as well as negative response,
-if one examines the right forefinger so much used in sewing, where the
-skin becomes hard and thick.
-
-The foot of man has a good deal of negative evidence in favour of my
-contention as well as positive. As to the latter, in the thickening of
-the skin over the heel and ball of the great toe in those who walk much
-we find changes precisely similar to those on the hand. The negative
-or degenerative changes visible on man’s foot consist chiefly in the
-remarkable simplicity of pattern of the papillary ridges as well as
-their flattening and blurring, through wasting of those which occupy
-mainly the arch of the foot. These will be shown in the next chapter
-in a drawing. When this portion of skin is compared with that of the
-foot of any monkey or anthropoid ape it is clear that in this respect
-the skin of man’s foot has undergone even more degeneration than his
-hand has shown of higher development. This degeneration has coincided
-with two facts, first that man’s terrestrial locomotion has advanced
-far beyond that of any other Primate, and second, that he alone has a
-plantar arch. This subject belongs to a later chapter and is referred
-to here because the possession of an arch to his foot has caused man to
-escape, on the under surface of it, a vast proportion of the stimuli of
-pressure and friction involved in his mode of walking, and the extreme
-simplicity of his plantar papillary ridges, and relatively thin, soft
-skin under the plantar arches affords a fairly conclusive example of
-change of structure from disuse _per se_.
-
-I have thus only selected and used two striking types of the Primates,
-the _loris_ and man, not wishing to burden this part of the subject
-unduly with intervening and less characteristic forms of life. It
-may be legitimate here to say in defence of this long chapter that
-it illustrates what I desire to keep before me all through, the fact
-that use, habit, environment and selection go ever hand in hand. In
-all matters of science one has to descend to particulars, so it seemed
-necessary to select a few scattered phenomena in the best known groups
-of higher animals and endeavour to understand how certain “characters”
-or better “modifications” _began_ to grow big enough to avoid passing
-through the meshes of the sieve.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII.
-
-ARRANGEMENT OF THE PAPILLARY RIDGES.
-
-
-The subjects of the preceding, present, and the succeeding chapter
-are closely allied, from the fact that they all deal with structural
-changes in the mammalian skin, and that most of these are exhibited for
-us on our own palms and soles. They certainly comply with the canons of
-Henri Poincaré as to simplicity, regularity and chance of recurring.
-
-In the last chapter, papillary ridges as organs of touch were briefly
-referred to, but their mode of development into complicated patterns do
-not concern the questions here at issue. The general manner in which
-they are arranged on the hands and feet of man and the Primates below
-him is very much a matter for such Lamarckian methods of inquiry as I
-have chosen. In this examination of the ridges I will proceed from man
-backwards among the Primates and lower still. I described these ridges,
-in a book previously referred to in the following words, and find no
-need to alter them here. “The ridges and adjoining furrows which cover
-the palmar and plantar surfaces of all Primates and a few lower forms
-in smaller degree, may be compared to the ridges of a ploughed field
-over which some object, as a light roller, has been passed, the effect
-of this being to produce a series of ridges with flattened tops. This
-can be well seen with a lens when the ridges are examined in profile,
-and is their normal condition in man and many lower animals, in nearly
-all the palmar, plantar and digital regions.”[64] The reservation in
-the last sentence is not material here.
-
- [64] _Sense of Touch in Mammals and Birds._
-
-
-The Hand of Man.
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 59.--W. K. Right hand drawing of papillary ridges,
-made from impressions.]
-
-Beginning with the tips of man’s fingers and excluding the wonderful
-patterns which Galton did so much to elucidate and bring into order,
-we find the ridges are placed, to a remarkable extent, parallel with
-the skin-flexures which will be treated in the next chapter. I term the
-thumb and fingers D 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 for the sake of accuracy (Fig. 59).
-Over the last joints (distal) of all the digits the ridges suddenly
-diverge from their directions in the patterns of the pulps, and become
-arranged transversely to the axis of the digits. This arrangement
-is observed on the remaining segments of the digits except, very
-significantly, on the outer or radial side of D 2 and the inner or
-ulnar side of D 5 where they slope more or less towards the palm. Their
-lines thus cross slightly those of the skin-flexures in these small
-areas. On the radial side of D 1 this slope appears in a minor degree,
-but here it coincides with those of the flexures. On the palm are
-similar arrangements of the ridges near the radial and ulnar borders,
-and especially on the two great eminences, thenar and hypothenar,
-also at the bases of digits 2, 3, 4 and 5. Over the rest of the palm
-they are arranged in a longitudinal or oblique direction. These brief
-descriptions are enough to show the close correspondence of the
-arrangement of the ridges with the flexion of the numerous joints of
-the hand. An observer can demonstrate this by holding up the open hand
-in a good light and flexing the fingers slightly, which brings nearly
-all the ridges adjacent to the joints into directions parallel with one
-another, the greater lengths of D 3 and 4, and their closer functional
-connection with one another, producing thus a transverse arrangement,
-and in D 1, 2 and 5 a more oblique one. In the palm this correspondence
-of ridges with flexion lines of joints is not found so much except in
-the central part of this surface. But the oblique and longitudinal
-ridges of the palm where it becomes concave in the action of folding
-the hand over a globular object are well shown there also to correspond
-with such action.
-
-This general grouping of ridges is seen, _mutatis mutandis_, to belong
-to all the palms and soles of lower Primates, and the illustrations
-given will speak for themselves, so that little need be said on each.
-
-
-Reasons for Arrangement Observed.
-
-When one discusses the forces in action on man’s hand which are claimed
-to have thus arranged the ridges, in regard to the question of use and
-habit, little more need be added as to those of other Primates, and it
-is because we know more about ourselves than them, and our own palms
-and soles are available for inspection, that I have taken man as the
-example.
-
-The main question is the old and now familiar one: “Are these ridges
-arranged as we see them _by_ use and habit, or adapted _for_ use?”
-Dr. Hepburn and the orthodox Selectionist would say that, of course,
-their mode of arrangement is an adaptation governed by selection for
-preventing slipping in the action of grasping an object by the hand,
-and in the foot for preventing slipping in walking. This does not take
-into account the question as to how the original slight shifting of the
-ridges in the earliest man and in lower forms could have had selective
-or survival value, for example, the insignificant sparse groups of
-ridges on the palm, sole and _tips_ of the digits in a hedgehog or
-squirrel. As things are now they _do_ subserve these purposes. But I
-think this matter of prevention of slipping has been much exaggerated,
-though I may be told that this is a matter of opinion and not a valid
-argument against the hypothesis.
-
-
-Foot of Man.
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 60 S. K. Right foot drawing of papillary ridges
-made from impression.]
-
-The point may be best understood by considering the foot of man, of
-which Fig. 60 shows a good example. The value of the roughened surface
-of the foot with its papillary ridges can hardly have been great, even
-in the days when man’s foot was naked, at any rate so little that for
-him to acquire by a selectional process such a remarkable _change_ of
-arrangement as we see when we look at the foot of man and of any other
-Primate involves on our part a tremendous stretch of imagination as to
-its _modus operandi_. These low, soft ridges of man’s foot could do
-little to prevent him from slipping on such surfaces as grass, sand,
-rock, wet or dry, and from the time when he began to protect his feet
-with coverings this small value would be further reduced. _Underneath
-his developing plantar arch it would not exist at all, and yet here
-especially he has changed their direction._ As to the papillary
-ridges, man’s foot has sadly embarked on the pathway of degeneration
-much as his little toe has done. Not only has he here a much simpler
-arrangement than any ape or monkey, but the individual ridges are
-blurred and flattened on much of the plantar surface. This comes of
-his pride in acquiring his human distinction, or title of nobility, of
-a plantar arch and his coincident increase of pedestrian locomotion.
-On the triple bases of support, heel, ball of great and little toe,
-the ridges are still strongly marked and coarse; transverse on the
-heel, whorl-like on the ball of the great toe, and oblique or nearly
-transverse on that of the little toe. On the rest of the surface they
-are vulgarly transverse. And I may add that the toe-prints of man are
-simplicity itself compared with his finger-prints. It would seem that
-this example of arrangement of ridges on man’s foot is strongly in
-favour of the hypothesis that they are so disposed by flexion of the
-foot in walking, and not by some need for prevention of slipping under
-the guidance of selection.
-
-
-Lower Animals.
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 61.--Slow loris--right foot.]
-
-At the other end of the scale the scanty ridges of a hedgehog’s or
-squirrel’s foot would be negligible in preventing slipping, however
-useful they would be, as I hold, as early organs of touch. Between
-these extremes the _slow loris_ affords a valuable example to study,
-with the help of Fig. 61. The foot, as more concerned with prevention
-of slipping than the hand, is chosen for observation, but with little
-exception the hand agrees closely with it. On the tips of four digits,
-D 1, 3, 4 and 5, omitting D 2 for the moment, the ridges are arranged
-nearly in a longitudinal direction, and would on that account have
-little or no effect in preventing slipping of the foot. If this be
-disputed one can but reply that if the need of preventing slipping
-in this tiny area were to call forth selective value this is not the
-arrangement of the ridges that best serves the purpose. It may be
-remarked here that the pulps of _lemurs_, the _marmoset_ and _squirrel
-monkey_ all show this indifferent mode of grouping of ridges. The
-aborted D 2 of the _loris_, with its hooked nail overhanging the
-circular pattern of ridges, is obviously quite unadapted for any
-non-slipping effect of its skin, as a glance at the figure shows. On
-the remaining segments of the digits the ridges in the main slope from
-each side of each digit in the distal direction and fail here also to
-obtain the best, or transverse direction for preventing slipping in
-locomotion. The corresponding surface of D 1 is not different from its
-pulp as to direction of ridges, and it is here to be noted and admitted
-that when this muscular great toe is tightly applied to a branch,
-which from its shape it must cross at a right angle, the non-slipping
-effect of the longitudinal ridges would be very effective. One must
-then notice that over the middle of the sole of this foot the ridges
-have again changed their direction and lie in a transverse direction.
-Between this and the basis of the digits are three fleshy pads and an
-intervening area of longitudinal ridges.
-
-The first question that arises in the attempt to analyse so complex a
-grouping on a strange member like the foot of a _loris_ is this--what
-is the primary function subserved by the ridges and their mode of
-arrangement, and what may be their secondary uses? In the book
-referred to I have maintained throughout, in opposition to Mrs. Wilder
-Harris and others such as Dr. Hepburn, that the sense of touch is the
-primary, and prevention of slipping the secondary adaptation secured
-by the ridges. If this be true (and I know it is _sub judice_) there
-is a very clear reason why the ridges should be longitudinal on the
-tips of the digits on account of the better discrimination of small
-objects secured by this arrangement, though it does not well assist
-the _loris_ to avoid slipping. On D 1, as mentioned, the non-slipping
-effect is secured by its ridges, and this digit is necessarily less
-employed for discrimination than support. On the other hand the sloping
-arrangement on the rest of the segments of D 3, 4, 5 is decidedly less
-effective in preventing slipping than a transverse arrangement would
-have been. I think I am justified in saying that too much has been made
-of this secondary effect of the ridges in the prevention of slipping.
-I know that the string wound round the handle of a cricket bat is very
-effective for its purpose, but one can also understand that a casual
-strand wound here and there on the handle as the ridges are on a
-_hedgehog’s_ and _squirrel’s_ hand and foot would be of little use for
-the purpose.
-
-On the other hand if the view may be entertained that on the palm and
-sole of _hedgehog_, _squirrel_, _loris_ and man, we have written in
-rows of papillary ridges and their modes of arrangement a register of
-long-continued flexion of hand and foot in flexion and correlated
-actions, we find the facts of these and numerous other Primates agree
-in a remarkable manner with the hypothesis; whereas the exclusive
-non-slipping rival has many awkward facts to explain, or disregard.
-
-Further as one has always to bear in mind the Mendelian analysis it
-should be observed that the extreme variability, within certain limits,
-of the arrangements of papillary ridges throughout the Primates renders
-the hypothesis of unit-characters segregated, according to Mendelian
-laws, wholly inapplicable to the _manner of their arrangement_ even
-though perhaps not so to the _existence_ of papillary ridges.
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 62. Hedgehog--right foot.]
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 62A. Hedgehog--right hand.]
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 63. Common squirrel--left foot.]
-
-It may be bluntly asserted that the ridges are arranged as we find them
-because, hands and feet being used as they are, the ridges “can do no
-other,” and that there’s an end of it, and that we cannot derive any
-help as to the origin of specific difference from such a trifle, the
-next item on the agenda should be called for. As a piece of dialectics
-that would be effective, but if taken literally it only goes to prove
-my simple contention.
-
-It will be enough to mention the hand alone of the remaining series
-with a note as to each animal.
-
-Fig. 64 gives the hand of a _chimpanzee_ with ridges on the pulps
-resembling those of all the _apes_, _monkeys_ and _lemurs_, arched
-groups on the digits and longitudinal ones on the centre of the palm,
-both of these last two being exactly what would be found arising from
-the actions of climbing branches and discriminating globular objects in
-the palm.
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 64.--Chimpanzee--right hand.]
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 66.--Orang--right hand.]
-
-Fig. 65 is that of a _gorilla_ and its general features resemble
-closely those of the _chimpanzee_ and of Fig. 66 which is that of an
-_orang_.
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 65.--Gorilla--left hand.]
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 67.--Gibbon--left hand.]
-
-Fig. 67 of a _Hainan gibbon_ is very different on the palm from the
-other three apes for its ridges are nearly all longitudinal or
-slightly oblique, precisely as one would find this part if the _palm_
-were used very little for grasping boughs and much for discriminating
-globular objects procured for its repasts. The wonderful long digits
-of the gibbon form its main organ for supporting itself on branches
-and swinging its body rapidly from branch to branch, and the arched or
-nearly transverse ridges on the digits are placed just as the endless
-use of them for this purpose would be likely to follow from it. This
-example is a very clear one for showing, if it exist, the effect of use
-and habit on the disposition of the ridges.
-
-Fig. 68 shows the arrangement of papillary ridges in a _lemur_ and 69
-that of a brown _sapajou_.
-
-Fig. 70 of the _Chacma baboon_, playfully called by the Boers Adonis,
-is a very active and wary animal which lives on the rough rocky slopes
-of the Cape. It is very much of a pedestrian and the response of its
-mode of life and use of its forefoot is shown in five great pads of
-muscle and efficient whorls of ridges for touch, those on the digits
-being very nearly all transverse in accordance with simple flexion of
-these joints. This again is what one would expect if my hypothesis be
-sound. The purely non-slipping mechanism supposed by the rival view is
-not here well supported by the facts.
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 68.--Left foot of ring-tailed lemur.]
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 69.--Brown sapajou, right hand.]
-
-Neither the arrangements of ridges (Fig. 61), in _loris_, nor the
-_hedgehog_ (Fig. 62), nor the _squirrel_ (Fig. 63), need further
-reference, but they are all, I think, very consistent with the
-prolonged effects of use and habit.
-
-
-Some Undesigned Experiments in Ridges.
-
-This section of the subject has afforded a good supply of indirect
-evidence, but so far no direct proof that papillary ridges can be
-created and disposed in their lines by pressure, friction and response.
-The clearest case is one I brought forward at the Zoological Society
-of London in 1905, and which was published in its proceedings of April
-18th. It was an instance of the hand of a _chimpanzee_ with papillary
-ridges produced in an aberrant or abnormal situation by walking, and
-was given as follows:--
-
- “In the course of an examination of the papillary ridges in some
- specimens of anthropoid apes and monkeys certain groups of ridges
- were found on the _extensor_ surface of the terminal phalanges of
- the hand, apparently identical with those of the palmar and plantar
- surfaces. Three specimens of chimpanzee living in the Society’s
- menagerie were examined, of the ages: one year eight months,
- two-and-a-half years and six years. In the oldest of these, called
- “Mickie,” the ridges were definite and well-developed, on the second,
- third and fourth digits on both hands; in the youngest specimen,
- “Jack,” they were absent; and in “Jimmie,” two-and-a-half years old,
- they were small and ill-defined, as if in process of development.
-
- Direction of Ridges.
-
- _Mickie._ Ridges longitudinal and reaching to the matrix of
- the nail on the second, third and fourth digits.
-
- _Jimmie._ Showed ridges as follows:--
-
- R. hand 1st D none. L. hand 1st D none.
- 2nd " oblique. 2nd " oblique.
- 3rd " transverse at base of D. 3rd " "
- 4th " " " " 4th " "
- 5th " nearly longitudinal. 5th " none.
-
- _In these three specimens ridges were absent from the corresponding
- surfaces of the foot._
-
- “The well-defined longitudinal direction of the ridges in “Mickie”
- is worth notice. It must be remembered in this connection that a
- chimpanzee walks with the extensor surfaces of the phalanges touching
- the ground and the digits turned inwards, so that their long axis
- are at right angles to the line of progression of the animal, and
- accordingly the ridges of this part also occupy the same relative
- position. There is no correlation in this instance between the act
- of prehension and the direction of the ridges, though it agrees
- closely with the general rule which obtains in so many regions,
- that the ridges lie at right angles to the line of incidence of the
- predominating pressure on the part.”
-
-In this example of ridges developed on an abnormal situation we see
-what is, perhaps, an undesigned experiment as to the production of
-ridges by a more frequent habit of walking in captivity than would
-be found to occur in the wild state, for, as Lydekker says in the
-_Royal Natural History_, Vol. I, p. 27, “When the chimpanzee goes
-on all-fours, he generally supports himself on the backs of his
-closed fingers rather than on the palm of the hand (see Fig. 6 of the
-illustration on p. 15) and he goes _sometimes_ on the soles of his feet
-and _sometimes_ on his closed toes.”
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 70.--Left hand of chacma baboon.]
-
-I have underlined purposely this word “sometimes,” for in the instance
-I have described, not only the presence of the ridges and their
-direction on the backs of the fingers but their absence on the backs of
-the toes is significant, and I suggest that the _chimpanzees_ examined
-have not sufficiently often exposed the backs of their toes to pressure
-and friction for the production of ridges, whereas those on the backs
-of the fingers have done so. Another point worth notice is that in the
-oldest of the three _chimpanzees_, “Mickie,” æt six years, the greatest
-number of ridges is present; in “Jimmie,” æt two-and-a-half years, they
-were “small and ill-defined as if in process of development,” and in
-“Jack,” æt twenty months they were absent. This would agree at any rate
-with the hypothesis that the element of time and frequent repetition of
-stimuli enter into the causation of aberrant ridges.
-
-A similar condition, with aberrant papillary ridges, has been found on
-the digits of the hand of the _orang_.
-
-On the heel of adult man ridges are found surrounding it, of the
-average depth of one inch from the plantar surface, and in one
-particular case of a woman aged forty-nine, the depth of this area on
-each foot measured was one and a half inches from the plantar surface.
-
-The extensor surface, or back, of the little toe shows ridges when it
-is distorted by ill-fitting boots.
-
-In man ridges frequently appear on the radial side of the back or
-extensor surface of the index finger to nearly the middle line of the
-finger, and this is often more on the right than the left hand.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIX.
-
-FLEXURES OF THE PALM AND SOLE.
-
-
-Those flexures of the palmar and plantar skin which are called by
-Galton chiromantic creases, and said by him to be no more significant
-to others than palmists than the creases of old clothes, have received
-a remarkable amount of pseudo-scientific attention since earliest
-times in Chinese and Greek history. The former even added podoscopy to
-their chiromancy. The line of life, the line of the head, the line of
-the heart, the line of fortune and that of the liver, figure freely
-in fortune-telling of modern drawing-rooms by women who ought to be
-in Holloway gaol, but are not. The gipsies, their predecessors and
-equally honest teachers, did not employ such high-sounding words, but I
-believe that by observing closely the bearing, looks, dress and manner
-of their dupes, while pretending to study their palms, both classes of
-practitioners, like phrenologists, are able to tell a good deal of what
-their customers _are_, and being shrewd persons they are able to guess
-pretty well what they _will be and will do_.
-
-I agree with Galton that these creases of hand and foot are no more
-significant than those of an old coat-sleeve, a pair of trousers, or
-boots; but they are not less significant of certain muscular habits of
-the wearers of those articles.[65]
-
- [65] Galton might have referred by way of illustration to an immortal
- woman in _Martin Chuzzlewit_, who shall be nameless here.
-
-The flexures in question are in line with the subjects of the two
-preceding chapters, and require little more description in detail than
-is afforded by the accompanying illustration of mammalian hands and
-feet.
-
-
-Description of Flexures.
-
-There are two classes which may be conveniently called here Primary and
-Secondary, the latter being too variable and accidental for further
-notice. The former lie in three main directions and are longitudinal,
-oblique or transverse. They represent in graphic characters the nature
-and degree of the functions exercised by muscles moving the joints
-which underlie them, and are often called “flexion-lines.” They are
-“folds so disposed that the thick skin shall be capable of bending in
-grasping while it at the same time requires to be tightly bound down
-to the skeleton of the hands and feet, so as to prevent slipping of
-the skin which would necessarily lead to insecurity of prehension,
-just as the quilting and buttoning down of the covers of furniture
-by upholsterers keeps them from slipping. For this purpose the skin
-is tied by fibres of white fibrillar tissue to the deep layer of the
-dermis along the lateral and lower edges of the palmar fascia and to
-the sheaths of the flexor tendons. The folds, therefore, which are
-disposed for the purpose of making the grasp secure, vary with the
-relative lengths of the metacarpal bones, with the mutual relations
-of the sheaths of the tendons and the edge of the palmar and plantar
-fascia.... The sulci are emphasised because the subcutaneous fat,
-which is copious in order to pad the skin for the purpose of holding,
-being restricted to the interval between the lines along which the
-skin is tied down, makes these intervals project, and these are the
-monteculi.”[66]
-
- [66] A. Macalister, _Palmistry Encycl. Brit._, 11th Edition.
-
-This account of them from a leading anatomist shows that not for
-nothing have these creases been evolved. They are inherited, have an
-important function and are worthy of study in their humble way: they
-may be even dignified with the name “character.”
-
-They are often double over the joints of the fingers and toes, but,
-from the functional point of view and for simplicity, may be reckoned
-as single.
-
-
-Chief Types.
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 71.--Flexures on palm of right hand. Drawing made
-from impression.]
-
-The most common types of them in the hand of man are shown in the
-example given in Fig. 71.
-
- 1. A flexure over each phalangeal joint.
-
- 2. A flexure at the bases of the digits.
-
- 3. A flexure over the metacarpo-phalangeal joints of D 2, 3, 4 and 5
- with an oblique direction, called _linea mensalis_.
-
- 4. A flexure over these same joints and oblique in direction, but
- nearer to the wrist--the _linea cephalica_. These flexures 3 and 4,
- though arising from the flexion of one set of joints should be looked
- at as separate folds because of their time-honoured popular names.
-
- 5. A curving flexure surrounding the thenar eminence, extending from
- the centre of the wrist along the palm and terminating at the radial
- border.
-
- 6. Variable longitudinal and oblique flexures not specified, which I
- have called secondary.
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 72.--Foot of common squirrel.]
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 73.--Flexures on foot of vulpine phalanger.]
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 74.--Foot of loris.]
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 75.--Foot of ring-tailed lemur.]
-
-
-Meaning.
-
-Whatever be the meaning and origin of these flexures they are not mere
-folds such as one makes in a garment and leaves it so. Action, function
-and fitting of the structures of the hand and foot are involved in
-their history. They may loosely be termed “ergographs” without any
-reference to the exact measurement of work done. No proper idea can
-be formed of them if the original function and evolution of the
-walking-pads of earlier mammals be omitted. If one goes back and back
-until one reaches some lowly marsupial as a _vulpine phalanger_, or
-insectivore such as a common _hedgehog_, one may even metaphorically
-see these animals being fitted by a shoemaker with rude shoes or
-walking-pads for the better locomotion on or under ground, or in the
-branches of trees. These pads are projecting masses of hard fat with
-fibrous tissue interspersed and they early become fitted or adapted
-_to_ or _by_ the use to which they are put. It is impossible to suppose
-that certain rudimentary pads are devised by selective processes prior
-to the altered habits of walking of the animal that acquires them. From
-the shoemaking point of view the fashion is rough and generalised, and
-the changing habits of the animal adapt the shoe by degrees to the
-function employed, much as many a private soldier knows to his cost
-that he has had to adapt slowly and painfully his army boot to his
-particular foot. This process in an early pedestrian mammal involves
-the breaking up and limiting of the rudimentary pads by sulci in the
-dense skin, and the process of struggle and adjustment between the
-pads and their bordering furrows issues in the characteristic flexure
-of each mammal. From experiences in the human body one knows how
-easily fibrous adhesions between the skin and deeper parts, notably in
-cases of Dupuytren’s contraction of the palmar fascia, are formed by
-close apposition of the two layers. Such adhesion is precluded when
-much movement of the part occurs, but _ex-hypothesi_ the rudimentary
-flexures are distinguished by absence of movement, and the conditions
-for fixing down the deeper layers of the skin to the bones beneath are
-clearly present. That these are not indifferent structures is evident
-from what Macalister says, and though they be small or even trivial may
-be held to have acquired at some time or other selective value. Their
-early stages would necessarily be too tentative, varied and slight to
-acquire such value.
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 76.--Foot of squirrel-monkey.]
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 77.--Foot of macaque.]
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 78.--Foot of gibbon.]
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 79.--Hand of chimpanzee.]
-
-Fig. 72 is a sketch of the hand and foot of a squirrel (Sciurus) and
-the numbers 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 and 6 are placed conspicuously on the walking
-pads in accordance with the teaching of Dr. and Mrs. Wilder Harris as
-to the six palmar and plantar walking-pads, of which the typical palm
-and sole is constructed. The thick, black lines indicate the flexures
-formed round the pads by the exercise of the functions of the hand and
-foot.
-
-Fig. 73 represents the clumsy, thick walking-pads of a marsupial the
-vulpine phalanger, _trichosurus vulpecula_.
-
-Fig. 74, the highly-developed prehensile foot of the loris.
-
-Fig. 75, the foot of a ring-tailed lemur.
-
-Fig. 76, the foot of a squirrel-monkey (Chrysothrix Sciurea).
-
-Fig. 77, the foot of a macacus (Macacus cynomologus).
-
-Fig. 78, the foot of a gibbon.
-
-Fig. 79, the hand of a chimpanzee and here the resemblance to the
-_hand_ of man and _not to the foot of man_ is very striking.
-
-A description has already been given of man’s flexures of the palm.
-
-[Illustration: Fig. 80.--Drawing of flexures of sole of foot in young
-adult.]
-
-Fig. 80 is a careful drawing of the sole of a young active woman
-with a well-formed foot, and there is little typical in the mode of
-arrangement of its creases except the slight tendency to transverse
-lines of flexure. In all the feet I have examined I have found no
-single flexure that is constant, and the longitudinal ones here shown
-are often absent.
-
-Reviewing these examples one observes an evolutional decay of a minor
-but necessary piece of mechanism of the Primate hand and foot. The
-general similarity, _mutatis mutandis_, of the flexures of the palm
-and sole in Primates is very noticeable, and is associated with the
-strong prehensile power of the foot of all the forms below man. In
-the cases of the two apes shown in this series, the resemblance is
-still well marked, more so even in the chimpanzee than the gibbon, so
-that the disappearance from the sole of man’s foot of any important
-flexure is very significant of his loss of prehensile and gain of
-locomotive perfection, and I find it impossible to conceive any process
-of evolutionary change where a loss of the flexures of a prehensile
-foot could come under the power of selection, on its own merits. On
-the other hand this remarkable instance of disuse of a formerly useful
-structure is adequately accounted for by the evolution of an organ
-like the human foot which in course of long periods of time became an
-organ of one function. Weismann might score a point over Spencer from
-his laboured explanations of man’s dwindling little toe, but here,
-I submit, he would have had to take refuge in silence, and pass to
-characters of a higher and more debateable kind.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XX.
-
-THE EVOLUTION OF A BURSA.
-
-
-A bursa exercises a function in the animal body which is the direct
-opposite of that shown to belong to the flexures of the hand and foot.
-Whereas the latter are adapted to the prevention of slipping in the
-act of prehension, bursæ are delicate contrivances for producing the
-maximum effect of sliding, within certain limits, between two opposed
-surfaces, either between the skin and a hard surface beneath it,
-between two muscles, or a tendon as it moves over a bone. As they are
-very variable and most of them are inherited and congenital, while
-some are produced only in the lifetime of the individual, they are
-useful for consideration in regard to the questions of transmission of
-modifications and of the origin of initial variations. Their degree
-of utility ranges, for example, in man, from that of the prepatellar
-bursa without which no useful movement of the knee-joint is imaginable,
-to the insignificant bursa which may or may not be found on the
-dorsal surface of a phalangeal joint of the foot. The principle laid
-down by Lyell, to which allusion has been made elsewhere, that is,
-of “explaining changes in the surface of the earth by reference to
-causes now in action,” is applicable in this small department of the
-evolution of a minor structure of the animal body. As man furnishes the
-largest of all collections of these lubricating organs, his skeleton
-and skeletal muscles will form the main subject of this chapter, and I
-venture, if one may say so, to “Lyell” them. None of the sections of
-this book except that on the mammalian hair affords so simple and easy
-a field for watching in operation certain mechanical forces. We may
-here go down to the potter’s house and watch him moulding his clay, or
-the cobbler his leather. So much are bursæ in the human body under the
-power of extraneous forces that I venture to say that if some young
-surgeon of an inquiring mind were to choose a place and time when the
-Honourable and Vigilant Stephen Coleridge was out of the way, and were
-to produce in a young _chimpanzee_ under an anæsthetic a “greenstick
-fracture” of his radius and ulna, immobilising it at a right angle
-for a month, the animal would exhibit at his death some years later a
-highly developed bursa over the bony protuberance nearly as good as
-the olecranon bursa on the uninjured side, and better than that of the
-injured limb. As I have reason to know the meticulous vigilance of this
-professional and expert humanitarian I hasten here to say in advance
-that I do not recommend this experiment, not because it would not be
-entirely justifiable, but because nature herself in the highest Primate
-has produced many undesigned experiments of nearly equal value, as I
-hope to show.
-
-
-Bursæ Described.
-
-Broadly considered a bursa is a sac lined by synovial membrane, and an
-extreme example of the simplest form in which it is found may be said
-to be that of the condition found in a domestic dog. Under its skin,
-except on such regions as the snout, the tail and the feet, there is
-hardly a place where a bursal surface does not exist. Here and there
-trabeculæ may divide the great sac imperfectly, but from the protective
-and selective point of view this mechanism under a dog’s skin may be
-compared to the oil with which an Indian criminal lubricates his naked
-body so as to elude capture. To us who are too familiar with dog-fights
-(to which the Hon. Bertrand Russell likened the recent Great War, as we
-all remember) and who know how much noise and ferocious attempts are
-made by the warriors to bite one another, and how little success they
-achieve, the beautiful adaptation of nature in the dog far surpasses
-that of the Indian criminal. Indeed the latter may well have been
-suggested by the former.
-
-Between such a simple and undifferentiated bursal surface as this and
-another such as the small but essential bursa under the tendo achillis
-there are endless variations adapted to particular uses and regions.
-
-The description of bursæ given by Macalister is too clear and good not
-to be given in his own words.[67]
-
- “Synovial membranes are found either as the lining of joints, or as
- _Bursæ_, which are closed sacs (_a_) between contiguous soft parts,
- or (_b_) beneath soft parts which glide tensely over a bone. Bursæ
- are formed around and beneath tendons in the neighbourhood of joints;
- and the hard part on which the tendon plays is often invested with a
- layer of cartilage over which the synovial membrane does not extend.
- When they completely surround tendons, as in the finger and toes they
- are called _thecæ_ or sheaths, and the tendons are connected to the
- sheaths by synovial reflections. Sometimes bursæ lie between exposed
- areas of skin and projecting bony points, such as the patella,
- olecranon, ankles, etc.
-
- “Their (synovial) membrane differs from the synovial membrane of
- joints in not having so continuous or definite an endothelial lining;
- indeed, while some bursæ, such as that beneath the ligamentum
- patellæ, have a more or less regular lining of regular endothelium,
- others have only elongated connective cells forming an imperfect
- lamella, and there are all possible gradations met with between
- the regular saccular bursa, and a loose meshwork of areolar tissue
- of which the bursa is only a specialisation. Bursæ may be (1)
- subcutaneous, (2) subfascial, (3) between two tendons, or (4)
- between tendons and subjacent ligaments or bone. Of these, some
- communicate with the neighbouring joints always, some occasionally,
- and some never. Bursæ underlying parts which have an extensive range
- of motion are _unilocular_, with a single cavity. Bursæ spread
- over an extensive surface, and whose walls move but little on each
- other, are often divided by imperfect fibrous septa, and are called
- _multilocular_. Almost all the lesser bursæ are unilocular, most of
- the subcutaneous bursæ are multilocular.”
-
- [67] _Text Book of Human Anatomy._ A. Macalister, 1889, p. 48.
-
-Now if one were not engaged upon such a problem as that of initiative
-in evolution and in trying to give examples of it there would be no
-Gordian knot to cut, and the condensed statement of Macalister might
-be simply taken as an accepted account of the manner in which reading
-between the lines a bursa is formed in the animal body. But, when an
-hypothesis such as the present is in question, one may not cut the
-Gordian knot in this way, and must produce briefly certain observations
-of the process, not only those known in man by anatomists and surgeons
-but also some found in lower Primates.
-
-
-Human Bursæ Enumerated.
-
-The following is a list of bursæ in man of which some are normal
-or always present, and others which are both occasional in their
-appearance and often imperfectly developed.
-
-_Front of Neck._
-
- (A) One in front of the pomum adami.
-
- (B) One in the thyro-hyoid space extending to the under surface of
- the hyoid bone.
-
- (C) One beneath the stemo-hyoid muscle.
-
- (D) One above the hyoid bone.
-
-_Pharynx._ A small central pit constituting a single bursa the _bursa
- pharyngea_.
-
-_Behind the angle of the lower jaw._ One.
-
-_On the symphysis of the chin._ One.
-
-_On the Acromion process._ One.
-
-_Beneath the deltoid_ and the acromion process, one large bursa often
- opening into the shoulder-joint.
-
-_Elbow._
-
- (A) One over the olecranon.
-
- (B) One occasionally over the inner epicondyle.
-
- (C) One over the internal condyle of the humerus.
-
- (D) One over the external condyle of the humerus.
-
- (E) Small one between the biceps tendon and the head of the radius.
-
- (F) Often a second bursa which separates the tendon from the oblique
- ligament crossing it.
-
-_Wrist._
-
- (A) One over the styloid process of the radius.
-
- (B) One over the styloid process of the ulna.
-
-_Hand._
-
- (A) One over each of the metacarpo-phalangeal joints.
-
- (B) One over each of the phalangeal joints.
-
-_Region of hip._
-
- (A) One over the anterior superior spine of the ilium.
-
- (B) Large one between the great trochanter and the gluteus maximus
- muscle.
-
- (C) One between the gluteus medius and the bone.
-
- (D) One between the gluteus minimus and the bone.
-
- (E) One between the psoas and iliacus muscles often opening into the
- hip-joint.
-
-_Thigh._
-
- (A) One over external condyle of the femur.
-
- (B) One over internal condyle of the femur.
-
-_Knee-joint._ The prepatellar bursæ.
-
- (A) Between the skin and superficial fascia at the lower edge of the
- patella there is often a small subcutaneous bursa.
-
- (B) Beneath the superficial fascia over the fascia lata there is
- always a large interfascial bursa, intersected by smooth fibrous
- bands extending downwards over the upper part of the patellar
- ligament.
-
- (C) One still deeper between the deep fascia and front of the bone
- there is a layer of lax connective tissue.
-
- (D) Sometimes a third or deep subfascial bursa.
-
- “These bursæ over the knee-joint appear in fœtal life and vary in
- size in persons of different occupations, being often large in
- housemaids and carpet-nailers, and often communicating with each
- other.”[68]
-
- [68] Macalister, p. 488.
-
- (E) Occasionally the upper part of the synovial pouch of the
- knee-joint is shut off from the general cavity and forms a separate
- bursa beneath the extensor muscles. It always communicates with the
- knee-joint though originating independently.
-
-_In the Ham._
-
- (A) Large bursa between the inner condyle of the femur and the
- gastrocnemius muscle, often opening into the joint.
-
- (B) A smaller one on the outer side.
-
- (C) One between the biceps tendon and the external lateral ligament.
-
- (D) One between the semimembranosus }
-
- (E) One between the popliteus }
-
- (F) One between the sartorius } and the bone.
-
- (G) One between the gracilis }
-
- (H) One between the semitendinosus }
-
-_Tibia._
-
- (A) One over the tuberosity.
-
-_Ankle._
-
- (A) Over both malleoli.
-
- (B) Between the tendo achillis and the os calcis.
-
-_Foot._
-
- (A) Over plantar surface of the great toe.
-
- (B) Over plantar surface of the little toe.
-
- (C) Over the dorsal surfaces of all the phalangeal joints of the toes.
-
- (D) Over the dorsal surface of metatarso-phalangeal joint of the great
- toe.
-
- (E) Over the plantar surfaces of the metatarso-phalangeal joints of
- all the toes.
-
-I calculate that there are at least fifty-two separate bursæ (about one
-hundred on the two sides of the body) in the normal or fully developed
-state, though of these many will be found either absent or with very
-little of the full structure of a bursa. One small but significant
-point may be referred to here. We are all familiar with the prominence
-of the knuckles of the hand and the very efficient bursæ which cover
-them, but most persons do not recognise that the foot has no such
-knuckles (or prominent metatarso-phalangeal joints) and no bursæ over
-these joints, except that of the great toe which happens to be very
-much more exposed to friction and has a much greater range of action
-than the other four metatarso-phalangeal joints. This might be called
-by some persons a beautiful bit of adaptation _for_ locomotion and by
-others an equally admirable bit of adaptation produced _by_ locomotion.
-
-
-Examination of Two Still-born Children.
-
-Some further light may be thrown upon the human bursæ by an examination
-of two still-born children I dissected in 1908 in Lewisham infirmary,
-and give here the results as to the more important subcutaneous bursæ.
-
-_Male Child_: full term.
-
- _Shoulder_: bursæ under acromion processes absent.
-
- _Elbow_: bursæ over outer condyle of humerus present.
-
- " " inner " " absent.
-
- " " olecranon both present.
-
- _Wrist_: bursæ over styloid process of ulna present.
-
- " " " " of radius present.
-
- _Hand_: bursæ over metacarpo-phalangeal joints D 1 absent, D 2, 3,
- 4, 5 present.
-
- bursæ over phalangeal joints, first set present, second set
- absent.
-
- _Hip_: bursæ over anterior superior spine of the ilium both absent.
-
- _Knee_: prepatellar bursæ well-developed.
-
- _Ankle_: bursæ over both malleoli present:
-
- bursæ beneath tendo achillis well-developed.
-
- _Great toe_: plantar bursa present.
-
- _Little toe_: plantar bursa absent.
-
- _Toes_: D 1 (great toe) bursa over metatarso-phalangeal joint
- present.
-
- D 2, 3, 4, 5 bursæ over metatarso-phalangeal joints absent.
-
- Bursæ over _Phalangeal joints_.
-
- D 1 present.
-
- D 2, 3, 4, none over either of the phalangeal joints.
-
- D 5 bursa present over the first and absent over the second
- phalangeal joint.
-
-This example of a still-born, but otherwise normal infant illustrates
-well the previous statement that certain bursæ are congenital and
-others of less functional importance are formed after birth. Whereas
-the olecranon, wrist, patellar, ankle and tendo achillis bursæ are
-fully formed, those under the acromion processes, one of those of the
-condyles of the femur, and the digits of the hand, those over the
-superior anterior spines of the ilium and those of the foot are little
-if at all developed in this case.
-
-Another still-born child at seven months was also dissected and this
-had well-formed prepatellar bursæ, scanty ones over the olecranon
-processes, also over the small joints of the hand and foot where they
-were difficult to isolate and over the malleoli they were only slightly
-developed.
-
-A fœtus in spirit I examined and found no commencement of a prepatellar
-bursa.
-
-
-Examination of Living Primates.
-
-
-_Anthropoid Apes._
-
-Eight of these I examined during life at the London Zoological
-Society’s gardens in 1908, four _chimpanzees_, two _orangs_ and two
-_gibbons_. These afforded the opportunity of ascertaining by means
-of touch the presence, and in a minor degree the size and efficiency
-of the main subcutaneous bursa, just as one can do this in a human
-subject. The _chimpanzees_ were A, aged thirteen; B, aged seven; C,
-aged three; and D, aged two-and-a-half years; the orangs E, aged
-thirteen; F, aged three years; the gibbons G and H both two to three
-years.
-
-These eight specimens possessed good examples of the leading
-subcutaneous bursæ over the olecranon process, the styloid process of
-the ulna, the patella and both malleoli.
-
-The smaller and less definite bursæ gave the following results.
-
-
-_Chimpanzees._
-
- A. _Hand._ Bursæ on all the metacarpal and first phalangeal
- joints; none on the second phalangeal joints of D 2, 3,
- 4, 5.
-
- _Foot._ Bursæ well marked on the five metatarsal first phalangeal
- joints; none on D 2, 3, 4, 5 joints, but one on that of D
- 1. None found on second row of phalangeal joints.
-
- B. Moderate development of bursæ on metacarpo- and
- metatarso-phalangeal joints of D 1; doubtful on those of D 2, 3,
- 4, 5.
-
- On hand and foot first phalangeal joints, bursæ present, on second
- row absent.
-
- C and D were similar. Metacarpo- and metatarso-phalangeal joints,
- none in C and scanty in D.
-
- No bursæ on any phalangeal joints of hand or foot.
-
-_Orangs._
-
- E. Metacarpo- and metatarso-phalangeal joints, bursæ ill-developed,
- first row of phalangeal joints of hand and foot moderate, second
- row none.
-
- F. Metacarpo- and metatarso-phalangeal joints more marked than in E.,
- and well developed on all phalangeal joints.
-
-_Gibbons._
-
- G. Metacarpo- phalangeal and metatarso-phalangeal joints poorly
- developed on D 2, 3, 4, 5, and none on those of D 1. Absent on all
- phalangeal joints.
-
- The digits of the gibbons were very long and evidently efficient
- in action, but were never flexed to any great degree.
-
-
-Dead Specimens.
-
-I also examined the hands and feet after death of certain lower
-Primates in 1909:--
-
- H. Hapalemur Griseus.
- I. Hapale Jacchus.
- J. Cercopithecus Callitrichus.
- K. Cercopithecus Mona.
- L. Macacus Rhoesus.
-
-_Hapalemur Griseus_ H. _Hands._ No bursæ on styloid processes of radius
- and ulna, and no localised bursæ on any metacarpo-phalangeal or
- phalangeal joints.
-
- _Feet._ Bursæ under tendo achillis small but distinct. Present over
- both malleoli.
-
- Metatarso-phalangeal joints D 1, 2, 3, rudimentary D 4 and 5
- absent.
-
- First phalangeal joints of D 1, 2, 3, 4, rudimentary absent
- over D 5.
-
- Second phalangeal joints absent on all digits.
-
-_Hapale Jacchus_ I.
-
- _Hand._ Lower end of ulna, which is very prominent, a bursa present,
- over end of radius, _which is much less prominent_, absent.
-
- Metacarpo-phalangeal joints, present in all.
-
- First phalangeal joints, which are prominent, present in all
- digits.
-
- Second phalangeal joints absent in all.
-
- _Foot._ Bursa under tendo achillis and over both malleoli.
-
- Metatarso-phalangeal joints absent on D 1; present on D 2,
- 3, 4, 5.
-
- First phalangeal joints, present in all.
-
- Second phalangeal joints, absent in all.
-
-_Cercopithecus Callitrichus_ J.
-
- _Hand._ Dorsal surface of the whole hand shows no localised bursæ,
- only a loose areolar tissue under the skin. Styloid
- processes of radius and ulna no bursæ.
-
- _Foot._ Dorsal surfaces over the whole foot similar to that of the
- hand.
-
- Bursæ present over both malleoli.
-
- Well-formed small bursæ under tendo achillis.
-
-_Cercopithecus Mona_ K.
-
- _Hand and Foot._ Dorsal surfaces similar to those of J and similar
- loose areolar tissue over styloid processes of ulna and
- radius.
-
- Bursæ over both malleoli.
-
- Well-formed bursa under tendo achillis.
-
-_Macacus Rhoesus_ L.
-
- This specimen showed more examples of bursæ than the two
- of Cercopithecus.
-
- Bursæ present over styloid processes of ulna and radius,
- also over metacarpo-phalangeal joints.
-
- Bursa well-marked over malleoli and under tendo achillis.
-
- Bursæ present over metacarpo-phalangeal and
- metatarso-phalangeal joints.
-
- No bursæ over phalangeal joints.
-
-
-Further Undesigned Experiments.
-
-The preceding facts as to the natural history of bursæ in man and
-some lower Primates, even if they stood alone, are enough to produce
-conviction as to the manner in which bursæ of all degrees of perfection
-are formed by function, and point to the origin of the initial stages
-of these structures. But they do not stand alone, for in man there
-have been carried out certain undesigned experiments in a similar
-direction, comparable to those described in the sections on direction
-of hair and arrangement of papillary ridges. These demonstrate the
-fact that frequent friction of skin over a hard surface has the power
-of producing adventitious bursæ in regions where they are not found in
-the normal state.
-
-These adventitious bursæ are the following:--
-
-In the first place certain normal bursæ in important situations are
-frequently so much enlarged by the constant irritation of pressure and
-friction that they become considerably enlarged. This enlargement may
-go on to definite pathological changes and thus come under the care of
-surgeons.
-
- They are Prepatellar bursæ--“housemaid’s knee.”
- Olecranon bursæ--“student’s elbow” and “miner’s elbow.”
- Tuber ischii bursæ--“weaver’s bottom.”
-
-These may be called “occupation-bursæ” and may be classed with three
-other well-known adventitious bursæ which are formed on the shoulder
-in “deal runners,” on the scalp in “fish porters” and in the back of
-the neck in Covent Garden porters, known as a “hummy.” Entirely new
-bursæ are formed also over the cuboid bone in talipes equino-varus,
-over the internal condyles of the femur in bad cases of knock-knee from
-friction of one joint against the other, over the prominent vertebrae
-in a humpback. A structure closely resembling a bursa and arising
-from similar causes to those producing adventitious bursæ is found in
-unreduced dislocations or ununited fractures.
-
-A small example of an adventitious bursa came under my notice. A woman,
-E. L., aged 49, had remarkable enlargement of the metatarso-phalangeal
-joint of her great toe of the left foot, and over this joint was formed
-a well-marked bursa on the dorsal surface. The right foot showed a
-much less prominent joint and only a very slight development of the
-corresponding bursa.
-
-This instance of a bursa-like structure being produced in unreduced
-dislocations and ununited fractures suggests the conception which I
-here propose, but do not attempt to verify that _all joints in all
-animal forms from the lowest up to man have been evolved in a manner to
-which this pathological experiment may give a clue_.
-
-A remarkable case reported by Sir William MacEwen in the Royal
-Society’s _Phil. Transactions_, Series B, Vol. 199, pp. 253, 279, is
-worth referring to in this connection. It was a case of a growth of
-bone in muscle connected with an old injury to the thigh of a man 38
-years old, and healthy. At the operation performed by the author of
-the paper the tumour was found to be movable, partly attached to the
-fascia lata of the thigh, and the upper part of the tumour moved on
-the lower. It was found that the tumour consisted of two parts, the
-upper three-and-a-half and the lower seven inches long, altogether
-a mass about ten inches in length. Muscular bundles of the vastus
-externus were included in this ossific formation, one passed through a
-tunnel in the bone through which it worked, and the sides of it were
-polished. _At the point where the newly formed bone came in contact the
-surfaces fitted each other and were polished as if they were covered
-with cartilage, and were here surrounded by a capsule._ (Italics not in
-original.) This fibrous covering when opened was seen to contain a thin
-serum, which, though not of the consistence of synovial fluid, still
-aided in lubricating the polished surfaces as they played over one
-another.
-
-A similar case was reported also by Dr. C. Paterson, surgeon to the
-Glasgow Royal Infirmary.
-
-A very interesting address by the Hunterian Professor, Mr. Jonathan
-Hutchinson, was given in February, 1917, on Dupuytren’s work,
-especially in the discovery of the cause and treatment of the
-contraction of palmar fascia known by his name. Professor Hutchinson
-described his method of curing this by the removal of the head of
-the first phalanx, and showed excellent results and evidence of the
-formation of a perfect new joint to take the place of the old distorted
-one, and the fingers were as efficient as in the normal state in the
-exercise of flexion. He gives photographs of the hand some months after
-the operation showing it to be capable of easy and full extension as
-well as of flexion. This again agrees well with the cases of Sir W.
-MacEwen and Dr. Paterson of the formation of a functional joint _by_
-use and habit.
-
-Another distinguished Hunterian Professor A. Keith, also gave two
-lectures in January, 1918, on the “Introduction of the Modern Practice
-of Bone-grafting,” which, in its modern form, he assigns to the credit
-of Sir William MacEwen. He lays great stress on the important work
-performed in such cases by the osteoblasts without whose living and
-formative action these results could not be obtained. He explains how
-necessary it is that these living elements should be stimulated into
-action by _work_. They thrive only so long as they have work to do.
-Another surgeon, Ollier, “wondered why the fragments of bone which he
-had succeeded in raising from slips of periosteum planted beneath the
-scalp or amongst muscles ceased to grow and tended to disappear. These
-bony grafts withered because they were not subjected to the strains
-and stresses which rouse the activity of osteoblasts.” MacEwen, “by a
-fortunate chance, planted his tibial grafts in a situation where they
-soon became subjected to muscular strains and stresses. In a short
-time bony fragments gathered from the legs of six boys became intrinsic
-parts of the humerus of a seventh; from the moment of primary union the
-bone cells of the graft were brought under the stimulating impulses of
-the biceps and triceps. Osteoblasts are the obedient slaves of muscles;
-_muscular dominance is their breath of life_.” (Italics not in the
-original.)
-
-“Wolff was the first to devote thirty years of constant work and
-observation to prove that the shape and structure of growing bones
-and adult bones depend on the stresses and strains to which they are
-subjected. By altering the lines of stress the shape of a bone can be
-changed.”
-
-Wolff’s law is simply this: “Osteoblasts at all times build and
-unbuild, according to the stresses to which they are subjected.”
-
-Professor Keith says further: “We are driven, as I have pointed out in
-a previous lecture, to look for the primary cause, not in the bones,
-but in the muscles, particularly in those which are tonically and
-constantly in action so long as we are standing.”
-
-A terse expression of Wolff’s law is quoted from Dr. John B. Murphy, of
-Chicago: “The amount of growth in a bone depends upon the need for it.”
-
-A remarkable illustration of a similar process is given in the
-construction of sponges by the scleroblasts and it is stated: “The
-soft walls of this sponge are constantly exposed to the force of
-moving waters, and we shall see that the spicule-builders--the
-scleroblasts--are endowed with the same properties as osteoblasts--the
-powers of fashioning and depositing the elements of the skeleton so
-that the sponge can best resist the forces to which it is habitually
-exposed.”
-
-One more important quotation from this lecture will suffice. “No
-one who has watched the behaviour of scleroblasts and marked the
-design in their workmanship can doubt that they have acquired certain
-characteristic qualities, chief of which is a sensitiveness to
-vibrations--to stresses. We see them build the same form of spicules as
-their ancestors, and therefore must suppose that their building quality
-is a gift of inheritance. We see them alter their mode of building as
-stresses change; we must therefore suppose that their inherited powers
-can be changed by the circumstances under which they work.”[69]
-
- [69] Hunterian Lecture on “The Introduction of the Modem Practice of
- Bone-grafting.” Royal College of Surgeons of England, January, 1918.
- Reported in the _Lancet_, February 9th and 16th, 1918.
-
-In regard to the action of the scleroblasts of sponges I have only
-to point out that the cautious words of Professor Keith on the
-treacherous ground of inheritance amount to the very same conception
-of personal selection and inheritance as are involved in the term
-“educability” of Sir E. Ray Lankester. Whether or not in the case of
-sponges this be a complete account of the matter it at any rate is a
-very important piece of evidence, if valid, for selection. Whether or
-not further it is a piece of evidence for a Mendelian factor implicit
-in the primordial sponges and released by some loss of inhibiting
-factors, as Professor Bateson would probably claim, is another and
-far more imaginative conception. The mere neo-Lamarckian with the aid
-of personal selection fails to see any difficulty in realising the
-wonderful process described by Professor Keith.
-
-An apology must be offered here to the patient reader for the
-introduction under the heading of the “Evolution of a Bursa” of the
-apparently alien subjects of bone-grafts, artificial new joints and
-sponge-spicules, but I have hazarded the guess that all joints in all
-animals have been fashioned--“forged by the incident of use,” to employ
-a fine phrase of Professor Macdonald’s in another connection--in slow
-but intelligible ways by use, and that in them, as elsewhere, function
-has preceded structure. This arose so simply out of the story of the
-bursæ that I ventured to digress as aforesaid rather than make it the
-subject of a separate section.
-
-
-The Significance of the Proceeding.
-
-The foregoing slender contribution to the comparative anatomy and
-physiology of bursæ is sufficient to show that at certain important
-and “critical” points in the mammalian anatomy, efficient bursæ are
-always present. One cannot indeed conceive the function of the parts
-involved being carried on at all without these ingenious contrivances,
-and no doubt can exist that in certain of the leading bursæ selection
-guides and guards, while use and habit maintain them. Over such as
-these “dominance” or the appearance of mutations might perhaps be
-supposed to preside, and possibly some useful statistical results might
-arise from their study from these points of view. But, between these
-major bursæ in man and lower Primates and the undifferentiated sacs
-which hardly deserve the name of bursæ, there is a perfect little host
-of insignificant structures, which at the first attempt at dominion
-over them on the part of Mendel or de Vries would hoist the standard
-of revolt. These would even refuse allegiance to Personal Selection
-under the persuasive banner, “Educability,” which however valuable
-elsewhere, must stand aside in this little province of Nature. I have
-thus attempted to “Lyell” this body of facts. Basing the statement on
-an analysis of a considerable mass of small facts which no one disputes
-I claim that the modifications drawn from normal anatomy on the one
-hand and on the other adventitious structures, produced by acknowledged
-mechanical forces, are examples of the transmission of modifications,
-and illustrate the mode of formation of certain initial variations. In
-other regions where Plasto-diēthēsis, as I conceive it, is at work in
-producing adapted organisms, there may be included in the hyphenated
-area certain factors of heredity, Mendelian, mutational and others, but
-not in this group. This is merely an assertion of an opinion though I
-submit that there is good evidence for it. Not even the hardest hearted
-Weismannian, Mendelian or mutationist, and not even the biometrician
-can refuse to this poor little province the required time and
-mechanical forces, and, unless an opponent can offer some explanation
-more consistent with the facts than that here offered, the proof of
-causation is as sound as that shown in the larger one of the direction
-of hair.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXI.
-
-THE PLANTAR ARCH.
-
-
-The principle of Lyell cannot be applied to this section of my
-subject for it is unique in the animal world. There is here a simple
-compilation of facts such as the medical schoolboy is supposed to know,
-and only requires for its setting forth the valuable expert knowledge
-of our predecessors in anatomy. It is indeed a pedestrian chapter.
-
-Man alone possesses this mark of a high lineage, and it adds point to
-Shakespeare’s description of man as “paragon of animals,” and Huxley’s
-“a superb animal, head of the sentient world.” For winning this
-integral part of a perfect walking-foot man must stoop to conquer; he
-must descend from the trees in order that he may have life and liberty;
-whether he bears the ancient surname of Tarsius or the more honoured
-one of Pithecus matters not. Names had not in those early times usurped
-that tyranny over man’s mind which they have done among his modern
-descendants. He came into that terrestrial kingdom which was to be
-his own with many a limitation, but with the promise and potency of
-an unexampled evolution, when he assumed more fully the erect posture
-and saw that his inheritance was very good. Neither then nor since has
-he ever reached the fleetness of foot of the Thibetan wild ass, the
-astonishing sense of smell of the dog or horse, the keen sight of the
-hawk, or the climbing power of that simian family upon whom he turned
-his back as on a poor relation. He became _par excellence_ the walking
-biped of earth, as, even with greater value to his mastery of the
-world he learned to talk in articulate language. A walking animal and
-a talking animal, with vast stretches of time for training these new
-powers of his, he became modified into the variegated human stocks,
-black, yellow and white, that now inhabit the earth.
-
-
-A Crumbling Arch.
-
-A digression, I hope, will be pardoned here before the value and beauty
-of the plantar arch and its mode of forging are described, and it is
-possible the latter may add some force to the former. Scientific (or,
-must I say?) semi-scientific writings are not concerned with the
-snobbishness of much of the pride of birth which still survives among
-us. But I would indeed think myself to be doing “my bit” if I could
-induce the present generation of young women and men to think highly
-of their plantar arches, nobler evidence of a “good” family than soft
-fair skin, taper fingers, Grecian nose, slender waist or that hair of
-which the decaying line of the long-haired kings of old France were
-too proud. For one reason or another, probably analogous to those for
-which he has lost so much the vigour of his hair of the scalp, or his
-dwindling wisdom-teeth and shrinking little toes, in other words,
-racial degeneration, modern man seems to be losing his plantar arch.
-For about three years I have made careful but saddening study of the
-ankles and feet of young women, and have embodied it in a variety
-of journals. This study has included about two thousand examples in
-young women of incipient or advanced flat-footedness as revealed,
-nay, flaunted before us in our towns and villages. This revelation
-has been offered by women’s shortened skirt, so that one can now note
-for oneself the ugly and disabling ankles and feet in the streets of
-any town, without the complicated business of a surgical examination.
-Such an examination, as it happens, and as it is usually undertaken,
-serves only to show a moderately advanced degree of this deformity,
-indeed, just so much as induces a patient to go to a doctor for relief
-of pain or obvious deformity. This is wholly insufficient for the study
-of a defect which in the various degrees of its development affects
-nearly 90 per cent. of all youngish women so far observed and noted.
-The doctors may--or may not--cure this evil, but they are not likely
-to find time even to discover during their strenuous lives, the great
-spread of this physical defect. But the merciful ukases of fashion,
-from Paris or elsewhere, and the obvious benefits, for once, of a
-fashion, are so powerful that the short skirt has remained with us for
-several years past and does not seem likely to go. I can only hope it
-will last until women who lead their sex in these days become ashamed
-of the feet of their sisters and their own, and make a forcible attack
-upon the Health Minister or Minister of Education, or both, so that
-systematic foot-drill in all elementary schools may be established.
-No other means than this, added to improved general health, can be
-conceived as able to correct so widely spread a deformity. I do not
-desire to be considered as making an attack on the bodily charms of
-women, for whose multifarious attractions I yield to none in sincere
-regard. But here is the revelation, here are the cases walking
-unashamed before us, and if the skirts _should_ lengthen again and
-cruelly hide up the evil, no one will be induced again to take up the
-unpopular attitude of saying that nearly all young women have feet that
-are deformed and ugly and, therefore, more or less inefficient. There
-is, alas! only too much reason to know that the evil is great among the
-better class, even of boys, for in 1919 Captain Coote said publicly at
-a Schoolmasters’ Conference that fully 30 per cent. of the new boys
-entering leading public schools had flat-foot, and Captain Coote, the
-highest exponent of physical training in the Navy, knows a flat-foot
-when he sees it. The measures here suggested in connection with the
-feet of women have the great merit that from them boys and girls will
-alike benefit.
-
-
-Non-Arboreal Man.
-
-Many problems faced non-arboreal man as he descended from the trees
-to claim his suzerainty and place of toil. Not least among them was
-the question of methods of protection against the terrible creatures
-among which he was to live. Their production must needs be slow, and
-for him to meet by “direct action” with weapons invented _ad hoc_
-the fierce large carnivora and clumsy but dangerous dinosaurs would
-have proved highly dangerous. Too long had they been in possession
-of his Canaan, and he could not cross his Jordan, walk seven times
-round their Jericho, blowing with trumpets of rams’ horns, and on the
-seventh day march in and “consolidate his position.” He had first to
-do what his descendants have always been bound to do; he had to learn
-to walk terrestrially long before he could think and live imperially.
-Sufficient for him was the evil of his day, and, as an old arboreal
-denizen he had much to learn and not a little to unlearn; and we know
-from the prehistoric pictures of his own doings and trophies, that he
-did in course of ages learn to walk, run and jump with variety of step
-and efficiency unknown in any other Primate group. We can ask, and we
-can but supply speculative answers as to the details of _how_ he did
-it, but somewhere and at some time he learned first to become as good a
-walking animal as later he became a talking one, and some at any rate
-of the steps of the process are plain for all to read to-day.
-
-
-How the Arch was Built.
-
-Did I not know something of the severity of the judges in such a
-Court of Appeal as we are facing in this case and of the opposing
-counsel--of the jury I have less fear--I should be disposed to settle
-on a half-sheet of note-paper the problem that non-arboreal man settled
-ages ago for himself on the ground, by a familiar saying. It really
-meets the non-scientific mind which is not weighed down by what Captain
-Marryat used to call “top-hamper,” to answer _Solvitur Ambulando_. But
-I hear judges and counsel both saying “This will never do,” and must
-address myself to opening up the case.
-
-If an adventurous gorilla and his mate, whom we may call gorilla
-Columbi, had long ago made a bid for a life completely terrestrial
-rather than partly arboreal, it is difficult to imagine how the feet
-of this pair could have failed to adjust themselves and their separate
-tarsal elements to a better if rudimentary form like that of man, and
-that their progeny would not have followed or improved upon this.
-Professor Keith,[70] in his work referred to, and Professor Wood Jones
-in _Arboreal Man_, have much to say on the evolution of man’s foot
-and arch, and I mention this _ab initio_ so as to be free from any
-supposed claim to originality which is apt in the present extended
-range of scientific progress to be as damaging to a man as for him
-to proclaim his honesty or a woman her virtue. And I also formally
-grant to the Mendelians and Mutationists, without offence and with
-some possible relief to their minds, a period of leave from this poor
-trench-warfare--_Plasto-ditēthēsis_ will not be obliged to call in at
-the place of its hyphen any reinforcements from these of the higher
-command.
-
- [70] _Human Embryology and Morphology._
-
-The assumed precursor of our human walker was probably more highly
-evolved in his own special line than the real ancestor, but we have so
-little yet of discoveries of whole skeletons of earliest man that the
-bodily structure of gorilla C. may fairly be taken as a starting point,
-indeed he is for this purpose a valuable lay-figure, almost artistic
-for once, on which may be draped the following story of the making of
-an arch. The ultimate verdict, which word I use in the old English
-sense of a “true saying” rather than the most recent declaration of
-those who “ride on white asses and sit in judgment,” does not therefore
-invalidate the verisimilitude of this picture. One may go farther and
-affirm that, given certain anatomical and physiological facts in an
-earlier Primate stock, which marvellously resemble those of modern
-man, and it must follow as the night the day that his more primitive
-physical basis employed in a new mode of progression, that is of
-terrestrial walking on two feet, will be converted by use and habit
-into the construction of such new formations as will best agree with
-the new style--in other words, in this instance, a plantar arch.
-
-
-An Unique Phenomenon.
-
-That a plantar arch is peculiar to man is a matter of fact, and
-Lydekker in the _Royal Natural History_, Vol. I., p. 41, says of
-the gorilla’s foot incidentally “there is no sort of resemblance
-to the human instep in the whole foot,” and Professor Keith in the
-work referred to “the arch is a human character.” One may see this
-for oneself in living apes and monkeys and in the wonderful series
-of drawings of apes in all kinds of postures in the _Royal Natural
-History_, and indeed in the feet of dead apes and monkeys. All Primates
-other than man walk on a flat sole.
-
-
-Equipment.
-
-Our adventurer starts with the following equipment of tools for making
-his arch as he learns to walk entirely on the ground which it must
-be remembered he can only do by unlearning _pari passu_ his highly
-cultivated power of grasping with his foot. The old and the new cannot
-flourish together. The evolving foot of man is an example of a slow
-change in the function of an organ and consequent modification of
-certain structures in it. He walks with his feet turning in, or in the
-axis of the leg; his great toe is not in this axis but may even lie at
-a right angle to the foot; he rests weight on his heel and even more on
-the outer border of his sole, and thus the sole of one foot turns more
-or less towards the other; and he puts a good deal of weight on his
-toes which are frequently doubled over; and his gait, though erect, is
-never completely so, and is clumsy in appearance.
-
-_Bones_: his heel-bone is relatively long and pointed and slightly
-arched below; the bones of his great toe are short and thick, and the
-other four toes relatively long and slender. You can see at once it
-is not primarily a walking foot. Any active boy of twelve could give
-him points and a beating in a race for life in the open. Further, his
-foot shows a much larger proportion of the whole foot in front of the
-end of the great toe than is ever seen in man. The _ligaments_ which
-bind the joints of his foot together, while the muscles play upon them,
-are little different from those he will require for the girders of his
-arch, except for such a throwing out of slips, and shifting under the
-stresses and strains of such walking as his new gait involves.
-
-The _muscles_ of his leg and foot are the most important by far of his
-original equipment with which to set about making his arch: he could no
-more do this out of his present muscles than a Hebrew could make bricks
-without clay. It is these variable and plastic structures which are
-most readily adapted by use in a fresh direction or increased degree.
-He has the great flexors of the ankle and foot in his poorly-shaped
-calf (this feature might be adduced as a human character and studied
-in this manner if it were not of so elusive a nature) and the long
-flexors of his four outer toes, the special long flexor of the great
-toe, which in his case does not of course act in the axis of the other
-metatarsal bones. He is lacking here in the special detached portion
-of the _flexor accessorius_, which eventually becomes of use in
-maintaining the arch, between the heel-bone and the tendons of certain
-digits. He has, in a measure, the _oblique adductor_ muscle of the
-great toe and the _transverse adductor_ muscle, more for future use
-perhaps than of much present value. Like all apes and monkeys he has
-a _peroneus longus_ with its tendon passing across the sole from the
-outer border to the base of the great toe and a _peroneus brevis_, both
-of them for everting the foot and supinating it. But here again he is
-lacking, for he has no little _peroneus tertius_, which Professor Keith
-speaks of as a muscle “peculiar to man” and “a special evertor of the
-foot”--a muscle passing from the tendons of the _extensors_ of the toes
-and inserted into the little toe. He has also the _tibialis anticus_
-and _tibialis posticus_, the latter which flexes the ankle on the leg,
-and the former which also flexes it and everts the foot; he has also
-the special _extensors_ of the toes.
-
-This enumeration of the bony, ligamentous, and muscular possessions of
-gorilla C. is enough to show that, though he has little of new tools to
-make, he has to modify greatly those he has learnt to use so well, so
-that one can almost hear him echo the words of David to Saul as to his
-new armour.
-
-The problem of an arch remains to be solved by eversion instead of
-inversion of the foot, growth in all directions of the heel-bone, and
-the enlargement and straightening of the great toe, and the “setting”
-of the foot in a certain degree of pronation and over-extension.
-
-
-Description of the Arch.
-
-The plantar arch is double, but the longitudinal one must be chiefly
-considered here. It lies under the concave roof of the tarsal bones,
-seven in number, and the metatarsal bones, and rests in a well-formed
-foot in front on the heads of the latter, and behind on the inferior
-surface of the heel-bone. The _astragalus_ alone of these bones in
-contact with those of the leg, acts like a washer to the ankle joint,
-and has no muscles attached to it. Three more of the _tarsal_ bones
-need reference: these are the three _wedge-shaped_ bones which have
-their bases on the dorsal and their apices directed towards the plantar
-surface. With such a set of bony tools as this, all the requisites for
-an arch are at hand. Let the half-tree, half-ground walker become a
-complete ground-walker, and in the first place the manifest increase of
-the action of the flexors of the leg will pull to an unusual extent
-on the _tendo achillis_ and heel-bone, leading, in accordance with a
-well-known law, to steady enlargement of the parts near to which it is
-attached. The greater amount of weight thrown henceforth on the heel
-tends in just the same direction, indeed, to general enlargement of the
-whole bone. The _astragalus_ being in No Man’s Land, so to speak, takes
-less part in the change than any other tarsal bone. The _wedge-shaped_
-bones are exactly so constructed as to retreat a little in a dorsal
-direction as the modified walking increases under the action of certain
-muscles which will later be mentioned. This, in conjunction with
-the projection backwards of the heel and the general growth of the
-bone, permits, as far as the bony parts go, a gradual hollowing out
-of the originally flat plantar surface, and the increasing eversion
-of the foot places more weight on the front pier of the arch, that
-is, the heads of the _metatarsal_ bones. The squeezing-up process of
-the smaller _tarsal_ bones contributes also to the formation of the
-transverse arch.
-
-The _ligaments_ need no new invention on his part but only a more human
-degree of development, and in particular the _calcaneo-navicular_
-ligament and _internal lateral_ of the ankle undergo in the human foot
-great development, and the long plantar ligament, originally part of
-the tendon of the _gastrocnemius_, comes in to the aid of the arch and
-goes to bind it together, so that these humbler structures follow in
-the wake of the changing and enlarging bones.
-
-The plantar fascia, though a powerful protective armour for the deeper
-parts of the sole, cannot be held to enter into the formation of the
-arch. The _initiative_ in this process lies with the muscles, and, even
-if neither gorilla C. himself, nor his descendants, had altered the
-muscles of his foot and just given up climbing for walking, there were
-muscles strong enough and appropriate for modifying very profoundly his
-simian foot, though he might not have arrived at an arch. He or they
-might have become long-distance walkers, but never sprinters.
-
-If the sole of the dissected foot is observed it is seen that the
-plantar arch lies approximately over a triangle of which the base is
-formed by the _transverse adductor_ muscle of the great toe, across
-the heads of the metatarsal bones, and the two sides by the _oblique
-adductor_ of the great toe and the _short flexor_ of the little toe. It
-extends, of course, somewhat further back under the heel-bone, but this
-is its highest part.
-
-In the changing foot the _tibialis posticus_, which was originally a
-flexor of the metatarsal bones, obtains a secondary attachment to
-the _scaphoid_ bone, and the _tibialis anticus_ becomes inserted anew
-into the internal _wedge-shaped_ and metatarsal bones. “Both of these
-muscles, thus modified, help to maintain the arch of the foot. So does
-the tarsal part of the tendon of the _tibialis posticus_.” (Keith).
-
-The three _peronei_ muscles, especially the new _peroneus tertius_,
-attached to the little toe, are called in by increased walking to
-redress the balance of forces in the foot and produce that eversion,
-with some supination, which is essential to the arch. No arch was
-possible till these muscles came into some preponderance of action
-over the _flexors_, so beloved of gorilla C. The _short flexor of the
-digits_ becomes modified so that its attachment to the tendons of the
-_long flexors_ in the sole has its _origin_ completely transferred
-to the heel-bone in man (Keith). “It can thus act more powerfully in
-maintaining the arch,” and finally the _flexor accessorius_, a muscle
-which cannot fail to surprise the dissector when he first penetrates
-into the deep layer of muscles of the sole, and which is a detached
-piece of the _long flexor of the great-toe_, becomes especially
-well-developed and helps to maintain the arch.
-
-The order of events then is: first, increased and altered muscular
-function; second, growth of bones and adjustment; third, binding
-together of these by new or modified ligaments. If it were possible
-to separate in this way the age-long formation of such a living tool
-as the human foot, this is the order in which alone, I submit, the
-sequence of events can be placed. It is a convenient, because simple
-and plain example of initiative in evolution, and I cannot say how much
-I owe to Professor Keith’s teaching on the subject.[71]
-
- [71] It is not sufficiently noticed by some writers how important
- is Professor Keith’s teaching as to the maintenance of the arch by
- muscular action rather than ligamentous union. And it is a very
- practical matter from my own point of view in connection with the
- prevention of flat-foot in the young. If indeed the poor deformed
- feet of the sufferers can only be corrected by attention to the
- lowly-organised ligaments, and the muscles will not avail, I can but
- add “God help them!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXII.
-
-MUSCLES.
-
-
-A work of great value to the biologist has been written by one whose
-work has led him in the widening path of human physiology and its very
-title is instinct with meaning. The Integrative action of the Nervous
-System may not aid the systematist or the student of genetics, but for
-insight into formative powers, where the former can but record facts
-and find no interpretation, such a work is of supreme importance.
-When the plant sealed its fate and enclosed itself in a cell-wall
-and abandoned a life of movement, it was foreordained that its rival
-would be that cell and its descendants which could adopt a free
-life, and that the future of the world would lie at the proud foot
-of that conqueror who could command and mobilize the resources of a
-nervous system. And, as we know, it has fallen to man to receive the
-rewards of this promise and potency of a higher life. If one seeks to
-understand the steps by which man has arrived at his primacy it can
-only be by the highway of nervous progress, however much the tracing of
-certain connecting or collateral paths may throw light on contributing
-causes. So that man’s place in Nature is nearly synonymous with the
-structural evolution of his brain, as Huxley has shown in his clear and
-simple manner. Even if man is to remain still an animal Melchisedec
-for generations to come, or to put it lower, a foundling, no future
-discoveries that can be imagined will disprove Huxley’s declaration,
-“Evolution is no longer an hypothesis, but an historical fact.” And
-yet if man has become adapted to his world, and, in it, crowned with
-glory and honour by the unfolding of some original complexity, or as
-the result of some fortunate mutations in the distant past, the human
-brain, with its cranial capacity of nearly three times the number of
-cubic centimetres to that of the gorilla, has been making false claims
-to a paramountcy over all factors in the wonderful initiative of fresh
-capacities and their mobilisation for conquest. Nothing less than such
-a “claim” was understood by the ancients, and, though metaphysics
-had to supply the lack of anatomy and physiology, it has always been
-held that mind was lord of matter, and now scientific research has
-told us why. But no one, even the most hard-shelled scholastic, can
-refuse to the brain organ its predominant share in the making of man.
-This is seen even in the frigid sphere of science by the difference
-of interest there is shown between any great discovery bearing on the
-evolution of man, or on some new lower animal form. When Sir. H. H.
-Johnston astonished zoologists in 1901 by his discovery and proof
-of the existence of an archaic large mammal which had been interned
-for an incalculable time in the Semliki Forest, the thrill felt at
-that historic meeting passed off very soon when the leading British
-biologist had monographed the Okapi, settled its name and surname
-and introduced it into text-books. This is never the fate of such
-as Pithecanthropus or Eoanthropus dawsoni, or of the more recent
-genealogical theory and researches as to arboreal man. The call of
-these studies of man’s evolution is felt by all, and the difference in
-the two branches of biology may account for what must have struck many
-others, that is the neglect of adding the blue ribbon of science to the
-honours of the discoverer of the Okapi.
-
-These few trite remarks as to the importance of the nervous system in
-the making of man have been introduced here, though they bear more
-closely on the next two chapters, because this importance comes in at
-every stage of the present treatment of the origin of modifications in
-muscle.
-
-
-Anatomists’ Views of Muscles.
-
-There is a very strict and austere custom among anatomists, which
-doubtless is in a measure necessary, of insisting upon following
-rigorously the homologies of muscles, especially in human anatomy,
-and in this branch of a greater subject the canons are followed to an
-extent that surprises the seeker after origins. A remarkable example
-of this is in a paper by an eminent anatomist, now Professor at King’s
-College, Dr. E. Barclay Smith. It is a paper on the “Morphology of
-the short extensor of the human fingers.”[72] He says “the precise
-significance of this occasional _extensor brevis digitorum manus_
-is a matter of considerable interest.” He gives four possible
-interpretations of this unusual muscle. The last, viz., that it is
-derived from a new muscle-germ alone interests us here because of the
-remarkable caution and austerity of his remarks on this interpretation.
-“If an _ext. brevis dig. manus_ cannot be regarded as an atavistic
-anomaly, or as a derivative from any existing musculature, the only
-way in which its presence can be accounted for is to suppose that
-it is of entirely new origin--the product of a new muscle-germ.
-Such an explanation is, of course, the last resort, and all other
-possible derivations must be disproved before it can be accepted.”
-The physiologist would probably think such an interpretation was
-the obviously first resort. The same writer discusses at length the
-homology of an exceedingly rare anomaly among muscles, the _extensor
-ossis metacarpi hallucis_, and his desire on the one hand to find a
-missing parent for Japhet, and his honesty and accuracy on the other
-hand lead him to say “even when it is present, it cannot be regarded
-as directly atavistic, since it does not represent a normal mammalian
-tendency.” And he adds a gentle but remote suggestion--“Brooks
-certainly describes such a muscle in _menobranchus_ and _hatteria_--two
-rare and remote reptiles!” But, lawful and necessary though this be,
-there must be stages on the path of human evolution where such a method
-must fail and the anatomists can do no more than hold aloof from theory
-or speculation, with a certain grim enjoyment of the disputes and
-difficulties of the genealogists.
-
- [72] Anatomical Society of Great Britain and Ireland, Trans., p. 54.
-
-
-Initiative in Muscles.
-
-Initiative in the evolution of muscles clearly occurs somewhere in
-the stem, and behind the formed expression of an altered habit is the
-integrating action of the nervous system. This will be by some looked
-at askance as a _deus ex machinâ_ and reckoned as part of the argument
-from ignorance in a way which recalls Weismann’s scorn of Lamarckian
-factors in germinal selection. I submit that what he and Osborn call
-“the unknown factor” of use and habit, arising in response to new
-stimuli meets as no other proposed suggestion does the formation of
-new muscles. Given a certain fundamental architecture of skeleton and
-musculature, such as of primitive vertebrates, one can, without doing
-violence to any known facts, place the formation of new organs of
-movement in the following order:--
-
-1. Neural changes and habits.
-
-2. Muscular modifications.
-
-3. Consequent modifications of bone. It carries the question no further
-to say that these are correlated, however loose may be the meaning
-of that word that is understood. If the prerogatives of Selection
-within the germ, of segregation of unit-characters and dominance,
-and of mutations are not unlimited in the construction of organisms,
-there still remains a sphere of action for the initiating power of
-the nervous system. Bones grow and change their form in response to
-increased or altered muscular action on them, and it is necessary to
-look back a stage further in the story to the neural changes however
-produced. There have been abundant opportunities in the long history
-of mammalian evolution for primitive forms to take a new course of
-life, and they have done so on an extensive scale. The impulses that
-have led them may have been started by some “needs” such as Lamarck
-taught, some change in their surroundings involving new stimuli, or
-“insults,” as Haeckel called them, but the first of the structural
-stages must have been in the cerebral cortex.
-
-
-Cross-Roads in Evolution.
-
-The most instructive levels of animal evolution are those where two or
-more great stocks have diverged from a primitive one. There may have
-been several factors leading to the division of the early Ungulates
-into the odd-toed and even-toed groups, of the Carnivora into cats,
-dogs and bears, the Felidæ into the highly-specialised genera of that
-intense family, the early parting of gibbons from the common anthropoid
-stem, and then the division of this line into the three great genera
-with which we are familiar. Whatever may have been the unknown factors
-in the environment such as changes of climate and level, geographical
-isolation, increase of foes, profusion or lack of food, to which these
-diverging stocks became adapted in their organs and form, in fact
-whatever we do _not_ know, we know this--that in their measure they
-acquired more convoluted and often larger brains, and the stimuli
-passing through their receptors into their consciousness increased
-with an everflowing tide, in volume, intensity and complexity. Many an
-archaic habit of their race they must unlearn, and it is doubtful if
-germinal selection would avail in this valuable process of economy as
-it is held to do in the case of the human little toe.
-
-It may be taken as granted that increasing complexity of brain in their
-own lines of life did accompany these adventurers of small or large
-groups. It follows that muscular changes from the original stock would
-follow neural changes, for movement and activity is inseparable from
-the animal, and the integrating action of the nervous system would
-constantly initiate, maintain and establish fresh habits and these
-be expressed in new muscular structure. Whatever higher uses, as we
-believe them to be, man makes of his brain, as reflection, reasoning,
-imagination and association, such were not the new properties acquired
-by these adventurers. They were very much concerned with hunger and
-love, and for them “philosophy” did not sustain the structure of
-their world. But more varied movements of head, trunk and limbs, and
-greater agility and strength brought them such prizes as were within
-their reach. This may be only another way of expressing Sir E. Ray
-Lankester’s conception of educability, which he maintains to be the
-only acquired character the organism inherits, and it may be therefore
-assumed to be under the iron law of selection. This must be accepted
-with the respect due to the high authority from which it proceeds. But
-such a conception, while it removes a false light in certain regions,
-sheds no light on the pathway of animal evolution, unless modifications
-be transmitted, and we can now take it that man does not inherit the
-power to speak which for incalculable ages he has been learning,
-nor to write, even though in the days of the early Pyramid-builders
-and the Sumerians in the plains of Chaldea they possessed the power
-of writing, nor can a musician’s child learn to play an instrument
-without teaching, or indeed man perform any of his arts and crafts by
-second nature: so, negatively, this knowledge is valuable, and the
-neo-Lamarckian must proceed on his quest without anything more than
-educability to aid him--but it will serve. The fact is that we do not
-inherit habits or associations as such at all, but the neurones of
-the grey matter in spine and brain which subserve, direct and control
-them. Though a fresh neurone or two in the brain of an early ungulate
-deliberating, so to speak, as to the life he shall take up, whether
-that of oxen or horses, may be trifling in itself as to immediate value
-to the animal, it may be to him as much a matter of fate to acquire
-those microscopic cells as it was to the undifferentiated organism
-that paused before it sealed its fate as plant. Under the free and
-enlightened government of the integrating nervous system liberty to
-express itself to an almost unlimited extent, in accordance with
-progress, is thus open to the hypothetical adventurers.
-
-When considering such an aspect of the organism as the “choice”
-between the career of an odd-toed or even-toed ungulate, a cat or
-dog, a lion or tiger, a gibbon or other of the four anthropoid genera
-which assuredly was presented to certain groups of primitive ungulates
-carnivores, felidæ or apes, as historical beings, the vision of the
-process is sore let and hindered by the limiting force of certain
-expressions which have been sanctioned with the _imprimatur_ of fifty
-years’ high thinking in the realms of high biology. I refer of course
-to the terms Selection and Evolution which, though they cannot be
-replaced by better terms, have the power and sometimes have had the
-effect of impressing on the story of organic existence an aspect of
-_determinism_ which does not allow, for any purposive action of the
-individual, the working out of its own salvation, on the part of higher
-forms at any rate. As among nations self-expression has become of late
-a powerful force in their development, and indeed of individuals, so
-it may be argued by analogy that the total experience of an organism,
-may result in its co-operation in the process of its progress towards
-higher things. Bergson hints at such a process in organisms, but
-appears to allow nothing for the individual in his _élan vital_, where
-the mass alone counts. So if the two binding terms of Selection and
-Evolution must be granted their enormous power over our thoughts, there
-must be also a loosing as well as a binding, and we, as well as certain
-young ecclesiastics in a hurry, may put in a plea for Life and Liberty.
-Thus is Lamarckism immortal, and the integrative action of the nervous
-system supplies the reason.
-
-This well-worn subject is not out of place here, where I am trying to
-show evidence of self-expression in terms of muscular modification
-arising from fresh activities of the brain.
-
-
-New Muscles.
-
-If it can be said without fear of question that “the differentiation
-of muscle and nerve is the morphological result of division of labour,
-whereby the unit of protoplasm, in which irritability and contractility
-are combined, has, on the one hand, become modified into muscle, which
-retains the property of contractility, and on the other into nerve,
-which retains that of irritability,”[73] and if Wolff’s _Law of Bone
-Transformation_ teaches that if a normal bone is used in a new way its
-structure and form will change to meet its new function, which Sir
-Charles Bell had more vaguely taught in 1834, it cannot well be denied
-that at certain turning-points in the history of animal organisms the
-sequence of changes which arise is neural change, muscular modification
-and finally change of bone, whether ungulates, carnivores, felidæ,
-gibbons or big anthropoids or man, be the _dramatis personæ_. The only
-question is whether selection or use and habit initiates the subtle and
-slow process.
-
- [73] Macalister, _op. cit._, p. 62.
-
-
-Unstriped Muscles.
-
-The simplest of the muscular acquirements of mammals is of course
-that great mass of little structures which constitutes the unstriped
-musculature. I must admit that here again I am engaged with what the
-professed biologist may call trifles, but these, like some others of
-a corresponding rank, have a provoking quality of persistence, and
-display, if one may personify them, an insistent desire to know whence
-they come and why they are here. Some of these, like the one before
-us, may be comprehended in the great chapter of the Evolution of the
-Indifferent of which they form a page. This world, at any rate in the
-moral sphere, would be an intolerable house of bondage if there were
-not many _things that matter not_ as well as _things that matter_, and
-there is reason to believe that in the process of the making of man and
-a vast number of forms below him there is a large field of structures,
-parts and organs, where things that matter not are to be found. One
-strange province of this realm is the colouration of animals in certain
-regions where no eye ever can see the colour or can take any heed of
-the markings, treated very fully many years ago by Mr. Beddard in
-_Animal Colouration_.
-
-Unstriped muscle arises, as the striped variety does, from the
-mesoblastic muscle-plate and appears in nearly all organs,
-blood-vessels and skin, and as trade is said to follow the flag, so
-a development of new unstriped muscles must speedily be found in
-every new structure of the regions where unstriped muscle is found.
-The skin is the simplest, and less complicated by the presence of
-other structures than vessels and organs, where it also exists, but
-where it trespasses too much on the territory of selection for my
-immediate purpose. A small band of this muscle called an _arrector_,
-or _erector_, _pili_ is attached to most, if not all, of the third of
-a million hairs which cover the skin of man, and is inserted into that
-side of each hair which forms an obtuse angle with the plane of the
-skin. This tiny structure is endowed with the quality of contracting
-in response to certain stimuli falling on the skin, so that it causes
-the hair to which it is attached to stand erect instead of sloping, and
-incidentally squeezes some of the secretion out of the sebaceous gland
-which lies in each angle. The human skin thus possesses about a third
-of a million minute muscular bands and shows no sign of parting with
-this old gift from a lower hairy stock, and whatever value, if any,
-their function be to their possessor they show a remarkable readiness
-to perform it efficiently. It makes their existence and persistence no
-clearer to call them vestigial, for one only thus throws the question
-of their origin much farther back. Undoubtedly they come from afar
-and were in full development in the earliest hair-clad mammals, so an
-ancestry reaching back to Monotremes or Marsupials is not to be lightly
-set aside. The raw material was undoubtedly formed in response to
-stimuli conveyed to the brain, and the earliest appearance of muscles
-which erected the hairs must have been wholly insignificant either upon
-the survival or comfort of the possessors.
-
-
-A Remarkable Example.
-
-The _arrectores pili_ exhibit very little evidence of control or
-interference from the action of the brain, but there is one region of
-one animal, like the Rosetta stone that set Champollion at work, where
-a very simple hieroglyph is recorded. I have been able to find no other
-in all the hairy mammals I have examined than that startling pattern
-which the back of the lion, shown in Fig. 37, sometimes displays. That
-well-formed patch of reversed hair of roughly triangular shape which
-is frequently found on the back of a lion has been described and, as
-I interpret this strange structure, it would seem clear that neural
-change in some examples of this species has led to so persistent
-contraction of the _arrectores pilorum_ over a certain area of skin,
-and that these have permanently reversed the normal and primitive slope
-of the hair. I have never found it present in a lioness, and not in
-all cases of male lions. It marks its possessor with the brand of a
-fierce and especially savage character, and he is not able to screen
-it from the eye of the Zoologist as well as Milady did her brand of
-shame, until that fatal day when D’Artagnan disclosed it. This pattern
-on a lion’s back is strangely reminiscent of the ridge of bristling
-hair we see on the corresponding region of a fierce dog’s back when he
-is infuriated. In the latter it may be said to have selective value,
-as perhaps also is the bristling hair on the head of a gorilla when
-enraged, much in the same way as the Chinese warriors sought to alarm
-their enemies by terrifying grimaces, or those terrifying tones and
-expressions of face which the Tyrant man, really a coward, is said by
-such as Miss Wisk to exercise over the women of his circle. We may
-present all these to the Pan-Selectionist, but inasmuch as the short,
-bristling hairs on the back of a lion are on the one hand hidden by
-the mane from an animal in front, and on the other are so small as
-to be seen quite close if at all, the survival-value of the reversed
-pattern of hair in question is quite outside the province of selection.
-It is so manifestly under the control of cerebral action, that it may
-be compared, as an undesigned experiment, with that of man in placing
-harness upon a horse, as to the power of cerebral action in producing
-structure. Though, as far as I can learn, it stands alone, it is
-difficult to believe that such a thing as a unique example occurs in
-nature, but it is interesting and suggestive from the Lamarckian point
-of view, and even the opposing counsel must admit that it is among
-indifferent structures.
-
-
-Facial Muscles of Expression.
-
-This record in terms of hair of personal and ancestral emotions has,
-however, a link with certain more numerous and important striated
-muscles, such as the facial muscles of man and apes, modifications of
-the great platysma-sheet, and which are disposed in two layers, a deep
-and a superficial. This covers like a hood at the third month the head
-and neck of the embryo, and later assumes on the face its specialised
-form of certain bands which operate round the eyes and mouth. As they
-are of the striated kind these muscles can be moved at will, but their
-main action is much more under the government of the mental processes
-of their possessor. As they are fundamentally the same in apes and man
-very little new muscular structure arises in man, and little more than
-shaping or refining takes place.
-
-The facial muscles which operate round the orbit have less mental
-action represented in them than those of the mouth, though the action
-of the special elevator of the upper eyelid is conspicuous among the
-expressions of a vigorous person. Both apes and man have muscles on
-each side which raise or lower the angles of the mouth, draw the
-angles upwards and outwards, and raise the upper and depress the
-lower lip; and, though the muscle of the mouth which corresponds
-to the _orbicularis_ of the eye is not a continuous structure, but
-formed of interrupted bundles of fibres, it is powerful in closing the
-lips and active in the expressions. There are also in man scattered
-oblique fibres in the substance of the lower lip, well-developed and
-closely-set in a sucking child, and these in the adult are scattered
-and less conspicuous.
-
-There is thus a remarkable set of structures in the face of a higher
-primate which convey mental emotion. As they also belong to animals
-with a high degree of convolution of brain, though certain are found
-in lower mammals, their specialisation is only to be accounted for by
-the long-continued involuntary expression of mental states existing
-in the particular form of primate. Professor Keith says in the work
-before referred to: “Muscles supplied by the facial nerve are the
-physical basis into which many mental states are reflected, and in
-which they are realised. Through them mental conditions are manifested.
-It is found that the differentiation of this sheet into well-marked
-and separate muscles proceeds _pari passu_ with the development of the
-brain. The more highly convoluted the brain of any primate the more
-highly specialised are its facial muscles,”[74] and he points out in
-a smaller work[75] that in the gibbon, and monkeys of the Old and New
-Worlds the facial system becomes simpler and at the same time more
-robust, and he pictures the facial muscles as the “servants of the
-brain.”
-
- [74] _Embryology._
-
- [75] _The Human Body._
-
-If an ape can express a good many of the coarser emotions of an animal
-by the action of its facial muscles, and through kindness and training
-exhibit some of the finer ones, there is a wide distance between this
-level of attainment and the multiplied moods and unnumbered varieties
-of expression which give to the human face its unique charm. If we can
-express pleasure, pain, anger, contempt, hatred, surprise, affection,
-sympathy, fear, hope, reflection, perplexity, gaiety, melancholy,
-cunning (and many another can be supplied) what a remarkable field of
-physiology in terms of anatomy we have in the facial muscles! There is
-a very obvious reason why none of these emotions have been fixed in an
-objective form in ape or man, as the patch of reversed hair is on the
-back of a lion, for moods and states of feeling in every individual man
-are subject to such endless variations that it would be impossible for
-them to stamp any individual face with a record of even one emotion
-which could be transmitted to descendants, to say nothing of the
-inconceivably great probability that heredity would at once swamp any
-initial modification.
-
-
-Three Stages.
-
-The stages then are but three--mental states, specialisation of small
-muscular bundles from an existing simple sheet of muscle, and disuse
-of the remaining portions, and in this small but highly significant
-field we see structures created independently of will as servants of
-the brain, and without any survival-value in their earliest stages.
-It is more than likely no monkey, ape, or early man whose face was
-covered with thick hair from his eyes downwards, ever saved his life
-or gained a better mate by reason of the subtle modification of a tiny
-muscle which was proceeding _pari passu_ with the growing complexity
-of his convolutions and their manifested emotions. This is not to
-claim that a more modern man or woman would not find sexual selection
-of value by reason of his or her more pleasing or commanding facial
-expression. That the initiative of these alluring modifications was
-simple and Lamarckian cannot be gainsaid, whatever the fruit of the
-finished process may be to-day. We know in our own experience that many
-a handsome person with good features and little expression is often
-unsuccessful in the matrimonial market, when another with defective
-features and a fine, delicate, attractive expression takes the prize.
-So the early story of the formation of muscles of expression is seen to
-be a page in the evolution of the indifferent.
-
-
-The Fly-shaker Muscle.
-
-The panniculus carnosus, of which the facial muscles are part, is a
-great system of musculature found in various animal forms, and it
-furnishes a field for study of the evolution of the indifferent and the
-initial stages of the formation of a muscle. This is a servant of the
-brain in a more indirect manner than the facial muscles, but it, too,
-arises in obedience to the integrative action of the brain. The early
-specialisation of it need not be considered here. It may be considered
-unwarrantable to claim the great Fly-shaker muscle of Ungulates as an
-indifferent structure, but the arguments by which the Pan-Selectionist
-would annex it to his sceptre, as a triumph of the minute care of the
-organism by selection, rest only on the assumption that he knows how
-it has become an adaptation to the life of its possessors. This is
-now more than it used to be a matter of opinion since the publication
-of Professor Bateson’s revolutionary _Materials_, and others beside
-he have reserved to themselves the liberty of doubting the accepted
-explanations by the tangled path of adaptation. The statement of
-Weismann, “Everything is adapted in animated nature” was necessary
-to his theory of germinal selection, but it admits of extensive and
-numerous exceptions in view of the fact that so much of adaptation is
-partial and imperfect. If he had said that _every organism_ as a being
-is adapted he would have been nearer the truth, but that every tissue
-and part of an organism is adapted is demonstrably untrue. A large
-number of organisms, themselves apparently well adapted, flourish well
-enough and reproduce their kind in spite of faulty and rudimentary
-tissues and parts. If it were not so we should have seen little of
-progress except what come under the laws of genetics,--a distributional
-matter. Even the super-Geddes could not distribute what was not there,
-for he could not deal with raw materials and change them by a fairy
-wand into manufactured articles. In the great field of domesticated
-plants and animals man has to find not only some mutation or some
-dominant strain and breed it to his will, but to cultivate the domestic
-qualities of animals and employ cultural conditions for plants. There
-is doubt expressed as to the length of time or numbers of generations
-during which these cultural conditions can extend, but Professor
-Thiselton Dyer many years ago made the remarkable statement as to
-plants:--“While specific stability under constant conditions appears
-to be the rule in nature, it is widely different in cultivation. When
-a plant is brought under cultural conditions it maintains its type for
-some time unaltered, then gives way and becomes practically plastic.
-From my experience at Kew, where I saw the process continually going
-on, I hazarded the generalisation that any species, annually reproduced
-from seed, could be broken down in five years. During that period
-specific stability, though menaced, tends to maintain itself. Darwin
-was well aware of this.”[76]
-
- [76] _Nature_, November 28th, 1907, p. 78.
-
-Most biologists from time to time betray the fact that their minds can
-only be relieved from an intolerable burden, in accounting for the
-numberless adaptations in organisms, by the view that many of them
-originate through factors of use and stimuli from environment, and
-at first are entirely indifferent as regards the survival or better
-mating of their possessors. To which the stern opponent replies, “What
-is there to show that in the existing scheme of things there is any
-provision made which will minister relief to the burden of your little
-mind?” To which, “answer came there none,” except a subdued reflection
-that everything we see of living, striving nature around us has a
-most provoking way of speaking to us of daily, hourly and incessant
-action and reaction, stimulus and response, and that those who view the
-process thus do seem to bring some order into what would otherwise be
-chaos--and yet all the while someone is being grossly deceived! This
-“may be magnificent but it is not proof,” some will say, and will ask
-if the older observers of the heavenly bodies were not wrong in their
-complete conviction that the sun went round the earth. This digression
-introduces the role of the fly-shaker. If I am told that this muscular
-sheet in a cow or horse to-day is a relic of raw material inherited
-from a remote ungulate stock little evolved, and that it contributes in
-hot weather in the time of flies to the comfort and better mental state
-of the cow or horse, that it shall be able to keep those enemies at
-bay, and that the muscle is kept well in order by two or three months’
-practice in each year I can understand in a measure its presence
-to-day. It has an efficient ally in the sweeping tail of a cow and
-that of a wild horse, and both of these weapons are further aided by
-the mobile ears of cow and horse, and the stretching movements of its
-head and neck. Thus the body of a cow, for example, is like a map with
-four territories delimited, that of the fly-shaker, the tail, the ears
-and the head and neck. Between these offensive weapons a cow is better
-defended against flies than a European in India by his punkah, or China
-was by its great wall, or Britain by the wall of _Vallum_ of Hadrian
-or the wall of Severus, which with forts and garrisons was designed
-to protect it. Speaking in allegory the evolving brain of an early
-ungulate occupies the position of an ancient Chinese Emperor or a Roman
-Proconsul in Britain in its provision against “barbarians,” either
-Asiatic or Celtic. The resemblance goes further, for no experienced
-Roman General, whatever the Celestial minds in China may have thought,
-would fear that the loss of a sector of his wall would imperil the army
-of occupation in Britain or the fabric of the Roman Empire. But as, in
-the long run it contributes to one’s welfare to be comfortable, and
-even the domestic ungulate is somewhat of a hedonist, a well-developed
-fly-shaker is maintained, the occasional use of which in winter and
-frequent use in summer and the active purposeful switching of tail,
-twitching of ears and jerking of head have their limited value. Here
-there is ample room for diverse opinion and the opponent will ask
-with some degree of force how we know that there is no more benefit
-to the cow from its fly-shaker than a mild degree of comfort, and may
-assert that the possession and use of it may have survival-value by its
-defence against deadly parasites. We do not know, nor does he, but it
-would seem that except for the tsetse fly in Africa the plague of flies
-does little to an ungulate beyond irritating its brain, and if he had
-no fly-shaker, he would still be able to reach a considerable distance
-with his tail, ears and head over the irritated regions. The question
-of survival indeed resolves itself into the vigour and energy of his
-integrating brain.
-
-To this view of the function and origin of the panniculus carnosus the
-busy systematist and student of genetics may refuse to listen, and pass
-to the order of the day, but I submit that in stating a position it is
-useful to put forward a crude example in which the issue is plain, and
-which subsumes an immense number of smaller and more subtle cases, and
-in a region where the most hardy rebel will not dispute altogether the
-sway of _personal_ selection. It is a question here of the manner in
-which, speaking in metaphor, the early ungulate first set about making
-his eolithic or palæolithic weapons and fashioned them into what we see
-to-day. “Forged by the incident of use” and habit meets the story of
-the fly-shaker far better than some mutation arising in far back ages
-or some dominant variation, or “useful variation within the germ.” At
-any rate Lamarck finds the raw material to hand, and there are supplied
-adequate noci-cipient stimuli with response, in regions where these are
-most active under the dominating action of the brain.
-
-
-Other Muscles.
-
-In the skeletal muscles of the primates many muscles offer themselves
-for consideration as examples of inherited structures arising under
-the stimuli of altered function, and only a few of these will be dealt
-with. It might appear sufficient to those who yield, perhaps too
-willingly, to authority, if I were here to try and prove my point by
-quoting the statements of one of the greatest anatomists of our time
-and country, and so pass on--but it is to be feared authority cannot
-carry one far in a dispute so important. Macalister says, however, “The
-anatomical arrangement of the muscular system is the physical exponent
-of habitual actions and those actions are the chief factors in moulding
-the bones and in regulating the position of the somato-pleural vessels
-and nerves”--and “the locomotory function and consequent utility of the
-trunk-muscles were lost when the early vertebrates became terrestrial.
-In higher vertebrates, and notably in man, the mobility of several
-regions of the vertebral column differs both in degree and kind: the
-outgrowing vertebrate processes show consequent variations, and _the
-muscular system is varied accordingly_.”[77] Also “as both origins
-and insertions (of muscles) are the creatures of habit, they are both
-equally variable with variation of function; but, as in higher animals
-the kind of work to be done is more constant than its degree, so,
-as a rule, insertions alter less than origins.”[78] Macalister, at
-any rate, held a very clear dynamical rather than static view of the
-making of the muscular system. But as the days of authority are in a
-certain sense gone for ever, and we live under the reign of experiment,
-research and questioning, every biologist, within certain limits, does
-what is right in his own eyes; there is no King in these days.
-
- [77] _Op. cit._, p. 71. (Italics not in original.)
-
- [78] _Op. cit._, p. 73.
-
-Skeletal muscles are structures in which, if ever, the factors of use
-and habit and disuse would be shown, because muscle is a tissue, with
-highly active metabolism, so that it has been called “an expensive
-tissue” for the animal to maintain.
-
-
-Muscles of Primates.
-
-This physiological fact agrees with the anatomical results of an
-extended study in the musculature of primates, especially of man, and
-Hartmann’s book on Anthropoid Apes supplies abundant evidence of the
-variations of the muscles of these animals, which are not at all more
-striking than their differing modes of life would suggest. It would be
-wearisome to quote all these, but a single muscle may be given as an
-example of a special ape’s muscle with variable distribution. It is
-called _latissimo-condyloideus_ and starts from the insertion of the
-_latissimus dorsi_ and passes along the inner aspect of the humerus
-for a variable distance. In the _baboon_ and others it goes to be
-inserted into the inner inter-muscular septum and the internal condyle
-of the humerus, in the _orang_ to the condyle, and in the _gibbon_ to
-the centre of the shaft. As to origin it proceeds from the insertion of
-the _latissimus dorsi_, but in the _gorilla_ from the coracoid process
-of the scapula and from two portions of the _pectoralis minor_, and is
-finally attached to the inter-muscular septum between the _brachialis
-anticus_ and the _triceps_; in the _chimpanzee_ it divides into an
-anterior and posterior portion, the former being attached to the inner
-condyle, the latter to the middle and inner head of the _triceps_;
-in the _orang_ it divides similarly, but in one particular example
-it had an anterior thin portion attached by a slender tendon to the
-coracoid process of the scapula and a posterior portion arose from the
-_latissimus dorsi_; in the _white-handed gibbon_ it arose from the
-function of tendons from the _latissimus dorsi_ and _teres major_ and
-was inserted into the fascia between the tendon of the _biceps_ and the
-_brachialis anticus_.
-
-Such a divergence as this within the strict limits of an anthropoid
-muscle, concerned in the various forms of climbing action of these
-apes, can only suggest an origin from a divergent set of functions and
-small details in their respective modes of climbing.
-
-
-Hand and Foot of Man.
-
-Both the hand and foot of man supply a small muscle for consideration
-in the present connection of habit with formation of new structure.
-If man be regarded as of simian origin there are not as many entirely
-new muscles in his equipment as would be expected from his departure
-from the habits of simian ancestors, though many muscles are found to
-be altered in size and shifted from the ancestral positions. But the
-human hand presents one suggestive example of a little muscle not found
-in any other animal, the special small extensor of the thumb, arising
-from the interosseous membrane between the radius and ulna, and from
-the radius, being segmented off from the _extensor of the metacarpal of
-the thumb_, and it accompanies this muscle and tendon to be inserted
-into the first phalanx of the thumb, and is peculiar to man. It can be
-easily seen at the radial border of the well-known “snuff-box” which is
-produced by it when it is fully extended. This is of course a muscle of
-small importance to the functions of the hand, and its appearance in
-man can only be supposed to be a subordinate detail easily derived from
-the _greater extensor_ by reason of the more delicate adjustment to
-complicated movements of the hand under the directing power of higher
-cerebral development.
-
-
-Peroneus Tertius.
-
-The foot of man possesses the small _peroneus tertius_ which was
-referred to as one of the evertors of the foot concerned in the
-construction of his plantar arch. Macalister and Professor Keith both
-speak of it as peculiar to man, and the latter refers to it at some
-length,[79] the whole passage being worth quoting here. “Although
-the evolution of the human method of progression was attended by a
-profound alteration in the form and action of every muscle and bone
-with lower limbs, yet this great transformation was produced without
-the appearance of any really new element. One new muscle--the _peroneus
-tertius_--did appear, and the history of its evolution throws an
-interesting sidelight on the origin of new structures. It arises by
-the outer fibres of the common extensor muscles of the toes being
-separated. In all the anthropoids the feet are so articulated at the
-ankle-joints that the soles are directed towards each other, and only
-the outer edge of the foot comes to rest on the ground when the animal
-tries to stand. The feet have a tendency to assume a similar position
-in children at birth. The advantage of a muscle, such as the _peroneus
-tertius_, is apparent in the human foot, for it tends to raise the
-outer border of the foot, so that the sole is properly applied to the
-ground. If we examine the muscles which, rising from the front of
-the leg, cross the ankle-joint to end on the back of the foot on the
-toes of fifty men, we shall find every stage in the evolution of this
-muscle. In one man at least it will be undeveloped; in two or perhaps
-three it will be represented by a part of the tendon of the extensor
-muscle of the little toe, which in place of ending entirely on the
-toe sends a part to end on the metatarsal bone of the little toe. In
-only forty of the fifty men will the _peroneus tertius_ be found quite
-isolated from the parent muscle--_the extensor communis digitorum_, and
-to have a distinct origin from the fibula in the leg, and a separate
-insertion to the base of the fifth metatarsal bone in the foot. In a
-series of fifty specimens every stage in the isolation of this new
-muscle will be seen. It has never been found in any anthropoid, and is
-more often absent or undeveloped in African than European races.”
-
- [79] _The Human Body_, p. 92.
-
-To this excellent account I have only to add one comment. It can
-hardly be an accident or without significance that this special human
-evertor of the foot concerned in the construction of the plantar arch
-is “often absent or undeveloped” in African races, which are well-known
-in some groups to have adapted themselves to a form of foot which shows
-no plantar arch, being normally flat-footed. In this small field of
-observation, a mere plot of lentils like that which Shammah defended of
-old, there is set forth a mimic battlefield, and it is not difficult
-to see that the forces at work can owe allegiance to one and one only
-of various commanders. The problem as to the origin of the _peroneus
-tertius_ would no more attract the Mendelian than did the trousseau
-and approaching marriage of Caddie Jellyby attract the far-away gaze
-of her mother, fixed upon the world of Borria-boula-gha, and, for that
-matter, de Vries would hardly pay it more attention--to him it would
-be indifferent; whereas Weismann would have as much to say about it
-as about the little toe of man, which furnished for him and Herbert
-Spencer such fruitful material for debate many years ago. This muscle
-resembles the results of some of Michael Angelo’s first attempts at
-sculpture, thrown aside perhaps in his place of work and from time to
-time taken up, rough-hewn again and again and finally shaped into a
-form far from perfect, but with the value and teaching of a failure
-for him who was some day to outshine all modern rivals. If the history
-of this muscle be not one of initiative in evolution through the
-factor of use and habit the Pan-Selectionist must do the best he can
-with an incalculable number of “trials and errors,” and must suppose
-that, rather than allow this small territory to the neo-Lamarckian, a
-long series of man’s ancestors have been making experiments for the
-benefit of man’s walking power under the guidance of selection with
-an insignificant muscle whose only function is that of aiding in the
-eversion of the foot, and that in the rudimentary condition described
-by Professor Keith it had selective value. No one who was not committed
-to a dominating theory could hesitate for a moment which of the two
-alternative views of the origin of the _peroneus tertius_ he would
-choose. Dr. Barclay Smith speaks in the paper referred to above of the
-_extensor brevis pollicis_, or _minor_, as a muscle of extremely late
-appearance, and as “peculiarly human,” and says all the evidence points
-to its being a segmentation product of the _extensor ossis metacarpi
-pollicis_, its appearance being foreshadowed in the anthropoid by an
-extension of that muscle on to the proximal phalanx of the thumb.
-
-It is not without interest to the thesis before us to read the rather
-bewildering story of the early life of a very insignificant muscle such
-as the small extensor of the thumb of man.
-
-As illustrations of the moulding and pruning of perfected muscles it
-may be remembered that, as Macalister says, “portions of muscles may
-also become detached and degenerated so as to act as ligaments,” and
-“the adult muscular system of man bears everywhere traces of earlier
-cleavings and subsequent fusions, partial disappearances and local
-outgrowths.”[80] This passage recalls one in which Huxley says in
-watching certain phases of development you can almost see the hidden
-artist at work, and here the sculptor may be pictured in his chipping,
-trimming, rejecting and finally shaping, some creation of his brain;
-and from a biological point of view a vision of the processes of use
-and disuse may be obtained. Professor Keith also speaks often of the
-migrations of muscular attachments in a way which agrees with the
-passage quoted from Macalister.
-
- [80] _Op. cit._, p. 73
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIII.
-
-INNERVATION OF THE HUMAN SKIN.
-
-
-For at least seventy years the surface of the human skin has been
-the subject of so much physiological observation and experiment that
-Professor Sherrington considers the literature connected with it to
-be probably greater than in any other branch of physiology. Most of
-this study centres round the skin as a receptive field and problems of
-the nervous system. It is easy to see why this should be in the case
-of an organ so great as the skin, covering all the other structures
-and organs and exposed through ages of evolution to the vicissitudes
-of an inconceivable number of stimuli. And one outcome of this study
-is to show that, metaphorically speaking, the skin is a mosaic, and
-not the confused and blurred production of a child of four years old
-who has been given a sheet of paper and a paint-box. There is order
-in this field, and even without calling in final causes, plan and
-purpose. Beside the protective function exercised by the skin it plays
-a large part, through its nervous endowment, in the processes by which
-the brain is made aware of the surrounding phenomena, thus conveying
-intelligence to the centre of life only less important than that of the
-special senses. It is maintained here that the result of the various
-physical stimuli, of which pain, cold, warmth and touch are the chief,
-is that certain functions and structures of the skin have arisen in
-response to them.
-
-This is, no doubt, to beg the question of origin, and if the balance of
-evidence be seen to be against this view the order of events would need
-to be stated differently. But the position is clear, whether correct
-or not, and if it be shown to be erroneous it will at least have good
-“lighthouse value.”
-
-
-Observed Facts.
-
-Briefly stated the facts of the innervation of the skin are of two
-orders, anatomical and physiological; the former examined by the aid
-of the microscope, the latter by physiological experiments of a varied
-kind. The chief aspect in which these are viewed here is the mode of
-distribution of these two groups of fact, and it is held that this
-strongly suggests without proving it, the alleged mode of origin of
-both.
-
-
-TABLE I.--_Distribution of Touch Corpuscles_:--
-
- In the deep connective tissue of the dermis there are:--
- In the thumb about 70.
- " " index finger 105.
- " " middle finger 60.
- " " whole hand 500.
- They are numerous over finger joints and front of elbow joint.
- In all 530 about the joints of the upper extremity.
- 317 about those of the lower extremity.
-
-TABLE II.--(_From Schäfer’s Text Book of Physiology_):--
-
- Average of Meissner’s corpuscles to each square millimetre, which is
- approximately one five hundredth part of a square inch:--
-
- Palmar surface of distal phalanx of index finger 21
- Palmar surface of second phalanx of index finger 8
- Palmar surface of first phalanx of index finger 4
- Palmar surface of metacarpus of little finger 2
- Plantar surface of distal phalanx of great toe 7
- Middle of sole of foot 2
- Flexor surface of forearm in each sq. mm. 1
- Distal end of flexor surface of forearm in each sq. mm.:--
- 1 to each 6 sq. mm. approximately.
-
- * Absent from the cornea, and conjunctiva of the upper eyelid and
- from the glans penis.
-
-
-TABLE III.--_Distribution of Touch Spots_:--
-
- These must be distinguished, of course, from the touch _corpuscles_
- of the preceding list and the subjective element in the study of them
- must be borne in mind.
-
- If an area, as of the calf of the leg, be prepared, by cutting short
- the small hairs, and examined, it is found that there are about 15
- touch spots in each square centimetre, which is about one-fifth of a
- square inch.
-
- In another area so treated the hairs are counted and the following
- result is given:--
-
- 1. On the dorsal surface of the forearm 78 touch spots are found in
- an area containing 15 hairs.
-
- 2. On the flexor surface of the forearm 147 touch spots are found in
- an area containing 22 hairs.
-
- 3. On the scalp 66 touch spots are found in an area containing 38
- hairs.
-
- Schäfer says: “An area of the dorsum of the distal phalanx of a
- finger contains about seven times as many touch spots as an equal
- area between the shoulders. Regions poor in touch spots are the
- flexor surface of the upper arm, the upper third of the thigh, the
- leg above the inner malleolus, the neck, and in general the skin over
- subcutaneous surfaces of bone.”[81]
-
- [81] Schäfer’s _Text-Book of Physiology_.
-
-TABLE IV.--_Distribution of Cold and Warmth Sensations._
-
- The Scale includes twelve grades of sensation in cold, and eight in
- warmth sensations, and commences with the regions which yield the
- maximal intensity of sensation.
-
- _Cold Sensations._
-
- 1. Tips of fingers and toes, malleoli, ankle.
-
- 2. Other regions of digits, tip of nose, olecranon.
-
- 3. Chin, palm, gums, glabella (a small central area just above bridge
- of nose).
-
- 4. Occiput, patella, wrist.
-
- 5. Clavicle, neck, forehead, tongue.
-
- 6. Buttock, upper eyelid.
-
- 7. Lower eyelid, popliteal space, sole, cheek.
-
- 8. Inner aspect of thigh, arm above elbow.
-
- 9. Intercostal spaces along region of axillary line.
-
- 10. Areola of mamma.
-
- 11. Nipple, flank.
-
- 12. Certain areas of loins and abdomen.
-
- _Warmth Sensations._
-
- Absent from lower gums, mucosa of cheek at second lower molar and
- cornea.
-
- 1. Tips of fingers and toes, cavity of mouth, conjunctiva, patella.
-
- 2. Remaining surfaces of digits, middle of forehead, olecranon.
-
- 3. Glabella, chin, clavicle.
-
- 4. Palm, buttock, popliteal space.
-
- 5. Neck.
-
- 6. Back.
-
- 7. Lower eyelid, cheek.
-
- 8. Nipple, loin.
-
-
-TABLE V.--_Distribution of Cold and Warmth Spots._
-
- By stimulation of cold or warmth spots there is shown, not only
- the quality and quantity of the stimulus, but the locality. When
- punctiform stimuli are applied to pairs of cold spots and pairs of
- warmth spots marked “local sign” is found. This Goldscheider showed
- to be higher for cold than warmth spots.
-
- Cold Spots. Warmth Spots
- Palm .8 mm. Do. 2 mm.
- Cheek, Chin and
- forehead 0.8 mm. Do. 5.0 mm.
- Upper arm 2 mm. Do. 3 mm.
- Back of hand, leg,
- thigh 3 mm. Do. 4 mm.
- Forearm 3 mm. Do. 3 mm.
- Back, chest, abdomen 2 mm. Do. 5 mm.
-
- Thus on the palm of the hand two pairs of cold spots .8 mm. apart
- are distinguished by this punctiform stimulation, whereas on this
- surface two pairs of warmth spots are only distinguished when they
- are 2 mm. apart on the cheek, chin or forehead and cold spots are
- distinguished when .8 mm. apart on the same surfaces warmth spots
- when 5 mm. apart.
-
-
-TABLE VI.--Average lowest distances in millimetres on different areas
- of skin where two points are felt as two or minimal distances from
- which double sensation is obtained.
-
- Skin Region. Adult Man. Boy aged Twelve.
- Tip of tongue 1.1 1.1
- Palmar surface of tip of
- finger (index) 2.3 1.7
- Red surface of lip 4.5 3.9
- Palmar surface of 2nd
- phalanx of finger 4.5 3.9
- Dorsal surface of 3rd phalanx
- of finger 6.8 4.5
- Side of tongue 9.0 6.8
- Tongue 27 mm. from tip 9.0 6.8
- Plantar surface of distal
- phalanx of great toe 11.3 6.8
- Surface of palm of hand 11.3 9.0
- Dorsal surface 2nd phalanx
- of finger 11.3 9.0
- Forehead 22.6 18.0
- Back of ankle 22.6 20.3
- Back of hand 31.6 22.6
- Forearm and leg 40.6 36.1
- Dorsal surface of foot 40.6 36.1
- Surface on outer border of
- sternum 45.1 38.8
- Back of neck 54.1 36.1
- Middle of back 67.1 31.6 to 40.6
- Upper arm and thigh 67.1 31.6 to 40.6
-
-
-TABLE VII.--(_According to Weber’s Law._) Average differences in
- different regions of skin of sensation of pressure.
-
- Forehead }
- Lips }
- Dorsum of tongue } 1/30 to 1/40
- Cheeks }
- Temple }
-
- Finger nail }
- Dorsal surface of forearm, leg, }
- and thigh }
- Dorsal surface of hand }
- Dorsal surface of 1st and 2nd } 1/10 to 1/20
- phalanges of fingers }
- Palmar surface of finger }
- Palmar surface of hand }
- Flexor surface of forearm }
-
- Dorsum of foot }
- Dorsal surface of toes }
- Plantar surface of toes } More than 1/10
- Sole of foot }
- Surface of leg and thigh }
-
- Thus on the forehead differences of pressure are distinguished when
- they are increased by 1/30, whereas on the dorsum of the foot they
- have to be increased by 1/10 to be distinguished. This is carried out
- by impact of little balls of a light substances such as pith.
-
-
-It may be remarked of these tabulated results that on the one hand
-they are the results of work extending over some seventy years and
-numerous observers, and on the other that, broadly looked at, _they all
-tell the same story_ of stimuli in their incidence on the skin--those
-of pain, cold, warmth and touch. There is also one thread of origin
-running through all, and that is that the regions most exposed to the
-four stimuli show the highest development of specialised function and
-structure.
-
-
-Some Aspects of the Nervous System.
-
-It has been said with some truth that the telephone has struck a
-mortal blow at such serenity of life as the Juggernaut Car of modern
-progress has left us. But if it has done nothing else it has furnished
-the physiologist with a good illustration when he sets out to expound
-the functions and arrangement of the elements of the central nervous
-system and its peripheral expansion. In addition to this general
-light upon a great matter the vivid experience of many an Englishman
-during the recent years of war adds point to a subordinate phase of
-the general story of the telephone, for it represents my contention
-as to the origin or initiative of the sensorial areas of the mosaic
-under consideration. Modern persons may be divided into two classes,
-those who want and those who do not want the telephone, and the former
-may be sub-divided into A, those who can, and B those who cannot
-get it (or could not). A and B from the present point of view may
-be termed Receptors, though to call the B people by that name is to
-speak Hibernically. With this war-time experience in our minds, we
-may picture a vast period of time during which the stimuli of pain,
-cold, warmth and touch were hammering on the skin both before it
-began to lose its chief hairy covering, and after that process had
-left man still a hairy animal, but with much-diminished amount of his
-ancient heritage. These stimuli fell upon the skin very much as the
-class A, among telephone receptors, spent numerous fruitless stimuli
-on Postmasters-General, Ministers in Parliament and in “short” bitter
-letters to our bright little _Daily Pope_, and who yet found themselves
-not “connected up,” as the saying goes. There is no knowing how long
-it was before they had enough effect on the delicate nerve fibrils
-struggling up into the epidermis and produced receptors or were
-“connected up” to the exchange or central nervous system. I am inclined
-to liken the pain stimuli to the short letters referred to, the cold
-and warmth stimuli to those addressed to the Postmasters-General and
-the touch stimuli to those which fell upon Ministers at question time.
-
-Another comparison of the peripheral portion of the nervous system to
-common things has at times forced itself upon my mind when reflecting
-on the stimuli which are continually assaulting the skin, as I have
-watched on the Needles’ Downs a flock of sheep on a summer evening
-returning to their fold. As the sun begins to set they are scattered
-over the western end of the Downs, still cropping the short grass
-clothing those chalk and flint slopes which from immemorial time has
-alone flourished there. They wander singly or in small groups on such
-parts of the slope as the intrusive golfer still allows, and gradually
-fall into larger groups which follow somewhat indefinite paths. As
-they move further and further towards home they are seen to follow
-one another in single file on some score or more of clearer paths,
-and finally converge into one well-beaten and broad path until they
-descend the northern slope and pass out by a single roadway into which
-a gate opens, and so reach the haven where they would be. Here one has
-a simple picture of the common stimuli of the skin, at first indefinite
-and ineffectual, by their cumulative action producing an individual
-receptor and its nerve connection with the central system.
-
-Professor Leonard Hill[82] also gives a view of the general action of
-the nervous system and compares it to control of the police force. He
-supposes a murder to have been committed in a village, and that the
-local policeman telegraphs to the local town ordering the roads to
-be searched. The policeman is the tactile sense-organ, the telegraph
-wire is the sensory nerve, the telegraph office in the local town
-is the spinal cord, from this office a message is sent to the town
-police-station by another wire and the police are set in motion. The
-police are the muscles, the wire that sets them in motion in the motor
-nerve. The message is also sent to neighbouring towns and to London,
-that is to say, other local offices (parts of the spinal cord) and the
-head office (the brain) are informed of the crime or sensory impulse.
-The central office in London directs the operations controlling the
-local police office. The whole order of events need not be here
-described because it goes beyond my immediate purpose, but it is enough
-to say that attached to the head office are the cleverest detectives
-(higher sense-organs) and in these are kept records of past crimes,
-lines of action of the police, and success or non-success of their
-investigations.
-
- [82] _Manual of Human Physiology._ Leonard Hill, p. 369.
-
-Following on this picture he speaks of the way in which conscious
-actions become automatic and makes a statement to the effect that
-“_There is evidence to show that the axons_ (or processes of the
-nerve-cells which extend unbroken from nerve-cell to its termination)
-_become covered with a adulated coat as each new tract is formed. Thus
-the structure, like the habit, becomes fixed_”--and--“_It would appear
-as if, by repeated experiences, tracts and pathways must be beaten
-through the nervous system_”[83] (Italics not in original).
-
- [83] _Op. cit._, p. 371.
-
-Beside this I place a statement from Professor Graham Kerr as to his
-view of the development of peripheral nerve-trunks. He is reviewing
-the “outgrowth” theory of His, the “chain cell” theory of Balfour, and
-the “Primitive Continuity” theory of Hensen, and expresses himself as
-follows: “_It is suggested that the development of the actual nerve
-fibril is simply the coming into view of a pathway produced by the
-repeated passage of nerve impulses over a given route._”[84] (Italics
-not in original.)
-
- [84] _Text Book of Embryology._ Vertebrata with the exception of
- Mammalia. Vol. II., 1919, p. 106.
-
-A passage from Professor McDougall’s _Physiological Psychology_ may
-also be referred to at more length than it was in Chapter III.,
-page 25. Speaking of the automatization of voluntarily acquired actions
-which have been explained by the view that purely reflex actions
-carried out by mechanisms of the spinal level were also originally
-acquired by our original ancestors as voluntary actions, he says, “This
-view is usually associated with the name of Wundt, who has forcibly
-advocated it. It implies, of course, the assumption that acquired
-characters are in some degree transmitted from one generation to
-another, a proposition which most biologists at the present time are
-inclined to deny because they cannot conceive how such transmissions
-can be effected. Nevertheless, the rejection of this view leaves
-us with insuperable difficulties when we attempt to account for
-the evolution of the nervous system, and there are no established
-facts with which it is incompatible. If, therefore, we accept this
-view we shall regard the congenital neural dispositions, both those
-that determine pure reflexes and those that determine instinctive
-actions, as having been acquired and consolidated under the guidance
-of individual experience, with the co-operation, to a degree which we
-cannot determine, of natural selection.”[85]
-
- [85] _Physiological Psychology._ W. McDougall, p. 156 (1911).
-
-These three statements from a physiologist, a zoologist, and a
-psychologist, all of great eminence, though they differ in particular
-problems studied, tell very strongly in favour of the position here put
-forward as to initiative in the production of specialised innervation
-of the skin.
-
-
-Origin of Cold, Warm, Pain and Touch Spots.
-
-The hair-clad skin of primitive man provided ample raw material for
-the eventual differentiation of both end-organs and sensorial areas
-which is found to-day. Not only did he possess what is called Common
-Sensation in his skin but in the individual hairs lay a delicate
-tactile structure, which, though probably inferior in delicacy, serves
-a similar purpose to that of the vibrissæ on the muzzle of Felidæ. Each
-hair, being deeply inserted into the skin and supplied with fine nerve
-fibrils, when it is bent, acts as a lever communicating an impulse
-to an afferent nerve trunk In an animal covered with thick hair the
-sensory impulse conveyed might be exceedingly delicate, but, from the
-nature of the case, of much more limited range than in one like man in
-whom the hair is so greatly diminished in length and thickness.
-
-It would be fruitless to speculate as to which of these four forms of
-stimuli was the earliest to become effective in developing man.
-
-
-Cold and Pain.
-
-Two of them, cold and pain, may be termed _nocuous_; one, that of
-touch, _useful_, and one, that of warmth, _indifferent_. If it be true,
-as Professor Scott Elliott states,[86] that man’s earliest home had a
-climate which “lies between the regular tropical, with wet, steaming,
-impassable jungles, and the colder temperate zone, so affording chance
-of acclimatisation in both directions,” the stimuli of cold would even
-then not be wanting, however much they increased in severity when he
-passed through glacial periods; but wherever, whenever, and at whatever
-time he first became man he had to tread the Via Dolorosa in the course
-of his hard and eventful life, and must have been well accustomed in
-all regions of his skin to the stimuli of pain, working, as he did, for
-his living, and fighting for it and his mate, with varied and powerful
-enemies. Though it is correct to call both these fundamental stimuli
-“nocuous,” this is all a matter of degree, and both the stimulus of
-moderate cold, raising blood-pressure and activating metabolism, and
-that of minor pains, would do little else than good in his education
-for the higher terrestrial life to which he had descended. If he was
-to learn effectually to take care of himself the discipline of both
-moderate cold and pain would be as valuable to him then as in its
-measure it is to his descendant to-day. The triumphs of medicine and
-surgery could never have appeared if it were not for the beneficent
-warning voice of pain that so generally accompanies disease.
-
- [86] _Prehistoric Man and His Story_, p. 92.
-
-Through long ages of exposure to the stimuli of cold and pain came
-response in the form of cold and pain spots, after minute struggles
-between the static conservative tissues of the skin and the dynamic
-force of repeated assaults upon them. In due time then receptors
-appeared and each became connected with the central organs, by which
-means better adapted motor reactions against “nocuous” cold and pain
-became possible. In 1900 Professor Sherrington summed up the evidence
-in Schafer’s work on Physiology against the existence “of separate
-afferent fibres with their specific end-organs entrusted specifically
-with carrying painful impressions to a pain centre,” but Professor
-Starling in his later work on Human Physiology speaks of “a distinct
-sense of pain,” probably subserved by a distinct set of nerve fibres,
-but for the present purpose it is not necessary that agreement on such
-a problem should be reached, for it is alone with pain _spots_ that we
-are concerned. He also points out that on the one hand the cornea is
-sensitive to only one of the four stimuli in question, that is, pain,
-and on the other that the surface of the glans penis is sensitive to
-cold and pain, but tactile sensation and warmth sensations are almost
-entirely absent.
-
-_Touch._--This form of stimulus and its response can only be reckoned
-as useful to the organism, except that it may be, and often must be
-indifferent. The great number of the touch spots can be understood
-when it is declared by Professor Sherrington that almost invariably
-there are one or more touch spots close to the emergence of each
-hair,[87] and that they are very numerous also on the palmar and
-plantar surfaces of the hand and foot. Of the four forms of cutaneous
-stimuli those of touch are the only kind that have so far been proved
-to have specialised corpuscles, the other three having developed the
-physiological equivalent of cold, pain and warmth _spots_.
-
- [87] _Schafer_, p. 922.
-
-_Warmth spots_ are decidedly the least numerous of the four, those of
-pain being, as stated by Professor Sherrington, the most numerous. It
-is obvious that unless thermal stimuli become somewhat excessive they
-hardly can be described as “stimuli,” being more or less neutral in
-their action on a warm-blooded animal. This cannot be entirely so,
-because it has been shown quite conclusively that warmth spots _do_
-exist, though much less numerous than others. There is a significant
-fact as to thermal reaction and that is that there are no pure
-_heat_ spots like those of cold, for the stimuli of about 49° C
-are so associated with those of pain that warmth spots alone are
-distinguished, and among primitive man no stimuli of heat could impinge
-on his skin, until he had learned the use of fire, more powerful than
-those of solar heat.
-
-Such stimuli of heat as the rays of the sun would occasionally
-discharge on the skin would resolve themselves into the general
-stimulus of pain, and in this direction a far shorter initiation
-occurred than with any of the four normal cutaneous stimuli. The fact,
-at any rate, of there being no _heat_ spots is to be noted.
-
-It remains now, having quoted three writers eminent in physiology,
-psychology and zoology in support of the modest thesis here put
-forward for me to appeal to the authority of the facts contained in the
-tables for such evidence as they can give, and to give a summary of
-this.
-
-
-Summary.
-
-1. Table I. shows that the structures known as touch corpuscles are
-distributed on those parts of the skin where the stimuli of touch fall
-most and in proportion to the degree in which those parts are employed
-in tactile discrimination; thus, most of all on the index finger (with
-the exception of the tip of the tongue) next on the thumb and less on
-the middle finger. There are 530 of these corpuscles to the upper and
-317 to the lower extremity.
-
-2. Table II. bears out the same conclusion, the average number of
-corpuscles to a square millimetre being twenty-one on the terminal,
-eight on the second and four on the first phalanges of the index
-finger, whereas on the foot there are seven on the great toe much
-exposed to stimuli and only two on the middle of the sole of the
-foot, which is little exposed. The absence of them from the cornea
-and conjunctiva, protected by quick and powerful reflexes from such
-stimuli, and from the (normally) covered glans penis is in accordance
-with the other results.
-
-3. Table III. dealing with touch spots, shows that these are nearly
-twice as numerous on the flexor as the dorsal surface of the forearm;
-and nearly five times as numerous as on the scalp, where tactile
-stimuli are few, and that the distal phalanx of a finger contains about
-seven times as many as an area between the shoulders. The regions poor
-in touch spots are shown to be those where relatively few tactile
-stimuli can fall.
-
-4. Table IV. gives cold and warmth sensations graded according to the
-delicacy with which they are perceived in many regions of the skin.
-The cold sensations are best distinguished on the parts normally most
-exposed to cold, as the tips of fingers, malleoli, tip of nose, chin,
-patella, wrist, and least on the protected areas, inner side of thigh,
-flank, loins and abdomen. The warmth sensations are best distinguished
-on the regions on which the stimuli of warmth has most frequently
-fallen, tips of fingers and toes, cavity of mouth, palm of hand, less
-so on the neck and loin. And the striking fact is noted that warmth
-sensations are not felt in the lower gums, the inside of the cheek at
-a certain level and the cornea, which again is protected from these
-stimuli by its efficient reflex, whereas to the gums and inside of the
-cheek most warmth stimuli have not been “stimuli” at all.
-
-5. Table V. also gives results of the mode of distribution of cold
-and warmth spots, examined with punctiform stimuli. The “local sign”
-for cold is higher than that for warmth spots, and two of these
-are distinguished as double when only 0.8 millimetres apart on the
-palm, cheek, chin and forehead, whereas on the upper arm, back and
-thigh, they are only distinguished as double when separated by two
-millimetres, and this distance is the minimum at which warmth spots are
-distinguished as two, that is 2 mm. on the palm, and five on cheek,
-chin, forehead and back. This tells the same story as Table IV., of
-past stimuli of cold and warmth.
-
-6. Table VI. deals more elaborately than the others with double
-sensation in different areas of the skin, the tip of the tongue being
-the most accurate in this respect of all examined, and the tip of the
-index finger next, which is to the great toe as 2.3 to 11.3, the palmar
-surface of a finger half as accurate again as the dorsal surface, the
-palm of the hand twice as accurate as the surfaces of the forehead and
-back of ankle, nearly four times as much so as the dorsum of the foot
-and six times as the skin of the middle of the back.
-
-There is here a very close relation between the amount of exposure of
-these various regions to tactile stimuli and their present equipment of
-ability to discriminate between two small objects.
-
-7. Table VII. deals with the sensation of pressure in certain groups of
-areas, and shows that change of pressure is perceived about three or
-four times as accurately on the forehead, lips and tongue, as on the
-finger nail, back of forearm, hand, or fingers, and more than three or
-four times on the back of the foot, and sole, and surface of leg and
-thigh. In this group of observations also the rule is followed that
-the greater and more frequent in man’s ancestral past have been the
-exposure of his skin to variations of pressure, the greater is his
-present power of accurate discrimination of them.
-
-There are some scattered facts mentioned by Professor Sherrington
-which are in keeping with the line here taken, that the formation of
-receptors in the skin have their origin in accumulated stimuli. He
-refers to the vain endeavours of Goltz to evoke the reflex croak of
-the female frog by applying electrical stimuli to the skin, whereas
-non-nocuous mechanical stimuli were the only stimuli that proved
-effective.
-
-He never was able to elicit the “extensor thrust” in the “spinal dog”
-by any form of _electrical_ stimulation, but only by a particular kind
-of mechanical stimulus. This peculiarity was also found in the pinna
-reflex of the cat.
-
-As to the scratch reflex in the dog it was only when it was _easily
-elicitable_ that it could be evoked by electrical stimulation as well
-as mechanical, and when it was not easily elicitable electrical stimuli
-failed altogether while mechanical stimuli still evoked it.
-
-He describes the receptor as a mechanism “_attuned_ to respond
-specially to a certain one or ones of the agencies that act as stimuli
-to the body,” and points to the fact that _electrical_ stimuli are
-not of common occurrence in nature and no chance for adaptation to
-evolve in the organism receptors appropriate for such stimuli has
-been afforded. Such negative facts are at the least suggestive in
-considering the question of the mode of origin of receptors and
-end-organs, electrical stimuli being rare in nature.
-
-The subject of the innervation of the skin and its receptors has been
-treated here in a great measure by the aid of imagination, with some
-evidence, and a good deal of reconstruction has been attempted, but
-perhaps this will be pardoned by those who are prepared to carry out
-a corresponding process with such as Pithecanthropus, Eoanthropus and
-Saurian monsters from somewhat scanty osseous remains. Any biological
-theory of the origin of these receptors than the one here put forward
-is faced with some formidable difficulties, which are probably
-insurmountable.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIV.
-
-THE BUILDING OF REFLEX ARCS.
-
-
-Assuming the foregoing origin of the innervation of the skin, I submit
-that between this rudimentary process and the building of sensori-motor
-arcs in the spinal cord and brain there is a field, almost unlimited,
-for initiative in the construction of new forms of animal life. The
-former is nothing without the latter. To leave it without proceeding
-further is to leave it “in the air” as military writers say. The
-formation of Receptors, then, both in the skin field and in the higher
-sense-organs, leads of necessity to the formation, multiplication and
-co-ordination of reflex arcs. As in an imperfectly organised telephone
-service after many a repeated stimuli or “rings” the messages begin to
-reach their destinations, and as by practice the operators better and
-better learn their business, so the impulses passing through receptors
-and nerve-fibrils become organized into more or less efficient systems
-of arcs, and response is secured to them by some effector of gland or
-muscle. It is not true of man alone that practice makes perfect.
-
-A certain feature of higher animals which distinguishes them from lower
-must be remembered, and that is that among them the individual becomes
-increasingly important. Speaking generally, the latter are born and die
-in large groups, and their lives resemble those of their group more
-closely than in the former. The struggle of the individual is vividly
-pictured by Professor Woods Jones in his description of the baby of the
-perfected arboreal animals. He shows how they and the roaming Ungulates
-and Pelagic Cetacea cannot indulge in large families, and that it is
-only those forms which have a safe retreat for their young which can
-avoid reduction of the size of their families, and how the higher apes
-still more resemble in these respects mankind, as we know it. For
-the proper study of the “synthesis of the individual” organism this
-essential fact must be kept in mind.
-
-
-Some Illustrations.
-
-It will be expected of course that for the claim here advanced on
-behalf of the predominant influence of the nervous system in the
-initiative of the evolutionary process some experimental or other
-evidence should be produced. Before entering upon this, I think some
-analogous facts from the story of man, in accordance with the principle
-laid down in the first chapter should be stated, so as to illustrate
-the line of thought. These will be in the nature of analogies, and
-whether or not the accepted accounts of the chosen examples agree
-precisely with the last word of the critics is immaterial, for if not
-they will equally well serve the purpose of illustration.
-
-
-Abraham.
-
-When from his Mesopotamian home an opulent and successful farmer
-decided for reasons sufficient to himself that he would leave his
-present prosperity for a promised land, and went out not knowing
-whither he went, it is manifest that the construction and organization
-of Abraham’s cerebral cortex was the motive power which led to this
-step so fraught with change to himself, his descendants, and the
-world. By his choice he showed the inherited structure of his brain,
-its nature, and perhaps its nurture, to be different from those of his
-family and tribe. Implicit in this venture was the introduction of a
-new group of people into a new environment, and their reaction to it
-through many generations is written before our eyes to-day in indelible
-characters. It was neither stature, muscular development, colour of
-hair, skin or eyes, properties of digestive or circulatory organs,
-keenness of sight, hearing, taste, smell, or touch which led to this
-result even though without a high degree of efficiency of these he
-could never have “arrived” as he did.
-
-
-Mohammed.
-
-The conjunction of environment with a certain organized complexity of
-grey matter was hardly ever more important to the world than that of
-Mohammed. The powerful frame, abundant black hair, wonderful dark eyes,
-and great imposing head may well have attracted the rich widow who
-“made his fortune” by marrying him, and they stood him in good stead in
-his later adventurous career. But nothing short of a unique arrangement
-of his reflex-arcs, chiefly in the association-areas of his brain,
-could have opened up to him the world of Asia and Europe.
-
-
-Columbus.
-
-Who can doubt that it was ultimately to the inherited structure of the
-convolutions of his brain that Columbus owed his great achievement
-in opening up a New World; or that to the reactionary and intense
-“character” of Philip’s brain the persecutions in the Netherlands were
-due; and on the other hand that to the brain of William of Orange
-with its liberal and enlightened “character” the Seven Provinces that
-resisted Philip owed their freedom; the results in the two cases being
-the decay of Spain from that time forward, and the final success in
-the struggle for religious liberty. In such a view of historical facts
-it is not necessary either to follow Carlyle in his extreme claims for
-the influence of great men and heroes, nor to look upon the hero as an
-epiphenomenon. It is certain that eventually some other great man would
-have arisen to do what the great Genoese did, if he had not done it,
-and as it is claimed that Amerigo di Vespucci did, and it is certain
-that Philip was only the last of the Hapsburg sovereigns who determined
-the fall of Spain, and that Huss, Jerome, Wycliffe and Luther in their
-days initiated the struggle for religious liberty which Holland brought
-to success. But the facts referred to can hardly be disputed, and the
-men and their “characters” did certainly determine permanent changes in
-the world.
-
-
-Napoleon.
-
-Among individual men of modern times none strikes the imagination
-as does Napoleon. Without ignoring the tremendous outburst of the
-soul of down-trodden France at the Revolution, it cannot be denied
-that the “character” or grey matter of brain of the man of whom it
-is said “nothing where he had passed was as it had been before,” was
-the dominant and natural fact that changed the face of Europe. What
-physical quality had Napoleon, except those of his grey cells, which
-could have led him to such results on the environment into which he was
-cast?
-
-
-Migrations.
-
-Similar results in nations and tribes can easily be supplied from
-the great migrations of the past. The wider movements are but due to
-comparatively small aggregates of adventurous men, in other words to
-the aggregation of many similar central nervous systems. The great
-Western and Southern adventures of the Scythian Tribes had many
-contributing causes on which the historian has much to say, and they
-were physically highly efficient for their new career, but, reduced
-to the simplest elements, it was neither their great stature, strong
-muscles, flaxen hair, nor blue eyes, but the cerebral constitution of
-a comparatively small group of them which brought part of the nation
-to the promised land, and left another and large part in their homes
-beyond and along the Danube. The subsequent story of the latter may
-well be compared with the invaders of Gaul and Italy in connection with
-initiative in evolution.
-
-The successive invasion of Britain by Low German tribes in the fifth
-century, and the Scandinavian hordes of Swedes, Danes, Norwegians,
-Letts and Finns in the eighth and ninth teach the same lesson. The
-later condition and development of the Northmen in France, Italy,
-Spain, Sicily and Britain have only to be compared for a moment with
-that of their races who remained in Norway, Sweden and Denmark and
-their descendants, to bring clearly before one’s mind the profound
-influence exerted by the cerebral constitution of the original Viking
-hosts on their career in their new environments, and, indeed, on the
-environments themselves; as in intermarriage with their conquered foes.
-
-These examples have been chosen for the reason that one feature is
-common to them all, the introduction of an individual or group into
-new environments by reason of the constitution of their brains,
-irrespective of the contributing factors. If these be sound analogies
-they bear closely on the matter of initiative in the evolution of new
-forms of life. The men in question came to their task, in their day,
-with a certain equipment of brain derived from many ancestors and much
-nurture. Unconscious arbiters of their fate and that of multitudes who
-should follow them, they initiated a course of physical and cerebral
-evolution of which we can see much revealed before our eyes. The motive
-power of their conduct bears a relation to their physical forms that
-the engines of a motor-car do to its varied forms of body. The latter
-are modified indefinitely to suit convenience, comfort and grace, but
-fundamentally they exist and are energised by the former, just as
-structure is modified for the performance of function.
-
-This fact is occasionally brought vividly to the mind of an observer
-when he first passes a Rolls-Royce car in all its glory and
-magnificence, and then a rough squalid kind of trolly in which the
-engine-parts of a similar future Rolls-Royce are out for trial. In
-principle it is not a long step from these illustrations to the diverse
-environments of animals in which their lot is cast, and their reaction
-to them as to behaviour and structural change.
-
-
-Some Changes in Habits of Man.
-
-There are two current views as to the present erect posture of man,
-one which traces it to the adoption of a new posture by a pronograde
-four-footed ancestor, and the other that man’s ancestors were “never
-typically pronograde with four supporting limbs,” but derived from an
-arboreal stock in which the forelimbs were mobile rather than stable.
-Whenever or wherever man became orthograde he opened up for himself
-and his descendants immense regions of structural and functional
-change and became increasingly dominant over his environment. Changes
-in muscles, joints, bones, bursæ, lungs, heart, and vessels occurred
-through his employing in new modes the muscles, joints, bones, bursæ,
-lungs, heart and vessels he already possessed, and the resemblance
-between these structures of man and the great apes has given to the
-latter the name of anthropoid, and this similarity of structures
-in the highest Primates has done much to support in the past that
-Simian origin of man which is at present questioned. The behaviour
-of the apes and early man were sufficiently alike to lead either to
-a parallel or genetic similarity. This point is, perhaps, irrelevant
-in considering the great field for initiative in the formation of
-new physical characters, and chief among these new reflex-arcs which
-have built up the marvellous organ of man’s glory and greatness; but
-no one can dispute the elementary fact that the ancestor of man who
-adopted terrestrial bipedal locomotion and became orthograde, owed it
-to his growing brain and the higher integration of his organs for that
-function. But besides the new posture he had adopted he learned to talk
-articulately, to make tools, and to use stereoscopic vision. None of
-these could have been started on the upward way without a long process
-of trial and error in the course of his total experience and practice
-of his powers. The results that followed from these three properties of
-his are inconceivably great, and it is unnecessary to enlarge on such a
-theme or to add to the number of examples.
-
-Leaving, then, the immediate ancestor to work out his own destiny in
-his new terrestrial home, we must as before proceed backward in the
-history of animal life in the line of Primate ancestry.
-
-
-Primate Ancestry.
-
-It is generally agreed to trace the Primates back to an active pioneer
-animal form which took to the trees, and which arose out of the
-widely-spread Insectivores. This derivation will probably satisfy
-any reasonable genealogist. But, if we may use a parallel in human
-families, this active animal was as different from its congeners as
-Napoleon was from his four brothers who played a part in European
-history, and it is not necessary to say more as to the significance of
-this fact than that the relative importance of “chassis” and “body” is
-again a useful analogy. But we need to ask what those congeners did
-if we are to succeed in understanding the Napoleon-like course of him
-who became our Primate ancestor. From the original widely-spread and
-plastic raw material of the Insectivores allied forms took different
-lines, and their stories are written at great length in one small
-and the three other great orders of Bats, Carnivores, Ungulates, and
-Rodents. As it has been pointed out, Carnivores took to attacking
-larger prey, including their less fortunate relatives, and stepped
-into the arena as carnivorous animals; the Ungulates-to-be became
-herbivorous and developed into two great groups of hoofed animals,
-relying mainly on flight for safety; Rodents took to burrows for
-defence, ceased to trouble much about attack, and became gnawing
-animals; Bats adopted an aerial life--a poor form of it indeed like
-that of the aeroplane--and acquired a degraded fore-limb. Before
-leaving these great orders of animals, whom I do not desire to compare
-unfavourably with poor Louis, Jerome, Joseph or Lucien Bonaparte, it is
-convenient here to refer to a fact which comes to light immediately one
-looks into such a piece of classification as this of the orders arising
-out of the loins of the early Insectivores, and that is the functional
-conception underlying it. Doubtless pure functional “characters”
-could never supply a whole system of classification in the light of
-the modern doctrine of descent with modification, and of zoological
-affinities. This is shown in a change from division of six orders of
-Birds-Running, Swimming, Wading, Climbing, Predatory and Perching
-Birds, to that of a few old-fashioned Ratite Birds, and all the rest,
-one which seems the best that can be offered at present.
-
-
-Insects, Mollusca, Birds.
-
-The grouping of animals by structural characters, and by affinities
-which are assumed, though based on almost undeniable evidence, whether
-into species, families, classes, phyla or sub-phyla, has its apotheosis
-in Mollusca and Insects. As to the second of these immense groups
-it has always seemed strange that their colourings and structural
-characters should have received such intensive study from Weismann to
-the exclusion of Mollusca, when he set out to prove his stupendous
-negative, and still more that of Vertebrates, among which his chief
-difficulty and desired triumph would seem to have lain. Mollusca though
-invertebrate are held by many to be in the line of ancestry of the
-highest forms of life, and at any rate insects are not. They are most
-fruitful fields indeed in which Nature has been able to show what she
-could do by her stern selective powers, but, from the point of view of
-descent with modification, may be fairly compared to a review of an
-army in time of peace, or the Kriegspiel of a German military staff. He
-who concerns himself with the fundamental difficulties of the problems
-at issue in evolution must make his notes of what experts tell him of
-such groups as those of Insects, Mollusca and Birds, and pass on to the
-higher forms in which on the one hand function becomes the predominant
-partner, and on the other individual experience becomes more and more
-important. He feels indeed at liberty to wish the entomologist and
-ornithologist all success, and to leave him at peace, in his siding, to
-pursue his delightful and interminable studies far from the dust and
-din of controversy.
-
-
-Insectivores.
-
-The critical territory of vertebrate, and still more of Mammalian
-forms, in which the genealogist pictures the five main groups of
-Insectivores, looking about them, if one may so speak, in the world
-around and pondering which of many paths they shall pursue, resembles
-certain centres that may be seen in towns where three, four, five,
-or seven different roads are open to the traveller, each with its
-incalculable effects on his ultimate career. If one may change here the
-metaphor it may be said that the Insectivores are the watershed of the
-Five Rivers of higher life. However much the wayfaring insect-feeders
-have diverged from this broad centre in structure, and however much
-the laws of genetics have widened this divergence, the facts of
-function stare one in the face when such descriptions of three of the
-four orders outside the Primate stock are pondered--Flesh-feeders,
-Herbivorous animals, Burrowers and Gnawers. These time-honoured names
-appealed strongly to older zoologists, and in them is implicit a large
-body of evidence for initiative in their evolution by pioneering work
-on the part of their ancestors. Though in these days Prototheria
-include Monotremes, One-vent animals, Metatheria, Marsupials or pouched
-animals, and Eutheria Insect-feeders, and though Mammals derive
-their indispensable name from the function by which they feed their
-young, the most severe of systematists cannot clear his mind from
-the old leaven of function in all these terms. They imply momentous
-potentialities prior to new structures, and the modern fails to ban
-entirely such functional names. I believe there is here no juggling
-with names and words on my part, but a stone in the foundation of the
-unambitious building which I am seeking to rear. It is ultimately
-connected with a directive power as well as the formation of
-sensori-motor arcs in the central nervous system.
-
-Is it possible or probable that the factors which led some group to the
-water alone, some to a life in water and on land at different parts
-of their lives, some to a crawling life on land and partly in water,
-some to the air and trees, some to nocturnal, some to hybernating, some
-to burrowing life, some to a diet of flesh, some to one of plants,
-some to the trees alone, some to the trees and land, some to the
-land by night and trees by day, and some for ever and wholly to the
-land--is it probable that any process of selection of suited structures
-with countless ages of trial and error, could have determined these
-changes of habit and habitat? At least one may claim that the balance
-of probabilities is heavily against that view, and that the forging
-of reflex-arcs, with all it means to the career of an individual,
-affords a more intelligible hypothesis, and that this is strongly
-supported by modern discoveries and doctrines arising from the work of
-physiologists, as will appear later.
-
-
-The Place of the Nervous System in Evolution.
-
-The constitution of the nervous system is conditioned by conduction,
-its fundamental and primary function. Its processes consist in the
-transmission of impulses from receptive fields to effective reactions
-through devious paths in a region which, even to-day, is a jungle, with
-many further secrets for physiology to reveal. From this point of view
-the nervous system may be looked at as a clearing-house and storehouse
-of impulses _on their way in_, _on their way through_, and _on their
-way out_. If so, the making of new reflex-arcs is a process which has
-gone on simultaneously with the formation of receptors in the skin,
-the higher sense-organs and such deep structures as muscles, and that
-of effectors of infinite variety--and these are called conveniently
-adaptations. When we hear from Professor Sherrington that the afferent
-fibres with their private paths which enter the spinal cord outnumber
-three times those which leave it, and that those of the cranial nerves
-should be added, so that the afferent fibres may be reckoned as five
-times more numerous than the efferent, we get a vivid idea of the
-fundamental importance of the formation and compounding of reflex-arcs
-into systems. Without that the most sensitive receptors and the widest
-range of structures and organs, small and great, would be as nothing
-and things of naught.
-
-A neurone is the anatomical, as the reflex-arc is the functional unit
-of a central nervous system. Just as it is profitless to consider apart
-the engines and body of a motor car, as working machine, so is it to
-picture neurones and reflex-arcs separately in the living nervous
-system except for the purpose of an ideal construction. In common with
-the organs and structures of higher animals they have to pass, as
-historical structures, through the stages of initiation, repetition
-of rudimentary function, and selection by trial and error, till the
-“canalizing force of habit” issues in rudimentary and increasingly
-efficient effectors. It is in this final stage where the triumphs of
-selection have been won, and where their undeniable value and interest
-has led some exponents of the distributional laws of genetics to
-disregard, or accept as data, the early and formative stages. Theirs
-is a mental state which resembles that of Darwin, who, for once in a
-moment of haste, declared the question of the origin of life to be
-rubbish.
-
-In the foregoing consideration of the formation of receptors of the
-skin it was assumed that certain common stimuli of the environment
-hammer out for themselves paths in the nerve-fibrils of the skin and
-by ceaseless repetition lay down not only the receptor, which may
-be called the _terminus a quo_, but also the afferent fibres which
-ultimately find their way into the grey matter of the cord and brain.
-That this is the initial stage of the construction of the higher
-nervous system can hardly be denied. But it carries the problem of the
-synthesis of the organism but a little way unless it be coincident
-with the construction of new reflex-arcs and their co-ordination
-into systems. Till this stage be reached in a rudimentary form the
-most cunning and exact adaptations and structures, or, as they may
-be broadly called effectors, will not advance the efficiency of the
-organism in the smallest degree. If the receptor be the _terminus
-a quo_ the effector is the _terminus ad quem_. This is so obvious
-that it may be waved aside as a truism not worth the notice of a
-zoologist concerned with the major problems of biology. It may seem to
-challenge in a highly speculative region and manner the labours of the
-biometrician and Mendelian, but, if fairly met it no more encroaches
-on their territory than do the labours of the engineers who invented
-the first and crudest chassis of a motor car upon the elaborate and
-brilliant ingenuity, taste and skill of the coachbuilders who turn
-out the “body” of a sumptuous Rolls-Royce of 1920. But the latter
-would never have “arrived” if the former had not made his slow and
-arduous trials and errors and final success. So here, as in many other
-subjects, a truism has its use. If the biometrician and Mendelian will
-only abstain from erecting notice-boards to proclaim “No thoroughfare
-here,” we shall not be put down as trespassers or poachers on their
-ground and may range at large in certain fields of speculation.
-
-
-Some Neural Phenomena.
-
-Among numerous phenomena of nervous reactions discovered by the
-research of physiologists certain have a close bearing on the formation
-of receptors, afferent fibres and reflex-arcs, especially those
-of Delay, Summation, Fatigue, Block or Resistance, Localization,
-Facilitation and Inhibition.
-
-
-Facilitation.
-
-But of all these important reactions in nervous tissues none bears
-so closely on the problem of the formation of reflex-arcs as that of
-Facilitation. This is equivalent to the Law of Neural Habit of the
-physiological psychologist, and is bound up with the highly important
-Law of Forward Direction, which Professor Starling says might as well
-be spoken of as the Irreciprocal conduction of nerve-arcs. The Law of
-Forward Direction of sensori-motor arcs is too well known to need here
-any description. But when this law is taken into account the phenomenon
-of Facilitation is seen to throw a strong light upon the earliest
-and rudimentary formation of specialized nerve-fibres, reflex-arcs
-and Final Common Paths leading to the effector glands or muscles.
-Facilitation is described shortly by Professor Starling as follows.
-If the passage of a nervous impulse across a synapse or series of
-synapses in the central nervous system be too often repeated, fatigue
-is produced, and there is an increase of the block at each synapse.
-If, however the stimulus be not excessive and the impulse not too
-frequently evoked, the effect of a passage of an impulse once is to
-diminish the resistance, so that a second application of the stimulus
-provokes the reaction more easily, and he adds that the result of
-summation of stimuli is in fact in the direction of removal of block.
-When an impulse has passed once through a certain set of neurones to
-the exclusion of others it will tend, other things being equal, to
-take the same course on a future occasion, and each time it traverses
-this path the resistance in the path will be smaller. Education then
-is the laying down of nerve-channels in the central nervous system,
-while still plastic, by this process of Facilitation along fit paths,
-combined with inhibition (by pain) in the other unfit paths. He makes
-the important statement that Facilitation is of great interest in
-connection with the development of “long paths” in the central nervous
-system and, _more especially with the acquirement of new reactions by
-the higher animals_. (Italics not in the original).
-
-
-Raw Materials of the Central Nervous System.
-
-The raw materials of higher central nervous systems are furnished
-even in lowly Vertebrates by the neurones and their processes, and
-the pathways into the grey matter by the “canalizing force of habit”
-in the receptors and afferent fibres. Facilitation, discovered in
-higher Vertebrates, such as dogs and cats, throws backwards a light on
-the earliest struggles towards success and integration among phyla,
-sub-phyla and smaller groups, and here again the well-known may lead
-to the less-known. We may then frame a legitimate hypothesis, or at
-least an ideal construction of trials and errors and success, if those
-of lower levels were ever to be introduced to the career of progress
-and achievement. But to make good this claim it is necessary that it
-be based on the important doctrine taught by Hughlings Jackson of the
-three (or more) levels of sensori-motor arcs--those of the spinal or
-lowest, of the sensory or intermediate, and those of the third or
-highest level, in which the association-areas of the Primate brain are
-at once the means and the title to his primacy, or headship of the
-sentient world. The light of this doctrine guides the mind backwards to
-the frog-stage of animal evolution with its highly organized congenital
-system of arcs of the spinal level, so efficient for its life that,
-even when the brain is removed, the frog can execute under certain
-stimuli a purposeful complicated movement such as that of trying to
-wipe away with its foot an irritant drop of acid applied to its head
-or back; or, still more, if touched lightly between the scapulæ, will
-“lower its head at the first touch, and again more so at a second,
-and at a third will, besides lowering the head, draw the front half
-of its trunk slightly backwards; at a fourth the same movement with
-stronger retraction; at a fifth give an ineffectual sweep with its
-hind or fore-foot; at a sixth a stronger sweep; at a seventh a feeble
-jump; at an eighth a free jump, and so on.” Probably such an animal as
-the frog has all its reflexes congenitally organized, whereas a dog,
-reaching the sensory level, has added countless reflex-arcs to those
-inherited from its early ancestors of the Insectivores which had long
-emerged from the spinal level, retaining its old, perfecting its new
-inheritance, and eliminating the unfit. Perhaps a faint picture of this
-long process may be afforded by watching an experienced mountain guide
-ascending an ice-slope with the aid of ice-axe, hand and foot.
-
-
-Integration of Raw Materials.
-
-Every group of animals in the higher ranks has its own entailed
-property of innate reflexes, for example, the reflexes which subserve
-the reflex functions of the cord: those of locomotion, muscular and
-vascular tone, micturition, defæcation, impregnation and parturition.
-These exist in an animal of the spinal level whether or not it
-remains purely aquatic, partly aquatic, partly terrestrial, arboreal
-or terrestrial. As the progressive groups ascend the ladder of life
-they add to this inalienable heritage, gained we need not here ask
-how, fresh reflex-arcs by response to new initial stimuli, forging
-them by the incident of use. So, the original acquirements in the
-past levels serve as starting points for raising the degree of their
-nervous integration with growing control over their environments. The
-long story from the simple central nervous system of a fish, with
-a few or no association-areas, to that of man with his extensive
-frontal, parietal, parieto-occipital association-areas, could never be
-deciphered, even with the light of the laws of genetics turned on full,
-without a protracted process of construction of fresh arcs. A common
-illustration of such a series of changes and results may be seen in the
-building of a house. Bricks, foundation-stones, walls and a roof may
-serve some of the elementary requirements of a house and much less than
-these were of use to early man for his shelter. Without them we cannot
-call any structure a modern house; but also without floors, staircases,
-windows, chimneys, division into rooms, some degree of decoration by
-paint or paper, and a supply of water, we should refuse in these days
-the name of house to that rough structure, apart from beauty of design,
-decoration, within and without, and some addition of modern appliances
-of comfort and convenience. In the history of house-building the stages
-of supply of raw materials, adaptation to needs guided by selection,
-initiation, trial and error have their counterpart in the construction
-of higher animals.
-
-
-Evidence.
-
-It will be asked what evidence there is for the view here put forward
-that such is the order and method of the construction of the central
-nervous system. There are two classes of evidence. The first direct,
-and the second indirect and resting on inference. The well-known leads
-to the less-known and inferred. Direct evidence of the foundation
-of new reflex-arcs and their organization is of course small. The
-conditions, such as the duration of human life, preclude any extensive
-formation under experiment of new reflex-arcs, but enough is known to
-enable one to follow the backward way with some confidence. As to the
-inheritance of these, the evidence rests on opinion and tremendous
-probability, but as the only problem with which I am concerned here
-is that of initiative I think it better to leave the matter of
-transmission to a dispassionate consideration of the probability of its
-occurrence.
-
-
-Direct Evidence.
-
-The prolonged researches of over twelve years of Professor Pawlow and
-his colleagues on dogs afford a body of evidence as to the possibility
-of producing new reflexes in the life of an individual which have
-never been questioned. In 1913 at Groningen, before the International
-Congress of Physiologists, he gave a brief account of this work. His
-previous work on the digestive glands carried on by delicate operations
-in which the œsophagus was diverted from the stomach and made to open
-externally, and in which a portion of the stomach was diverted from the
-rest and a new “small stomach” was formed, gave him the opportunity
-of immensely important insight into the factors governing the work of
-the various glands of the stomach. The work of others showed similar
-results in the pancreas. I only refer to these because they lead up to
-the special artificial results with new reflexes which he described in
-1913. He states that the nervous system besides the primitive function
-of reproducing innate reflexes, possesses another prime function-namely
-the formation of new reflexes; and that the living thing is enabled
-to respond, by definite and suitable activities to agencies to which
-it was formerly indifferent. His experiments on the formation of
-“conditional reflexes,” as he calls them rather than “acquired” as
-opposed to “innate,” are grouped around the feeding of the animal
-and mainly deal with the salivary glands, because they are in direct
-connection with the external world and their reactions are simply and
-easily observed. An indifferent stimulus is chosen for the reflexes
-which it is desired to build up, and this is applied at the same time
-as food or acid is introduced in the mouth. After a few sittings it
-is found that this indifferent stimulus _alone_ is now capable of
-calling forth a secretion of saliva. “The conditional reflex has been
-formed; the formerly indifferent stimulus has now found a path to the
-requisite part of the central nervous system. The reflex-arc has now
-a different afferent neurone.” He gives a good example of this in the
-result of the application of painful stimuli by a strong electrical
-current to the skin, systematically accompanying each feeding of the
-animal. He finds that the strongest electrical stimuli applied to the
-skin give rise merely to the “feeding reaction,” that is, the secretion
-of saliva, and no indications of any fright or pain appear. “The skin
-of a dog can be subjected to cutting, pinching or burning, and the
-only result we shall obtain will be the manifestation of what, judging
-from our own experience, we should call the symptoms of the keenest
-appetite; the animal follows the experimenter about, licks himself,
-and saliva flows in abundance.” This, it must be remembered, occurs in
-the absence of the offer or sight of food, _at the time in question_.
-He adds: “In this way we have been able to divert the impulses from
-one path to another according to the conditions, and we cannot avoid
-the conclusion that the diversion of an impulse from one path to
-another represents one of the most important functions of the highest
-parts of the central nervous system.” The presence of certain special
-conditions, he points out, causes the indifferent stimulus, which would
-otherwise be dispersed in the higher centres, to be directed to a
-particular focus, and _eventually to lay down for itself a path to that
-part_. A very interesting detail of such a building of a new reflex is
-that “the stimuli from which the new reflex is to be worked out shall
-be rigidly isolated.” Therefore to avoid any interference with the
-certainty of the experiment, such matters as a personal bodily odour
-or kind of movement, or even such a slight fact as a change in the
-mode of breathing familiar to the dog on the part of the experimenter,
-has in the latest experiments been removed by the application of the
-stimuli by mechanical devices worked from another room, with results
-similar to the earlier ones. Conditional reflexes can also be obtained
-from stimuli arising from the locomotor apparatus, as the joints,
-eliminating the stimuli arising from the skin. Also certain parts of
-the frontal lobes were extirpated and “when one part is extirpated
-the reflex is obtained from the flexion of the joint, but not from
-the skin; if a different part be removed we can get the skin-reflex,
-but not the reflex from the joint.” He extirpated in one case the
-greater portion of the posterior part of the brain and the dog lived
-for several years after this in complete health. It was found easy to
-obtain a conditional reflex for various intensities of illumination,
-also for sound, and even a fine differentiation of tones. In another
-dog the anterior half of the brain was removed and all the reflexes
-before worked out in this animal disappeared, and yet in this helpless
-condition of the dog he could train it to give that response of the
-salivary glands which he called the “water-reflex,” in which first of
-all an irritating acid was introduced into the mouth and the subsequent
-administration of water provoked an abundant secretion of saliva which
-does not occur when water is poured into the mouth of a normal dog.
-This was confirmed in another example in which alone the centre for
-smell had been spared, and yet it was possible in it to train the
-smell-reflexes also. I add one striking sentence from Pawlow’s address
-which, though an opinion, must be received with the respect it deserves
-from such a source. “It is perhaps not rash to think that some of the
-newly-formed conditional reflexes can be transmitted hereditarily and
-become unconditional thereby.”
-
-
-Indirect Evidence.
-
-From these limited but cogent pieces of evidence I turn to the
-larger but confirmatory lines of indirect evidence and inference, of
-which such works as those of Professors Sherrington, Bayliss, and
-Starling, the notable address of Professor Macdonald at Portsmouth
-in 1911, as well as the recent work of Professor Woods Jones on
-Arboreal Man, are full. Indeed if the construction of new reflexes
-and reflex-arcs in organic evolution “forged by an incident of use”
-as Professor Macdonald puts it, were expunged from these works, their
-treatment of the physiology of the central nervous system of higher
-animals would be emasculated, to say the least of it. And yet not
-one of these eminent men is writing _ad hoc_, or for the confusion
-of Weismann and his followers. At this point it may perhaps gain for
-the remaining pages a little more consideration from opponents if I
-give a few quotations from these writers in support of the foregoing
-statement--perhaps the breeze of authority may then carry my little
-bark a little further on its perilous voyage. Professor Sherrington
-remarks on the first page of his well known work, in reference to the
-cell-theory, “with the progress of natural knowledge, biology has
-passed beyond the confines of the study of merely visible form, and
-is turning more and more to the subtle and deeper sciences that are
-branches of energetics. The cell-theory and the doctrine of evolution
-find their scope more and more, therefore, in the problems of function,
-and have become more and more identified with the aim and incorporated
-among the methods of physiology.” Again, “Mere experience can apart
-from reason mould nervous reactions in so far as they are plastic.
-The ‘bahnung’ (or facilitation) of a reflex exhibits this in germ.”
-He uses more than once the pregnant phrase, “The canalizing force of
-habit”; again, “Progress of knowledge in regard to the nervous system
-has been indissolubly linked with the determination of function in
-it.” Speaking of the receptive-field he says of the central nervous
-system, “To analyse its action we turn to the receptor organs, for to
-them is traceable the initiation of the reactions of the centres”;
-of the extero-ceptive field he says, “facing outwards on the general
-environment it feels and has felt for countless ages the full stream of
-the varied agencies for ever pouring upon it from the external world,”
-page 20, and “each animal has experience only of those qualities of
-the environment which as stimuli excite its receptors, it analyses
-its environment in terms of them exclusively. The integration of the
-animal associated with these leading segments can be briefly with
-partial justice expressed by saying that the rest of the animal, so far
-as its motor machinery goes, is but the servant, of them. Volitional
-movements can certainly become involuntary, and conversely, involuntary
-movements can sometimes be brought under the subjection of the will.
-From this subjection it is but a short step to the acquisition of
-co-ordinations which express themselves as movements newly acquired by
-the individual,” and, “The integrating power of the nervous system
-has, in fact, in the higher animal more than in the lower, constructed
-from a mere collection of organs and segments a functional unity, an
-individual of more perfected solidarity,” also “a single momentary
-shock produces in the nervous arc a facilitating influence on a
-subsequent stimulus applied even 1400σ later.” I will give but one more
-statement from this work which seems to tell against my humble position
-of initiative in evolution. Professor Sherrington says at the end of
-his book, speaking of the adjustments of nervous reactions in the
-lifetime of the individual: “These adjustments though not transmitted
-to the offspring yet in higher animals form the most potent internal
-condition for enabling the species to maintain and increase in sum
-its dominance over the environment in which it is immersed.” A little
-care in reading the foregoing chapters will show that this in no way
-contradicts the views expressed.
-
-
-Facilitation.
-
-From Professor Starling’s Principles of Human Physiology I may again
-quote part of his account of Facilitation or “Bahnung.” “When an
-impulse has passed through a certain set of neurones to the exclusion
-of others it will tend, other things being equal, to take the same
-course on a future occasion, and each time it traverses this path the
-resistance in the path will be smaller. Education is the laying down
-of nerve-channels in the central nervous system, while still plastic,
-by the process of ‘Bahnung’ along fit paths combined with inhibition
-(by pain) in the other unfit paths. Memory itself has the process of
-facilitation for its neural basis,” again, “stimulation of one anterior
-root produces no definite movement of a group of muscles, but partial
-contraction of a number of muscles which do not normally contract
-simultaneously. Thus, stimulation of a sensory nerve may provoke either
-flexion or extension of a limb, not both simultaneously. Stimulation
-of the motor roots will cause simultaneous contraction of both flexor
-and extensor muscles. It is _this subordination of morphological to
-physiological arrangements_ in the limbs which has necessitated the
-foundation of limb-plexuses.” (Italics not in the original). Professor
-Graham Kerr in his work on Embryology before mentioned says: “In early
-stages of Evolution, whether phylogenetic or ontogenetic, we may take
-it that vital impulses flitted hither and thither in an indefinite
-manner within the living substance and that one of the features of
-progressive evolution has been the gradual more and more precise
-definition of the pathways of particular types of impulse, as well as
-the transmitting and receiving centres between which they pass. We may
-then regard the appearance of neuro-fibrils within the protoplasmic
-rudiment of the nerve-trunk as the coming into view of tracks, along
-which, owing to their high conductivity, nerve-impulses are repeatedly
-passing. It may be that as each successive passer-by causes a
-jungle-pathway to become more clearly defined so each passing impulse
-makes the way easier for its successors and makes it less likely for
-them to stray into the surrounding substance” (p. 112).
-
-Professor Macdonald, in the Portsmouth address referred to, speaking of
-the states of the cells under excitation, rest, and inhibition, says
-“_excitation_ is associated with an increase in pressure of certain
-particles within the cells; in _rest_ these particles are in their
-normal quantity and have their normal number. During _inhibition_ they
-are decreased in number or have a retarded motion. Thus it happens
-that the excited cell tends to grow in size, on the other hand the
-inhibited cell tends to diminish, and the resting cell to remain
-unaltered in the nervous system. Structure is everywhere the outcome
-of function.” Speaking of the relationship of parts within the nervous
-system, “In so far as it is fixed, it is a sign of the orderly action
-of circumstance upon the structures of the body, and the result rather
-than the cause of the monotony of existence. I hold it as probable
-that all the individual structures of the nervous system, and so in
-the brain, have just so much difference from one another in size and
-shape and in function as is the outcome of that measure of physical
-experience to which each one of them has been subjected; and that the
-physiological function of each one of them is of the simplest kind.
-The magnificent utility of the whole system, where the individual
-units have such simplicity, is due to the physically developed
-peculiarities of their arrangement in relation to one another, and
-to the receptive surfaces and motor-organs of the body.” As to the
-lens-system of the eyeball he remarks, “Surely there is no escape from
-the statement that either external agency cognisant of light, or light
-itself has formed and developed to such a state of perfection this
-purely optical mechanism, and that natural selection can have done no
-more than _assist_ in this process.” He applies the same conclusion
-to the formation of the sound-conducting and resonant portion of the
-ear as well as the semi-circular canals and to the cerebellum. These
-statements are not strictly associated with this chapter but bear by
-analogy very strongly on the matter at issue. Indeed the whole of this
-address might be utilised by a junior counsel for Lamarck if he rested
-alone on the authority of a leading physiologist. The same may be said
-of the anatomist whose _Arboreal Man_ has attracted so much attention.
-Speaking of the arboreal habit in the phylogenetic history of mammals
-he asks the question, “How did this factor enable that particular stock
-to acquire supremacy?” and says that it will be answered as far as it
-is possible, by the study of the influence of the arboreal habit upon
-the animal body; which may be put in another way as the production of
-reflex-arcs suited thereto (p. 3.) Of the muscle groups of fore and
-hind limbs he says, “With a simple arrangement of anatomical parts
-a slight shifting of muscular origins has turned a perfectly mobile
-second segment into a supporting segment constructed upon very simple
-lines: that these changes are those produced by the demands of support
-from the hind-limbs in tree-climbing seems obvious” (p. 6); of the
-position of uprightness upon a flexed thigh of an arboreal man, “It is
-tree-climbing which makes this posture a possibility” (p. 63). “But it
-is not to be doubted that the underlying principle is clear enough,
-that the arboreal habit develops the specialised and opposable thumb
-and big toe” (p. 71). “Even before the power of grasp is developed,
-we may imagine the dawn stages of educational advances initiated by
-hand-touch” (p. 159). “Tactile impressions gained through the hand are
-therefore perpetually streaming into the brain of an arboreal animal
-and new avenues of learning about its surroundings are being opened up
-as additions to the olfactory and snout-tactile routes” (p. 160). He
-asks also the pertinent question, and says at least a partial answer
-to it can be given, “Did the cerebral advance create the physical
-adaptations, or did the physical adaptations make possible a cerebral
-advance?” (p. 196). Two more statements from this chapter show what
-the answer to this question from the _anatomist_ would be--“and again
-in the evolutionary story we are forced back to consider a combination
-of seemingly trivial, and apparently chance associations: in this case
-the dawning possibilities of neo-pallial developments combined with
-the physical adaptations _due directly to environmental influences_”
-(p. 198). I have ventured to underline this passage.
-
-I regret the necessary length of these quotations but, on account of
-them, can the better be suffered to finish this study, when I briefly
-consider certain well-known nervous reactions in the cat and dog as
-to their probable origin. It would be a highly interesting thing to
-hear an exposition by an expert of all the reflexes and reflex-arcs of
-such a system as those which in a cat, dog, ape, or man are concerned
-with the passage of a morsel of food from the mouth through all its
-chequered and varied career till it undergoes metabolism and excretion,
-but I could not do it if I would, and would not here if I could,
-because of their fundamental fixed and innate character, and I think
-it simpler and safer to refer to such minor reflex-arcs as those which
-govern the scratch-reflex in a dog, the pinna reflexes in a cat, and a
-few smaller ones, on the principle of _ex uno disce omnes_. Such minor
-nerve-mechanisms as these in a pair of well-known domesticated animals
-will suffice for evidence on behalf of initiative in evolution.
-
-
-The Scratch Reflex.
-
-The scratch-reflex in the dog, which like the tendon-reflex in man was
-in my youth a subject for schoolboy tricks, has received a vast amount
-of attention and research from physiologists to whom it has brought
-valuable fruit. It is a familiar phenomenon in a familiar friend of
-man. There is a saddle-shaped area on the back of the dog over which
-it was found empirically that even a light stimulus when applied
-rhythmically, produces the “scalptor-reflex” or a reflex rhythmical
-action of the flexor muscles of the leg on the same side, calculated to
-remove the irritating causes of the stimulus. This includes a series
-of receptors in the skin leading to a spinal segment in the region of
-the shoulder, a long neurone in the cord, then a motor neurone, the
-axon from which activates the flexor muscles of the leg and produces
-scratching. It is described as an efferent arc from receptor to the
-motor neurone, from which the Final Common Path supplies the motor
-apparatus or effector. Professor Sherrington says that in this reflex
-a single stimulus which is far below threshold intensity is found
-on its fortieth repetition and nearly four seconds after its first
-application to become effective and provoke the reflex and that its
-frequency is about 4.5 per second. The reflex movement remains rhythmic
-and clonic under the strongest as under weaker stimulation. When it is
-easily elicitable the scratch-reflex can be evoked by various forms
-of electrical as well as mechanical stimulation, but, when not easily
-elicitable, electrical stimulation fails whereas rubbing or other
-mechanical forms of stimuli still evoke it, though less vigorously than
-usual. This reflex can also be set aside by the “nociceptive arc from
-the homonymous foot” or, in other words, a nocuous stimulus to the leg
-of that side produces “interferences which amounts to inhibition.”
-Empirically it is easy to notice also that if the “scalptor-reflex”
-can be elicited on both sides of the body, the dog when standing will
-momentarily lose the power in the hind legs.
-
-_Note._--The rhythm of this reflex act is so special even to the
-layman that lately I had a singular confirmation of its stereotyped
-character, when lying awake at night and being puzzled by a curious
-rhythmical scratching sound coming from my next door neighbour’s back
-yard. It might have been taken by a wakeful person for some mechanical
-work on the part of a burglar, but after listening repeatedly to the
-apparently familiar sound I found that it came from the kennel of a fox
-terrier kept by my neighbour.
-
-
-Purposes of Reflexes.
-
-All reflexes being purposive this particular innate reflex is
-acknowledged to have for its purpose the grooming or cleaning of the
-skin over its hereditary territory. This introduces its connection
-with initiative here propounded, and the justification for its
-introduction is contained in Professor Sherrington’s statement that
-“In the analysis of the animal’s life as a machine in action there can
-be split off from its total behaviour fractional pieces which may be
-treated conveniently, though artificially, apart, and among these are
-the reflexes we have been attempting to decipher”--scratch-reflexes and
-others. There seems to be no reason for the existence and stereotyped
-character of this reflex except the need or rather the desire (if
-one may use a convenient but inaccurate term) on the part of the dog
-to remove an irritant which disturbs its comfort when at rest. Some
-“minor horrors,” probably fleas moving across the skin-receptive
-field of its shoulder and back, must be assumed to be the irritant in
-question. This touches the great question of the initiative of this
-remarkable reflex, which seems more fixed and powerful in the dog as
-we know him than that other reflex which leads him to turn tail and
-flee immediately he sees a boy stoop down as if to pick up a stone. I
-dare say a clever advocate on the opposite side might impress a jury by
-building up a case under which an adaptation to a protective need would
-be conceived as responsible for the rapid flight at the sight of the
-threatening attitude of the boy. Such a reconstruction is not required,
-for it is perfectly clear that in the history of the domesticated
-dog the selection of such an adapted reflex could have no place. The
-survival-value of this reflex would be nil, for the number of dogs
-killed by a stone or maimed for life would be so negligible that the
-production of a specialised reflex for the purpose by selection or
-survival of the fittest would not arise. Obviously the danger would
-be intermittent and rare; and dead dogs tell no tales. On the other
-hand it would be highly unpleasant for dogs to be hit by stones and
-educability would lead them to avoid the stooping attitude associated
-with missiles.
-
-We are told on high authority that not education but educability
-is transmissible, and yet this humble reflex appears in very young
-dogs that could hardly if ever have known the impact of a stone.
-Incidentally we are compelled to remember how in past battles of our
-youth the aim both of “ourselves and the enemy” was deplorably poor,
-and not from want of practice. This school-boy-stone reflex is either
-an example of educational effects transmitted or of a minute bit of the
-unpacking of an original complexity which it would require the brain of
-a de Quincey to work out. But if we suppose the initial stages of such
-a stimulus as the occasional impact of a stone in many generations to
-be slowly ingrained in the skin-receptors, reflex-arcs and receptors we
-do not need opium either for the acceptance of orthodox dogma or to aid
-us in the Mendelian alternative to a very simple ideal construction.
-
-This digression bears on the initiative of the more important
-scratch-reflex, and it is profitable to ask “are not both of these
-reflexes in dogs examples of Evolution of the Indifferent?” Is it
-possible to imagine that from its inception to its fully-formed state,
-with a specialised territory of skin-receptors accurately mapped
-out, with receptor neurones, reflex-arcs and adapted effectors, this
-scratch-reflex can have arisen through Germinal Selection or selective
-processes within the germ? At no stage can anything more than a
-contribution to more or less comfort to the animal be held to result
-from its operation. It is strangely reminiscent of the proceedings
-of an elderly man after lunch on a hot day when he protects his head
-against house-flies with a handkerchief. I am aware that it is but one
-of a large number of reflexes produced for the purpose of grooming
-the trunk head or limbs of animals as low down in the scale as the
-house-fly or grasshopper, many of which were beautifully described
-a few years ago by Miss Frances Pitt in the _National Review_ in an
-article dealing with small mammals, chiefly rodents. But I have availed
-myself here as elsewhere, of the liberty of doing what Professor
-Sherrington says we may do, and consider this scratch-reflex as
-split off from the rest of the animal’s behaviour for the purpose of
-analysis. He also says in discussing the subject of parasites moving
-across the receptive surface of the skin that the ulterior purpose
-may be the removal of what “would confuse its function as a receptive
-surface to more significant environmental stimuli.” This statement is
-hypothetical and the problem obscure; but at any rate we know this that
-the removal of the parasite must conduce to the greater comfort of the
-dog without any more recondite purpose. The one suggested by Professor
-Sherrington would in some possible but very vague manner be referable
-to selection, but, whether the suggestion be valid or not, it is almost
-impossible to suppose that a saddle-shaped area of the kind described
-could be under the guidance of selection. The law of Parcimony forbids.
-There is a close similarity between this saddle-shaped area in the dog
-and that on the cow’s trunk described in Chapter X. It is difficult
-to believe that from man downwards to grasshoppers relief from mild
-irritating causes such as this is not enjoyable to the particular
-animal, and yet indifferent altogether as to its survival in the
-struggles of life for food and mates. The “scalptor-reflex” only
-reaches the limits of the receptive field of the scratch-reflex and it
-is contrary to observed facts that parasites confine their depredations
-just to the region where the formidable scalptor-reflex can reach. The
-wicked flea knows better than that. The initiative of this reflex can
-well be pictured as taking place in domesticated dogs and their wild
-ancestors whose habitats in prehistoric times were probably infested
-with these irritants to such a degree that no modern mind can conceive,
-and the adequate stimuli, leading to receptors after ages of impact and
-consequent hammering out pathways through certain reflex-arcs until
-the required weapons of offence or effectors were organised into a
-_defensive-offensive system_--were there in profusion. But a great and
-fundamental principle of the evolutionary process such as Selection
-is not honoured by being dragged in, even for forensic purposes,
-to account for results which owe to the search for comfort their
-perfection of organisation. I have personally seen in some professional
-invalids of the softer sex nearly as perfect adaptations to their
-comfort which in no way contributed to their length of life. This may
-be put aside as irrelevant but it is at least suggestive.
-
-I submit the statement as to the scratch-reflex in the dog that from
-beginning to end it is an _indifferent_ mechanism and the probability
-is immense that its initial stages were governed alone by repeated
-stimuli from parasites which produced receptors, conducting fibres
-afferent neurones and efferent neurones, leading into the Final
-Common Path controlling the flexors of the hind limb. It would then
-come under the Law of Subjective or Hedonic Selection formulated by
-Professor Stout in the words: “Lines of action, if and so far as they
-are unsuccessful, tend to be discontinued or varied; and those which
-prove successful to be maintained. There is a constant tending to
-persist in those movements and motor attitudes which yield satisfactory
-experiences, and to renew them when similar conditions recur; on the
-other hand those movements and attitudes which yield unsatisfactory
-experiences tend to be discontinued at the time of their occurrence,
-and to be suppressed on subsequent similar occasions.”
-
-In this connection a statement from Professor McDougall’s work may be
-advantageously quoted. He says that “It is characteristic of those
-(arcs) of the higher or third level that their organisation, their
-interconnections, by means of which the simpler neural systems of
-great complexity, is _congenitally determined in a very partial degree
-only_, and is principally determined in each individual by the course
-of its experience. The arcs of the higher level thus constitute the
-physiological basis or condition of docility, the power of learning by
-experience.”[88] (My italics)
-
- [88] _Op. cit._ p. 21.
-
-
-Scratch Reflex of the Cat.
-
-There is a notable difference between the scratch-reflex of the dog
-and that of the cat, especially as to the site of its receptive-field.
-That of the dog has been referred to, but it appears to be generally
-accepted that the cat has no such saddle-shaped or indeed other area of
-skin receptive-field on its back or flanks. I have repeatedly tried by
-various mechanical stimuli, applied both irregularly and rhythmically,
-to evoke a scratch-reflex in a cat, young or adult, on the surface
-corresponding to that of the dog, and have found no response. This
-has been tried both when the animal was awake and when asleep. But
-the receptive field of the cat’s scratch-reflex has received careful
-and elaborate attention, which is described in a paper by Professor
-Sherrington in the _Journal of Physiology_, Vol. LI. No. 6. By means of
-delicate stimuli, mechanical and electrical in a decerebrate cat, the
-receptive-field of the scratch-reflex has been accurately delineated
-in the pinna, and several other pure reflexes have been obtained.
-These are protective of the pinna; some, the retraction and folding
-reflexes seem directed against irritant touches, _e.g._ the settling
-of fleas--or against exposure to injury in fighting; others, the cover
-and head-shake and scratch-reflexes against the ingress of foreign
-matter, such as dust, water, insects, into the meatus and ampulla. The
-threshold for their elicitation is extremely low, that is to say, they
-require very gentle stimuli to evoke them, while with the exception of
-the scratch-reflex they are elicited with difficulty and uncertainty
-_by electrical stimuli_ (My italics) to which the animal has been
-subjected in the course of its total experience. He adds that the
-pinnal reflexes are readily obtained in the normal animal, and I may
-allude here to some small observations I made on a normal young cat
-during profound sleep, recorded in _Nature_, Vol. 106, Sept. 2, 1920.
-Light mechanical stimuli, applied during this state of deep sleep to
-the internal surface of the pinna, especially close to the meatus,
-produced first, twitching of the facial muscles on the same side;
-second, as this ceased the fore foot was moved irregularly towards the
-ear, and third, as this ceased a rhythmical scratching action of the
-hind foot took its place, the rate of which seemed to be exactly the
-same as that of the scratch-reflex in the dog evoked from stimulation
-of the flank and back. I had not then, unfortunately read more than
-an abstract of the above paper, but if the full account be followed
-it will be seen that the various “territories” belonging to all the
-former-reflexes are now known as well as the frontiers of a European
-Kingdom. All I was able to do with this unusual opportunity of a heavy
-sleep in a normal young cat was to verify more roughly Professor
-Sherrington’s observations and slightly to extend them _in respect of a
-sleeping animal_.
-
-In the course of these observations on a young cat I examined the
-various regions of the back and flanks with mechanical stimuli of
-different degrees of strength. These were applied during sleep and I
-found that it was more often during a moderate than a light or deep
-sleep that the following results were shown--chiefly under the stronger
-stimuli the tail was raised sharply and swept in a circular way, and
-this would be repeated according as the stimulus was applied; but at
-the same time there was shown a strong, irregular twitching along the
-flank, extending forwards to a point near the level of the shoulder.
-This latter reflex would appear to be a reaction on the part of the
-panniculus carnosus. Both the reflex of the muscles of the tail
-and this of the flanks appear to be connected in their origin with
-movements of parasites in their respective territories.
-
-In considering the scratch-reflex in the cat a subtle bit of adjustment
-is found. That coarse and simple scratching of its ear, which we see
-so often in the cat, must have often astonished us for its vigour and
-yet its bloodless character. This action is of course a purposeful
-one, for it goes on when the animal is awake. Here if anywhere this
-profoundly hedonistic animal shows that for it the laws of comfort
-are its laws of conduct. It is clear that there may be two processes
-or conditions involved in its bloodless violence. On the one hand the
-reflex retractile mechanism of the claws may be kept in abeyance by
-another reaction which is pre-potent; on the other, it is a fact that
-the hind foot in the cat is furnished with claws which are much blunter
-than those of the fore foot. As far as I have been able to examine cats
-of different ages I have found the claws of the hind foot more like
-the blunt claws of a dog than the familiar sharp claws of the Felidæ.
-So in the violent scratching referred to there may be a double reason
-associated in the process. As to the difference in the sharpness of the
-fore and hind claws it would appear to be remarkably like a transmitted
-bit of adaptation initiated and kept in being by use and habit in
-progression, for the hind foot in such animals as the cat has a larger
-share in this action than the fore foot. But here it is difficult as so
-often to assign to selection its possible share of the adjustment.
-
-Certain minor but persistent reflexes may be briefly mentioned in
-support of this side of the evolutionary process. In the dog and cat,
-as we know them, the action of the muscles of the tail by which it is
-elevated during the act of defæcation is very suggestive of a reflex
-acquired by a very small degree of physical comfort and repeated in
-countless individuals, wild and domesticated. I have seen not only this
-but a few small scratches made by a cat before defæcation in a kitten
-as young as three weeks old. It is also mentioned in illustration of a
-vestigial character that a horse will paw the ground with no immediate
-apparent object, the act being derived from ancestors which thus
-cleared away snow from the ground. This is claimed, doubtfully I think,
-as a vestige of a formerly _useful_ habit but seems more probably to
-be one of these indifferent reflexes connected with comfort than with
-survival-value.
-
-It will be observed that in this branch of the case for Lamarck _v._
-Weismann the indirect evidence from inference far exceeds in amount
-that of direct experimental evidence, but from the nature of the
-problem under consideration this could not be otherwise.
-
-If we may again look back in thought over the long series of animals,
-from man downwards, we shall picture those of the spinal level
-striving (with apologies for the use of an anthropomorphic word) to
-reach the sensory level and finding out the fact that few there be
-that enter therein. Again we see in vision the higher creatures of
-the sensory level reaching forwards to the strait paths of primate
-existence, and again finding the difficulty of self-advancement that
-their predecessors found. We see the elect few of these, by a happy
-combination of nature and nurture, uprearing to glory and honour the
-primate stock with its culmination in man. A long vista indeed and a
-vision, but assuredly no mere figment of the imagination, as some of
-the slender facts and arguments here would seem to show. With Professor
-Bateson we personify Nature in the story, with her wonted coyness
-betraying the fact that though she is stern she has her tolerant
-moods; that she allows her children, even that “insurgent son” who
-calls himself Homo Sapiens, a genial liberty to frame new reflex-arcs
-which make for his enjoyment of life in indifferent fields, and _that
-the great neural process of Facilitation is the leading factor in
-their constructions and probably also in more deeply-based systems of
-sensori-motor arcs_.
-
-
-
-
-SUMMARY.
-
-
-Though it be true that _dolus latet in generalibus_, it is a more
-important truth that “without premature generalisations the true
-generalisation would never be arrived at.”[89]
-
- [89] Herbert Spencer, _Essays_, II, 57.
-
-Therefore I conclude:--
-
- 1. That Plasto-diēthēsis, or the moulding and sifting processes
- experienced by organisms, represents the beginning and end of higher
- animal evolution; and that its wide hyphen stands for the provinces
- where Mendelism, Mutationism, Tetraplasty, Orthogenesis, and the
- dynamical work of growth on Form, as well as other factors yet to be
- discovered, can range at large.
-
- 2. That personal selection is the leading form of that process in
- higher animals, whereas among Invertebrates, especially unicellular
- forms, selection of groups is the rule.
-
- 3. That Initiative in animal evolution comes by stimulation,
- excitation, and response in new conditions, and is followed by
- repetition of these phenomena until they result in structural
- modifications, transmitted and directed by selection and the laws
- of genetics--a series of events which agree with Neo-Lamarckian
- principles.
-
- 4. That undesigned experiments in the arrangement of the Mammalian
- hair, and the production of new bursæ, as well as the designed
- experiments of Pawlow, support the foregoing claims, with which agree
- the converging facts of--varieties of epidermis, arrangement of the
- papillary ridges, flexures of the palm and sole, the formation of the
- plantar arch, the origin of certain muscles, the innervation of the
- human skin, and the building of reflex-arcs.
-
- 5. That there is a large place in higher animals for the Evolution of
- the Indifferent through the action of use and habit.
-
- 6. That the position for Initiative in Evolution here advanced is no
- bar to unlimited research.
-
-
-
-
-INDEX.
-
-
- Adami, Professor. “Medical Contributions to the Study of Evolution,”
- 21.
-
- Ancestry, primate, 235, 236.
-
- Anthropology, 4.
-
- Ape: Arrangement of hair on forearm of, 43.
-
- ----Papillary ridges on hand and foot of, 164.
-
- ----Bursæ of, 184–186.
-
- ----Muscles of, 213, 214.
-
- Artists, Evidence from, 66.
-
- Ass: Hair-patterns of, 82.
-
-
- Baboon, Chacma, papillary ridges on hand and foot of, 165, 166.
-
- Bartholinus, Erasmus, 126.
-
- Bateson, Professor, 9, 20, 22, 33, 149, 255.
-
- ----“Materials for the Study of Variation,” 9–13, 22, 210.
-
- Bayliss, Professor, 244.
-
- Bear, Parti-coloured (_Æluropus melanoleucus_): Hair-patterns of,
- 121, 122.
-
- Beddard, Mr., 118.
-
- ----“Animal Colouration,” 206.
-
- Bell, Sir Charles, 205.
-
- Bergson, 205.
-
- Bongo (_Tragelaphus euryceros_): Hair-patterns of, 118.
-
- Bonney, Professor. “The Story of Our Planet,” 3.
-
- Bower, Professor, 21.
-
- Brooks, Professor, W. K., 20, 202.
-
- Bursæ, description of, 179, 180.
-
- ----Human, enumerated, 180–183.
-
- ----Experiments as to, 186–190.
-
-
- Canidæ: Hair-patterns of, 98–102.
-
- Capybara, epidermis of, 151.
-
- Chimpanzee, papillary ridges on hand and foot of, 164, 167, 168, 176.
-
- ----Bursæ of, 184, 185.
-
- Clark, Sir Andrew, 30.
-
- Cold and warmth sensations of human skin, 220–230.
-
- Coote, Captain, 194.
-
- Correlation, 28.
-
- Correns, 11.
-
- Cow, hair and habits of, 87–91.
-
- ----Fly-shaker muscles of, 90, 211, 212.
-
- Crime, detection of a, 5.
-
- Cunningham, J. T., 21.
-
-
- Darwin, 1, 2, 15, 35, 39, 40, 139, 145, 147, 239.
-
- ----“Origin of Species,” 2, 8.
-
- ----“Descent of Man,” 2.
-
- ----Three Blows to, 9.
-
- ----On human eyebrows, 64, 65.
-
- Darwin, Sir Francis, 20, 21.
-
- ----On Mnemonic theory of Heredity, 20.
-
- Darwinism, 9, 15, 25, 145.
-
- Dendy, Professor. “Outlines of Evolutionary Biology,” 21.
-
- de Vries, 11, 24, 27, 145, 190.
-
- Dog: Arrangement of hair of, 27, 28, 34, 100–102.
-
- ----Habits of, 98, 99.
-
- Dyer, Professor Thiselton, 210.
-
-
- Earth Wolf, epidermis of, 150.
-
- Echidna, epidermis of, 151.
-
- Elliott, Professor Scott, 98, 126.
-
- ----“Prehistoric Man and his Story,” 43, 47, 226.
-
- Environments, Discontinuous, 31–33.
-
- Epidermis: Varieties of, found in mammals, 145.
-
- ----Stimuli and response, 145–153.
-
- Eyebrows, hairs of human, 64–73.
-
- ----Interpreted by wrinkles, 67.
-
-
- Facilitation, 240, 246–248.
-
- Felidæ: Hair-patterns of, 92–97.
-
- ----Snout of, 94.
-
- Flexures of hand and foot, description of, 170–172.
-
- ----Chief types of, 172.
-
- ----Meaning of, 173–177.
-
- Foot of Man, 155, 156.
-
- ----Papillary ridges on, 159, 160.
-
- ----Flexures of, 176, 177.
-
- Foot of Man, Plantar arch of, 192–194.
-
- ----Muscles of, 214–217.
-
- Forearm, arrangement of hair on, 41.
-
-
- Galton, 157; On chiromantic creases, 170.
-
- Galvani, 126.
-
- Geikie, Sir Archibald, 3.
-
- Genealogy, 4.
-
- Germinal Selection, 19, 20.
-
- Gibbon, flexures of foot of, 176.
-
- ----Bursæ of, 185.
-
- Gibbon, Hainan, papillary ridges on hand and foot of, 164, 165.
-
- Giraffe: Habits of, 115.
-
- ----Hair-patterns of, 117.
-
- Gorilla, papillary ridges on hand and foot of, 164.
-
-
- Haeckel: Pithecoid Ancestors of Man, 1.
-
- Hair-direction, causation of, 140–144.
-
- ----Summary of conclusions with regard to, 141.
-
- ----Phenomena of, 37, 38.
-
- ----Experimental Inquiry into, 125, 126.
-
- ----Steps of Inquiry into, 40, 124, 125.
-
- Hair-pattern, Dynamics of, 44, 45, 46, 50.
-
- Hand of Man, 155, 156.
-
- ----Papillary ridges on, 157–159.
-
- ----Flexures of, 176, 177.
-
- ----Muscles of, 214–217.
-
- Harris, Dr. H. Wilder, 147, 154.
-
- Harris, Mrs. Wilder. _See_ Whipple, Miss Inez.
-
- Hartmann, 213.
-
- Hedgehog, epidermis of, 152.
-
- ----Papillary ridges on hand and foot of, 162, 163, 166.
-
- ----Flexures on hand and foot of, 173.
-
- Hepburn, Dr., 148, 159, 162.
-
- Heredity, Mnemonic theory of, 20.
-
- Herschel, Sir John, 126.
-
- Hill, Professor Leonard, 224.
-
- Historian a biologist, 2.
-
- Horse: Arrangement of hair on side of neck of, 51–63.
-
- ----Habits of, 75.
-
- ----Hair-patterns of, 75–82.
-
- ----Compared with Zebra, 83–85.
-
- ----Effect of harness upon hair of, 126–136.
-
- ----Fly-shaker muscles of, 211.
-
- Howes, G. B., 12.
-
- Hutchinson, Professor Jonathan, 188.
-
- Hutton, 3.
-
- Huxley, 5, 8, 126, 192, 200, 217.
-
-
- Insectivores, 237, 238.
-
-
- Jackson, Hughlings, 241.
-
- Jevons, 124, 125, 126, 140.
-
- Johnston, Sir H. H., 96, 201.
-
- Jones, Professor Wood, 230.
-
- ----“Arboreal Man,” 195, 245, 248.
-
-
- Kammerer, 21.
-
- Keith, Professor, 112, 188, 189, 190, 195, 196, 208, 215, 216, 217.
-
- ----On functions of platysma, 113.
-
- Kerr, Professor Graham, 224.
-
- ----On Embryology, 246, 247.
-
- Kiang (Thibetan Wild Ass): Hair-patterns of, 119.
-
- Kinkajou, epidermis of, 153.
-
- Kropotkin, Prince, 21.
-
-
- Lamarck, 13, 21, 22, 33, 35, 145, 147, 247, 255.
-
- Lamarckian hypothesis of organic evolution, 19, 20, 22, 24, 25, 26,
- 28, 30, 31, 138, 205.
-
- Lankester, Sir E. Ray, 20, 23, 45, 141, 190, 204.
-
- Lemur: Arrangement of hair on forearm of, 43.
-
- ----Hair-pattern of, 46.
-
- ----Papillary ridges on foot of, 161, 162, 164, 165.
-
- ----Black-headed, epidermis of, 153.
-
- ----Ring-tailed, epidermis of, 153.
-
- ----Flexures of foot of, 176.
-
- Lion: Hair-patterns of, 92–97, 207.
-
- Livingstone, 92.
-
- Llama: Hair-patterns of, 119, 120.
-
- Loris, Slow: epidermis of, 154, 155.
-
- ----Papillary ridges on foot of, 161, 166.
-
- Lydekker, 86, 92, 94, 115, 118, 119, 168, 195.
-
- Lyell, 3, 178, 192.
-
- ----“Principles of Geology,” 3, 46.
-
-
- Macacus, flexures of hand and foot of, 176.
-
- Macalister, 215, 217.
-
- McBride, Professor, 21.
-
- Macdonald, Professor, 190, 244, 245, 247.
-
- McDougall, Professor: On Physiological Psychology, 24, 25, 225, 253.
-
- MacEwen, Sir W., 188.
-
- McTaggart, Dr., 142.
-
- Malthus, 2, 15.
-
- Malus, 126.
-
- Mammals, palms and soles of, 150–153.
-
- Man: hair and habits of, 103.
-
- ----Arrangement of hair on back of, 104.
-
- ----Passive habits of, 106, 107.
-
- ----Arrangement of hair on chest of, 108, 109.
-
- ----Palm and sole of, 155, 156.
-
- ----Papillary ridges on hand of, 157–159.
-
- ----Papillary ridges on foot of, 159, 160.
-
- ----Flexures of palm and sole of, 176, 177.
-
- ----Plantar arch of, 192–194.
-
- ----Muscles of hand and foot of, 214–217.
-
- ----Changes in habits of, 234, 235.
-
- Marmoset, Papillary ridges on foot of, 161.
-
- Mendel, 11, 15, 26, 145, 190.
-
- Mercier, Dr.: On Causation, 141, 142.
-
- Mill, John Stuart, 141, 142.
-
- Mole, epidermis of, 150.
-
- Monkey, papillary ridges on hand and foot of, 164.
-
- Mule: Hair-patterns of, 82.
-
- Murphy, Dr. John B., 189.
-
- Muscles: Anatomists’ views of, 201, 202.
-
- ----Initiative in, 202, 203.
-
- ----New, 205.
-
- ----Unstriped, 205, 206.
-
- ----Facial, of expression, 207–209.
-
- ----Fly-shaker, 210–212.
-
- ----Skeletal, 212, 213.
-
- ----Skeletal, of Primates, 213, 214.
-
-
- Neural phenomena, 239.
-
- Nervous System: Some aspects of the, 223–225.
-
- ----Place of the, in Evolution, 238, 239.
-
- ----Raw materials of the, 240, 241.
-
- ----Integration of raw materials of the, 241, 242.
-
-
- Oken, 126.
-
- Ollier, 188.
-
- Onager, Hair-patterns of, 82.
-
- Opossum, American, epidermis of, 151.
-
- ----Azara’s, epidermis of, 153.
-
- Orang, papillary ridges on hand and foot of, 164.
-
- ----Bursæ of, 185.
-
- Organic Evolution, consideration of problems of, 24–28.
-
- ----Factors in, 27.
-
- ----Cross-roads in, 203–205.
-
- Owen, Richard, 10.
-
- Oxen: Hair-patterns of, 87–91.
-
-
- Palm, skin of, 147–156.
-
- ----of Man, 155–156.
-
- Papillary ridges, some undersigned experiments in, 166–169.
-
- Paterson, Dr. C., 188.
-
- Pearson, Professor Karl, 34, 141, 142.
-
- Phalanger, epidermis of, 152.
-
- Pitt, Miss Frances, 94, 95, 251.
-
- Plantar arch, of man, 192–194.
-
- ----How it was built, 194, 195.
-
- ----Equipment of, 196, 197.
-
- ----Description of, 197–199.
-
- Plasto-diēthēsis, 34, 145, 195.
-
- Platysma, Struggles of the, 111–114.
-
- Playfair, 3.
-
- Pocock, Roger, 75.
-
- Poincaré, Henri, 157.
-
- ----Principles of method, 36.
-
- Porcupine, Canadian Tree, epidermis of, 151, 153.
-
- Poulton, Professor: “Essays on Evolution,” 86.
-
- Prescott’s “Conquest of Peru,” 120.
-
- Pressure, Examples of the effects of, upon hair-direction, 127–136.
-
- Primates, epidermis of, 153.
-
-
- Rabbit, epidermis of, 151.
-
- Records, Interpretation of, 110.
-
- Reflex arches, formation of, 231.
-
- ----Some historical illustrations of, 231–234.
-
- ----Of Insects, 236, 237.
-
- ----Of Mollusca, 236, 237.
-
- ----Of Birds, 236, 237.
-
- ----Evidence of production of new, 242–246.
-
- Reflexes: Stimuli of, 249–256.
-
- ----Scratch, of the dog, 249.
-
- ----Purposes of, 250–253.
-
- ----Scratch, of the cat, 253.
-
- Rivers, Sources of, 4.
-
- Romanes: 19, 39, 40, 145.
-
- ----On Weismann, 17, 18.
-
- Roux, 19, 145.
-
- Russell, The Hon. Bertrand, 142.
-
- Russell, E. S. On Lamarck’s theory, 20.
-
-
- Saint-Hilaire, Geoffrey, 10.
-
- Sapajou, Brown, papillary ridges on hand and foot of, 165.
-
- Schafer’s “Text Book of Physiology,” 219, 220, 226.
-
- Scratch reflex; of the dog, 249.
-
- ----Of the cat, 253.
-
- Selous, 92, 115, 118.
-
- Sherrington, Professor, 218, 226, 229, 238, 244, 245, 249, 250, 251,
- 253, 254.
-
- Skin, Human: Distribution of Touch Corpuscles, 219.
-
- ----Distribution of Touch Spots, 219.
-
- ----Distribution of Cold and Warmth Sensations, 220.
-
- ----Distribution of Cold and Warmth Spots, 220, 221.
-
- ----Stimuli of pressure, 222, 226–230.
-
- ----Stimuli of cold, 226–230.
-
- ----Stimuli of pain, 226–230.
-
- ----Stimuli of warmth, 226–230.
-
- Sloth, Two-toed (_Cholæpus didactylus_): Hair-patterns of, 122, 123.
-
- Smith, Dr. E. Barclay, 201, 216.
-
- Sole, skin of, 147–156.
-
- ----Of Man, 155, 156.
-
- Spencer, Herbert, 28, 177.
-
- Squirrel, epidermis of, 152.
-
- ----Papillary ridges on hand and foot of, 162, 166.
-
- ----Flexures of hand and foot of, 175.
-
- Squirrel-monkey, papillary ridges on foot of, 161.
-
- ----Flexures of foot of, 176.
-
- Starling, Professor, 227, 244.
-
- ----On Facilitation, 240, 246.
-
- Still-born children, subcutaneous bursæ of two, 183, 184.
-
- Stimuli, 30, 31.
-
- ----Of touch, 219, 226–230.
-
- ----Of cold, 220, 226–230.
-
- ----Of warmth, 220, 226–230.
-
- ----Of pressure, 222, 226–230.
-
- Stout, Professor, 252.
-
- Summary of conclusions arrived at, 257, 258.
-
-
- Thomson, Professor J. Arthur, 20, 22, 23, 24, 25, 28, 29, 34.
-
- ----On Heredity, 22.
-
- Touch Corpuscles, 219, 227, 228.
-
- Touch spots, 219, 225, 227, 228.
-
- Tschermak, 11.
-
-
- Ungulates, even-toed, 86–91.
-
- ----odd-toed, 74–85.
-
-
- Vernon, Dr.: “Variations in Animals and Plants,” 28.
-
- Vulpine phalanger, flexures of foot of, 173, 175.
-
-
- Wallace, Professor, 2, 39, 40, 46, 145.
-
- Weber’s Law, 222.
-
- Weismann, 9, 11, 14, 16, 17, 18, 21, 22, 24, 25, 26, 86, 139, 177,
- 210, 245, 255.
-
- ----Twelve points, 15, 16.
-
- Weismannism, 17, 18, 19, 26, 145.
-
- Welton, Mr., 142.
-
- Whipple, Miss Inez (Mrs. Wilder Harris), 154, 162.
-
- ----Criticism of “The Direction of Hair in Animals and Man,” 137–139.
-
- Wolff, 189: “Law of Bone Transformation,” 205.
-
-
- Young, Arthur, 143.
-
-
- Zebra: Comparisons between horse and, 83, 84.
-
-
-
-
-
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-
-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Initiative in Evolution, by Walter Kidd
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
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-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Initiative in Evolution
-
-Author: Walter Kidd
-
-Release Date: October 19, 2016 [EBook #53319]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
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-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK INITIATIVE IN EVOLUTION ***
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-</pre>
-
-
-
-<div class="transnote">
-<p><b><a id="Transcribers_notes"></a>Transcriber’s notes</b>:</p>
-
-<p>In this e-text a black dotted underline indicates a hyperlink to
-a page, illustra­tion or footnote (hyperlinks are also highlighted
-when the mouse pointer hovers over them). The text of the book has
-been preserved as in the original except for correc­tion of some
-typographic errors (see below) and a few punctua­tion inconsistencies.
-<span class="htmlonly">Page numbers are shown in the right margin and
-footnotes are at the end.</span> <span class="epubonly">Footnotes are
-listed at the end.</span> Some illustrations have been moved nearer to
-the relevant text.</p>
-
-<p class="ml1hi">Corrected misspellings include the following:<br />
-constitutent —&gt; constituent<br />
-It —&gt; If<br />
-ot —&gt; to<br />
-endotheliun —&gt; endothelium<br />
-ecomomy —&gt; economy<br />
-involutary —&gt; involuntary<br />
-old factory —&gt; olfactory<br />
-tacile —&gt; tactile<br />
-irrevelant —&gt; irrelevant<br />
-tranverse —&gt; transverse<br />
-decebrate —&gt; decerebrate<br />
-Thistleton —&gt; Thiselton<br />
-opprobious —&gt; opprobrious<br />
-Duputryen's —&gt; Dupuytren's<br />
-ditēthēsis —&gt; diēthēsis<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="epubonly">The original plain cover has had a title added and
-is placed in the public domain.</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="titlepage">
-<h1>
-INITIATIVE IN<br />
-EVOLUTION</h1>
-
-<div class="tp1">BY</div>
-
-<div class="tp2">WALTER KIDD, M.D., F.R.S.E.</div>
-
-<div class="tp3">AUTHOR OF “USE—INHERITANCE,” “DIRECTION OF HAIR IN ANIMALS AND MAN,”<br />
-“THE SENSE OF TOUCH IN MAMMALS AND BIRDS,” ETC.</div>
-
-
-<div class="tp4"><i>WITH NUMEROUS ILLUSTRATIONS</i></div>
-
-
-<div class="tp5">H. F. &amp; G. WITHERBY</div>
-
-<div class="tp6">326 HIGH HOLBORN, LONDON<br />
-1920</div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" title="v"><a name="Page_v" id="Page_v"></a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>PREFACE.</h2>
-
-
-<p>The Great War imposed on speculative biology a moratorium as
-in the long vaca­tion of lawyers, in which are causes left over to
-the next term. And so the old case Lamarck <i>versus</i> Weismann
-was not heard in the Courts of Science during the war. In the
-present term it is due to be heard afresh, and at some future date
-to come up for settlement. The chapters that follow comprise
-some of the pleadings on behalf of the plaintiff and are part of the
-brief of a junior counsel. This adjective, alas! signifies not the
-years—for such are often old enough to be the fathers of the leaders—but
-the standing and attainments of a junior. But in the open
-Court of Science, and on suited occasions, it may be the business
-of a junior to question, in the interests of his client, the authority
-even of Attorneys-General and Lords Chief Justice. In matters
-of thought and inquiry it is useless to retreat within a stronghold
-and bar the gates. It may be satisfactory to himself for one
-Milner to write a book on behalf of a certain body of doctrine and
-call it <i>The End of Controversy</i>, but the book should have held the
-sub-title <i>The End of Progress</i>. The Newtons, Pasteurs and
-Darwins have seldom wielded the weapon of controversy, though
-the triumph of <i>The Origin of Species</i> would have been slower
-without the aid of Darwin’s brilliant champion and candid friend.
-But, if the leaders seldom need such help, for the Gibeonite it is a
-matter of course and simple necessity. With all the urbanity
-due to the great subject-matter should this pleasant duty be
-performed. Who would not prefer to the fierce Spaniard the genial
-Portuguese, discussing all subjects without rancour, and lover of
-bull-fights though he be, taking care to wrap in cork the horns of
-his fighting bulls?</p>
-
-<p>The earlier chapters treat of the arrangement of the mammalian
-hair, which has occupied my attention for over twenty<span class="pagenum" title="vi"><a name="Page_vi" id="Page_vi"></a></span>
-years, and this has led straight to the other subjects, because of
-their bearing on Lamarckism and Initiative in Evolution. The
-tentative conclusions reached years ago have been strengthened by
-further knowledge and reflec­tion, and perhaps by certain criticisms.
-The furrow ploughed may have been lonely, but the pursuit has
-not been without the mild pleasure of seeing fresh scattered portions
-of the field coming into their natural order. The resulting state of
-mind resembles that of a certain Mr. Burke recorded in the annals
-of a golf club, second to none, the Ancient, and now Royal Blackheath,
-among whose minutes appears the <span class="nowrap">following:—</span></p>
-
-<div class="ml2em">
-<p class="ml2em">“20th September, 1834.</p>
-
-<p>Present, Mr. Burke, <i>Solus</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="ml4em">The dinner was good, wine abundant, and the utmost
-harmony prevailed. The want of grouse was severely
-felt this day.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>It is written on page 101 of the <i>Chronicles of Blackheath Golfers</i>.</p>
-
-<p>My debt to such writings as those of Professors Arthur Keith,
-Woods Jones, Graham Kerr, and Professors Sherrington, Starling,
-Schäfer, McDougall and Ward is too obvious to the reader to need
-more than a bare mention.</p>
-
-<p>I have to thank one critic, Miss Inez Whipple, now Mrs. H.
-Wilder Harris, for her able if hostile criticism of two former books
-of mine which has been of use in this one; and Mr. R.&nbsp;E. Holding
-for good help extending over many years in the prepara­tion of the
-illustrations, and for many a good sugges­tion.</p>
-
-<p class="tar mr5pc">W.K.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-<h2>CONTENTS.</h2>
-
-
-
-<div class="center">
-<table id="toc" summary="table of contents" border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0">
-<tr class="ptb03"><td class="tar">CHAPTER</td><td class="tal"></td><td class="tar"><span class="ilb">PAGE</span></td></tr>
-<tr class="ptb03"><td class="tar">I.—</td><td class="tal">From Known to Unknown</td><td class="tar"><a href="#Page_1">1</a></td></tr>
-<tr class="ptb03"><td class="tar">II.—</td><td class="tal">Review of the Position</td><td class="tar"><a href="#Page_8">8</a></td></tr>
-<tr class="ptb03"><td class="tar">III.—</td><td class="tal">The Problems Presented</td><td class="tar"><a href="#Page_22">22</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tar">IV.—</td><td class="tal">Initial Variations and Total Experience</td><td class="tar"><a href="#Page_30">30</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tar">V.—</td><td class="tal">Method of Proof</td><td class="tar"><a href="#Page_36">36</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tar">VI.—</td><td class="tal">Evidence from Arrangement of Hair</td><td class="tar"><a href="#Page_39">39</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tar">VII.—</td><td class="tal">The Evolution of Patterns of Hair</td><td class="tar"><a href="#Page_50">50</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tar vat">VIII.—</td><td class="tal">Can Muscular Action change the Direction of Hair in the Individual?</td><td class="tar vab"><a href="#Page_64">64</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tar">IX.—</td><td class="tal">Habits and Hair of Ungulates</td><td class="tar"><a href="#Page_74">74</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tar">X.—</td><td class="tal">Habits and Hair of Ungulates</td><td class="tar"><a href="#Page_86">86</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tar">XI.—</td><td class="tal">Habits and Hair of Carnivores</td><td class="tar"><a href="#Page_92">92</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tar">XII.—</td><td class="tal">Habits and Hair of Carnivores</td><td class="tar"><a href="#Page_98">98</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tar">XIII.—</td><td class="tal">Habits and Hair of Primates</td><td class="tar"><a href="#Page_103">103</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tar">XIV.—</td><td class="tal">Miscellaneous Examples</td><td class="tar"><a href="#Page_115">115</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tar">XV.—</td><td class="tal">Experimental</td><td class="tar"><a href="#Page_124">124</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tar">XVI.—</td><td class="tal">First Summary</td><td class="tar"><a href="#Page_140">140</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tar">XVII.—</td><td class="tal">Varieties of Epidermis</td><td class="tar"><a href="#Page_145">145</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tar">XVIII.—</td><td class="tal">Arrangement of the Papillary Ridges</td><td class="tar"><a href="#Page_157">157</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tar">XIX.—</td><td class="tal">Flexures of the Palm and Sole</td><td class="tar"><a href="#Page_170">170</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tar">XX.—</td><td class="tal">The Evolution of a Bursa</td><td class="tar"><a href="#Page_178">178</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tar">XXI.—</td><td class="tal">The Plantar Arch</td><td class="tar"><a href="#Page_192">192</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tar">XXII.—</td><td class="tal">Muscles</td><td class="tar"><a href="#Page_200">200</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tar">XXIII.—</td><td class="tal">Innervation of the Human Skin</td><td class="tar"><a href="#Page_218">218</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tar">XXIV.—</td><td class="tal">The Building of Reflex Arcs</td><td class="tar"><a href="#Page_231">231</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tar"></td><td class="tal"><span class="smcap">Summary</span></td><td class="tar"><a href="#Page_257">257</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tar"></td><td class="tal"><span class="smcap">Index</span></td><td class="tar"><a href="#Page_259">259</a></td></tr>
-</table></div>
-
-
-
-<h2>LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.</h2>
-
-
-
-<div class="center">
-<table id="loi" summary="list of illustrations" border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0">
-<tr><td class="tac vat">FIG.</td><td class="tal"></td><td class="tar vab">PAGE</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tac vat">1</td><td class="tal">Arrangement of hair on the forearm</td><td class="tar vab"><a href="#Page_42">42</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tac vat">2</td><td class="tal">Diagrams of hair-patterns</td><td class="tar vab"><a href="#Page_51">51</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tac vat">3,&nbsp;4,&nbsp;5</td><td class="tal">Neck of horse, showing muscles and tendons</td><td class="tar vab"><a href="#Page_53">53</a>, 54</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tac vat">6–19</td><td class="tal">Side of neck of various horses, showing varieties of hair-patterns</td><td class="tar vab"><a href="#Page_56">56</a>–<a href="#Page_62">62</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tac vat">20–29</td><td class="tal vat">Illustrations of human eyebrows, showing muscular action and hair-direction</td><td class="tar vab"><a href="#Page_70">70</a>–<a href="#Page_73">73</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tac vat">30</td><td class="tal">Front view of horse, showing pectoral pattern</td><td class="tar vab"><a href="#Page_76">76</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tac vat">31</td><td class="tal">Side view of horse showing hair-direction</td><td class="tar vab"><a href="#Page_77">77</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tac vat">32,&nbsp;32a</td><td class="tal">Frontal region of horses, showing muscles and hair-pattern</td><td class="tar vab"><a href="#Page_78">78</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tac vat">33</td><td class="tal">Side view of horse, showing chief superficial muscles</td><td class="tar vab"><a href="#Page_79">79</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tac vat">34,&nbsp;35</td><td class="tal">Side and back views of cow, showing hair-patterns on back</td><td class="tar vab"><a href="#Page_88">88</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tac vat">36</td><td class="tal">Lioness, showing direction of hair-streams on muzzle</td><td class="tar vab"><a href="#Page_93">93</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tac vat">37</td><td class="tal">Back of lion, showing hair-pattern</td><td class="tar vab"><a href="#Page_95">95</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tac vat">38–40</td><td class="tal vat">Gluteal region, foreleg and chest of domestic dog, showing hair-direction</td><td class="tar vab"><a href="#Page_99">99</a>,&nbsp;<a href="#Page_101">101</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tac vat">41</td><td class="tal">Arrangement of hair on back of lemur, chimpanzee and man</td><td class="tar vab"><a href="#Page_105">105</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tac vat">42</td><td class="tal"><i>Idem</i> chest</td><td class="tar vab"><a href="#Page_109">109</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tac vat">43</td><td class="tal">Giraffe, showing hair-patterns of neck</td><td class="tar vab"><a href="#Page_116">116</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tac vat">44</td><td class="tal">Giraffe in attitude of drinking or browsing off the ground</td><td class="tar vab"><a href="#Page_117">117</a><span class="pagenum" title="x"><a name="Page_x" id="Page_x"></a></span></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tac vat">45</td><td class="tal">Bongo, showing hair-patterns of chest</td><td class="tar vab"><a href="#Page_119">119</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tac vat">46</td><td class="tal">Kiang. Side view showing inguinal and axillary patterns</td><td class="tar vab"><a href="#Page_119">119</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tac vat">47</td><td class="tal">Forefoot of llama, showing hair-direction</td><td class="tar vab"><a href="#Page_120">120</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tac vat">48</td><td class="tal">Two-toed sloth, showing action of gravity on hair</td><td class="tar vab"><a href="#Page_123">123</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tac vat">49</td><td class="tal">Domestic horse, fully harnessed</td><td class="tar vab"><a href="#Page_128">128</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tac vat">50</td><td class="tal">Side view of domestic horse, showing reversed hair due to harness</td><td class="tar vab"><a href="#Page_129">129</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tac vat">51–58</td><td class="tal">Necks of various horses, showing reversed hair due to collar</td><td class="tar vab"><a href="#Page_132">132</a>–<a href="#Page_135">135</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tac vat">59</td><td class="tal">Right hand, drawing of papillary ridges, made from impressions</td><td class="tar vab"><a href="#Page_158">158</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tac vat">60</td><td class="tal">Right foot. <i>Idem</i></td><td class="tar vab"><a href="#Page_160">160</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tac vat">61–70</td><td class="tal vat">Hands and feet of lower animals, showing papillary ridges</td><td class="tar vab"><span class="ilb"><a href="#Page_161">161</a>,&nbsp;<a href="#Page_163">163</a>–<a href="#Page_166">166</a>,&nbsp;<a href="#Page_168">168</a></span></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tac vat">71</td><td class="tal">Flexures on palm of right hand. Drawing made from impression</td><td class="tar vab"><a href="#Page_171">171</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tac vat">72–79</td><td class="tal">Flexures on hands and feet of various lower animals</td><td class="tar vab"><a href="#Page_172">172</a>–<a href="#Page_175">175</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tac vat">80</td><td class="tal">Drawing of flexures of sole of foot of man, young adult</td><td class="tar vab"><a href="#Page_176">176</a></td></tr>
-</table></div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" title="1"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1"></a></span></p>
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER I.<br />
-
-FROM KNOWN TO UNKNOWN</h2>
-
-
-<p>Upward—still upward—still upward to the highest! Such is
-the claim of modern man for the story of himself and the lower
-inhabitants of the globe. The zoologists have gone so far as to
-confer upon him the surname Sapiens—Homo Sapiens. Learned
-indeed he is, and heir of all the ages, but whether or not his assumed
-surname be warranted the doctrine of descent with modifica­tion
-can never again be questioned. The work of Darwin was crowned
-when he compelled a general acceptance of that doctrine, and now
-the Descent of Man and the Ascent of Man are equivalent terms
-for a natural process which has converted man from a thing to a
-person, and is the founda­tion of all modern thought. The biologist
-works secure in the knowledge that he is studying some portion
-of a chain of life stretching back for incalculable ages, and is not
-careful to produce those missing links demanded by the once
-formidable foes of his fundamental principle. Haeckel may
-announce that Pithecanthropus Erectus of Dubois is truly a
-Pliocene remainder of that famous group of highest Catarrhines
-which were the immediate pithecoid ancestors of man. This may
-or may not be true, but if true it makes the descent of man from
-a lower stock none the surer, the increasing verifica­tion of which
-is not found to rest on missing links.</p>
-
-<p>Many of the discoveries of modern science are made by
-proceeding from known phenomena to the unknown, or, more
-precisely, from the well-known through the little-known
-to the hitherto unknown.</p>
-
-<p>As to the validity of knowledge it is enough to say this—and
-pass on—<i>all our knowledge is provisional and imperfect, and much
-of our ignorance is as transient as ourselves</i>.</p>
-
-<p>There are two chief ways in which historians deal with their
-subject-matter, though the moderns combine them. When oral
-tradition gives place to written records the lineal descendant of
-the bards and annalists collects his scanty authorities and compiles
-his story from them from beginning to end. The Anglo-Saxon
-Chronicle of Bede and Alfred, the Book of Howth, the works of
-Giraldus Cambrensis, the Chronicles of Froissart and the Memoirs<span class="pagenum" title="2"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2"></a></span>
-of de Comines were composed in the only way that was then possible.
-But the muse of history entered on a deeper and more fruitful
-course when about ninety years ago the study of documents became
-an essential feature of historical work. It was then that the
-historian grew up, entered upon his finest inheritance and assumed
-his Greek title, Enquirer, Student of facts, Man of research. He
-is now nothing if not a man of science as well as of letters. With
-a wealth of documents within his reach so great that the 3239
-Vatican cases full of them formed by no means the richest collec­tion
-in the archives of Europe, he proceeds to read backwards correctly
-what many an earlier annalist read forwards falsely. “We are
-still at the beginning of the documentary age which is destined to
-make history independent of historians, to develop learning at the
-expense of writing, and to accomplish a revolu­tion in other sciences
-as well.<span class="nowrap">”<a id="FNanchor_1" href="#Footnote_1" class="fnanchor">1</a></span></p>
-
-
-<h3>The Historian a Biologist.</h3>
-
-<p>It is not too much to say that he who studies history, national,
-political, constitutional, ecclesiastical, military or economic is as
-much a biologist in the widest sense as the botanist and zoologist.
-Indeed these were till recently termed students of natural <i>history</i>,
-until the advance of knowledge gave us the various special groups
-of workers, conveniently called biologists. Though the study of
-human history by documents is an essential part of the historical
-method and the student may read <i>his</i> subject backwards, this would
-not of itself warrant the technical biologist in doing so, even though
-he be a child of Nature and part of her—“Nature’s insurgent son.”
-But some reflec­tion on the facts of certain provinces of science
-affords ample justifica­tion for the method. It is chiefly in questions
-of origin that it avails, while it fails in that form of research by
-experiment which is the glory of modern science. A few examples
-of the process of passing from the known to the unknown will
-illustrate the method.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Darwin.</h3>
-
-<p>Much of the <i>Origin of Species</i> and all of the <i>Descent of Man</i>
-was founded on this method; thus in the former the conceptions
-of struggle took their main rise from the work of Malthus on Human
-Popula­tion, and of variation from domesticated animals and plants,
-and this is true also of Wallace. A mere glance at the divisions of
-<i>The Descent of Man</i> shows that it could never have been attempted
-in any other than the backward way.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" title="3"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3"></a></span></p>
-
-
-<h3>Geology.</h3>
-
-<p>In their researches on the crust of the earth Playfair, Hutton
-and Lyell did not pursue them by going down a coal mine till they
-came to the lowest available beds and work upward from these
-to the highest. Though for purposes of exposi­tion a great geologist,
-as Sir Archibald Geikie, may expound the making of the earth
-from the lowest to the highest levels, and Professor Bonney tell
-us the <i>Story of our Planet</i> from beginning to end as if he had watched
-it unfolding, Lyell in his <i>Principles of Geology</i> shows how the
-studies of his great province began. There we have the backward
-reading of its story pursued by himself and other great ones, and
-where it led them. Commencing with the Pleistocene period
-and passing through Neocene and Eocene periods through the
-Mesozoic Era and its cretaceous, jurassic and triassic systems to the
-Newer Palæozoic Era and its Permian, carboniferous, and Devonian
-systems, the older Palæozoic Era and its Silurian Ordovician and
-Cambrian systems, he reaches the unknown. But before all this
-patient research and its record is reached he treats, as he must, of
-consolida­tion and altera­tion of strata, of petrifica­tion of organic
-remains, elevation of strata, horizontal and inclined stratifica­tion,
-of faulting, denuda­tion, upheaval and subsidence as they combine
-to remodel the earth’s crust. The title of his classical work is
-significant—<i>An Attempt to Explain the Former Changes of the
-Earth’s Surface by Reference to Causes now in Operation</i> (it
-may be noted that in 1830 they were fond of capital letters and
-of underlining their words). If these great men had been condemned
-to the sole use of the method of the annalist in his treatment
-of human history, that of the coal mine in geology, this great
-province of knowledge would never have been what it is to-day.</p>
-
-<p>At this point I think it well to state that this illuminating
-principle of Lyell is pursued in nearly all the matters of fact and
-their interpreta­tion contained in the following chapters, so that
-from time to time I shall have to employ the verb, coined for the
-purpose, when I attempt to “Lyell” them on behalf of Lamarck.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Anthropology.</h3>
-
-<p>The anthropologist could hardly make a start with his research,
-if, knowing nothing of his own anatomy, physiology, customs and
-beliefs, he tried to interpret the physical features, habits, manners,
-customs and rites of an African tribe. Without such prior knowledge
-he would find it a profitless task to journey to the banks of
-the Zambesi and bring back any intelligible history of the aborigines.
-If he did not know the games of a European child how could he<span class="pagenum" title="4"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4"></a></span>
-understand the variants of them such as the writer of <i>Savage</i> <span class="nowrap"><i>Childhood</i><a id="FNanchor_2" href="#Footnote_2" class="fnanchor">2</a></span>
-expounds so well?</p>
-
-
-<h3>The Sources of Rivers.</h3>
-
-<p>To trace the course and source of a river is a simple task through
-the work of modern geographers, and such a pursuit illustrates
-well the two methods here considered, but it is doubtful if any river
-was ever traced originally from its fountain head to its mouth. The
-backward way of such explora­tion, from the nature of the case,
-has always been taken, and men have traced the more or less finished
-products of the lower stretches, backward, still backwards, even
-as in the Indus, to the still-unknown. The earliest thinkers and
-seekers in the plains of Bengal were familiar with much of their
-great sacred and composite river as it flowed into its delta. Slowly,
-laboriously, here a little and there a little, they learned its stupendous
-story. They found the plateau of Tibet in the Himalayas where
-the twin-sisters, Brahmaputra and Ganges were born, and saw how
-from the one high cradle they parted on their eastward course
-for a thousand miles with the mountain-chain between them, and
-how, coming together again, the one descending through Assam
-and the other flowing through the plains, reinforced by the Jumna,
-they united to form the Ganges-Brahmaputra. A great subject
-indeed for the early geographer, but one which he could only follow
-in the backward way. Again how well known and revered in
-Egypt was the Nile for thousands of years before its source in
-Victoria Nyanza could be traced, even though Nero might send
-his explorers as far as the marshes of the White Nile, and Ptolemy’s
-search for it might lead him to guess the riddle, and assign it to
-two great lakes!</p>
-
-
-<h3>Genealogy.</h3>
-
-<p>Not many of us can trace our ancestry in the direct male line
-to the 8th century by authentic and written documents as did a
-Hebrew friend of mine, thus effectually meeting the doubts of a
-prospective brother-in-law who asked him as to his fitness to enter
-a family which was able to produce a stray peer of the realm in its
-roll. On the other hand a man who has lost his parents in childhood
-may know nothing of them but that his father’s name was A. Mann,
-and that he was buried in a Kentish churchyard. He may go on a
-pilgrimage and find there recorded the fact that A. Mann was the
-son of A. Mann, Gent, who came from Northumberland. He will
-doubtless make another pilgrimage and find there a large vault,<span class="pagenum" title="5"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5"></a></span>
-and over it an imposing record of many a Mann, and yet further
-he may go, and from the Heralds’ College find out the still earlier
-deriva­tion of his ancestors.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Detection of a Crime.</h3>
-
-<p>There are two chief ways of detecting a crime. By oral evidence
-from eye-witnesses or confession of the accused you may get direct
-proof, though even here are pitfalls from careless and hasty witnesses
-on the one hand, or on the other from a strange perversion of mind
-of the confessing person which is well enough known to forensic
-medicine. You may thus bring home to the accused his guilt by
-the method of the annalist. Or you may employ the more common
-method of studying circumstantial evidence; the story of the crime
-is read backwards and a verdict of guilty is given. This is the
-main stuff of which the prevalent detective story is composed.</p>
-
-
-<h3>A Parable.</h3>
-
-<p>A plain parable may well conclude this chapter.</p>
-
-<p>As I mused on the chain of life I found a piece of whipcord
-which had been lying by for twenty-five years since some of it was
-used for rigging a model yacht, and this very efficient product of
-human art seemed to speak to me on the subject of my musings.
-Perhaps if Huxley could extract from a piece of chalk or lumps of
-coal two magnificent expositions on geology and biology, this little
-trifle of cord might afford a text on a way of looking at living things
-which should be useful in this old case of Lamarck <i>v.</i> Weismann—and
-others.</p>
-
-<p>Should I learn the story of the whipcord forwards like an annalist,
-or backward like a modern historian? Clearly it could be done
-in a measure by either method. Here was a highly finished product
-of which either might furnish the story, and of which, we may suppose,
-I knew nothing. I tried the backward way, and by the aid of a
-needle began to unravel it. The cord was as good as if just made,
-slender, strong, twisted, with some glazing on the twisted threads.
-It showed three main bundles, and each of these was composed of
-two smaller ones. The substance of all these six was found when
-examined with a lens to consist of minute silky fibres varying
-from a quarter of an inch to an inch in length. This was all I could
-learn without a stronger magnifying power or a chemical analysis,
-and the direct search was at an end. I gathered since then that
-the first three bundles were called “strands,” and the two composing
-each of these “yarns,” and that the fibres were from a plant called
-hemp. This did not carry the story deep or far, and illustrates<span class="pagenum" title="6"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6"></a></span>
-how often in the backward method facts have to be supplemented
-by inference. But I had learnt some undoubted facts and some
-inferences from them nearly as certain. Some mind of man had
-conceived and hands carried out the division of the bundles of
-fibres into three strands, had twisted them somehow so as to reduce
-their length by a quarter and yet not far enough to rupture them,
-and had thus fitted them the better for their purpose by a reinforcement
-of tensile strength due to the twisting. I could also see
-that this same mind had seen it better to divide each of these
-strands into two yarns before the final twisting, and that in framing
-the yarns the silky fibres of the plant had been squeezed together
-by some powerful agency and yet not disintegrated, and that the
-finished product had been immersed in a protective substance
-which gave it a slight glaze. In short, I, though a child in these
-matters, read much of the story of this cord in terms of mind dealing
-with given organic matter. I may add that I did not imagine
-myself a little Paley, and that I do not intend to “take in” the
-reader as to the argument from design and final causes, even though
-this parable may feebly resemble Paley’s study of a watch. The
-conclusion was perfectly clear that certain directing grey cells of
-a certain brain had interfered with and acted upon some plastic
-vegetable matter, and one could at the “strand” stage, the “yarn”
-stage, and the “fibre” stage see mind writ large.</p>
-
-
-<h3>The Forward Way.</h3>
-
-<p>The limits of the former method are obvious, but I might also
-attempt to follow the little story as a crime is followed and described
-by eye-witnesses. So I go to an old-fashioned rope-factory and
-ask the foreman questions about the making of twine, cords, ropes
-and cables. He shows me bundles of hemp; he calls them Russian,
-Italian or American, and goes on to tell me how the fibre is
-“heckled” or combed, how “tow” is separated from “line,” and
-how the yarns are pressed together and twisted, how they are at
-first rough and bristly, and are then dressed, polished, and “sized”
-with such a starch as that of the potato. When I proceed to ask
-him about the plant itself his interest flags, and he becomes vague.
-He says, “You had better ask the Head, young Mr. X., he knows
-these things better.” I find the Head with his golf clubs over his
-shoulder and about to start on his “business,” and he is polite, but
-says he knows very little about the origin of his hemp. “You should
-go over the way and ask Messrs. Y. if they will let you see the expert
-who advises them in their business, he will know.” The expert is
-at home and kindly and fully describes to me the early home of<span class="pagenum" title="7"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7"></a></span>
-the wild <i>Cannabis Sativa</i> in a moderate climate of Asia, the rich
-soil it needs for its growth and the various countries of the world
-into which it has been introduced; and the bast-fibres of the bark
-of this plant which from remote antiquity has supplied the silky
-stuff. He then tells me how the stems are dried and crushed, and
-then of the important stage of fermenta­tion or “retting” in water,
-how they are again beaten in a “break,” then rubbed and “scutched,”
-and finally “heckled” or combed; and, as to analytic chemistry,
-he tells me that the chief constituent is cellulose. This quest is
-now over and I know much I could not find out by the backward
-method, though the dependence of its rival upon the presence of
-honest and capable eye-witnesses is not less obvious. It is not alone
-in ecclesiastical history that cheats and forgers of documents exist.
-In the world of Nature there may be, for all we know, biological
-False Decretals that may lead us far astray, such perhaps as
-Amphioxous and Archæopteryx, and the Pseudo-Isidore who
-produced them may yet be discovered.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" title="8"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8"></a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER II.<br />
-
-REVIEW OF THE POSITION</h2>
-
-
-<p>The modern story of the theory of organic evolution shows certain
-important dates—1859, 1880, 1894, 1895, 1899 and 1909. These
-begin with the <i>Origin of Species</i> and end with the publica­tion of a
-volume in commemora­tion of its jubilee, when most of the leading
-students of evolution united to render homage to Darwin. The
-year 1859 has been so often and so worthily treated that it is enough
-here to say that the fifty years between the issue of the work of
-Darwin and Wallace and 1909 saw a greater revolu­tion in biology,
-speculative and practical, than any period so relatively brief had
-ever seen.</p>
-
-<p>In the year 1880 the “coming of age” of the <i>Origin of Species</i>
-was celebrated. On the 9th of April at the Royal Institu­tion an
-address was given by the powerful friend, champion and candid
-critic of Darwin, and before the scientific and educated world
-Huxley was able to say with his own force and directness: “Evolution
-is no longer an hypothesis, but an historical fact.” It may
-be noted in passing that Darwin’s theory of natural selection is not
-referred to in the address. Challenges and opposi­tion from various
-quarters met this confident claim of the formidable speaker, as
-doubtless he desired, but the work of the succeeding half-century
-has done little or nothing that does not establish that claim. It
-is hardly to be doubted that if in the jubilee-year, 1909, Huxley had
-been alive on this earth, instead of elsewhere, his eloquent voice
-would have been heard to declare with emphasis equal to that
-of 1880: “Selection is no longer an hypothesis, but an historical
-fact.” Some such statement, with the <i>imprimatur</i> of a great name
-would have removed from the jubilee-volume that slight aspect
-as of a Dutch <span class="nowrap">chorus<a id="FNanchor_3" href="#Footnote_3" class="fnanchor">3</a></span> which is apparent in it. A remark of Kelvi<span class="pagenum" title="9"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9"></a></span>n’s
-when he was conferring a medal of the Royal Society on Huxley
-may illustrate what has been said above. He said that they must
-all be thankful to have still among them that champion of Evolution
-who once bore down its enemies, but was now possibly needed to
-save it from its friends. It may be regretted that it was not so
-in 1909.</p>
-
-<p>Considering the mole-like and persistent work of the biometricians, some
-who are at present keeping well-ordered lawns may find some day a few
-disturbing heaps of facts. I am reminded here of an historic duel, Oxford <i>v.</i>
-Cambridge, which took place soon after the introduc­tion of Mendel’s discoveries
-into England at the London Zoological Society, when Prof. Bateson
-expounded them with enthusiasm and when Weldon repelled them with
-cogent and incisive arguments. The duel lasted nearly two hours and that
-was not too long for the audience, but one has the impression that some of
-what Professor Thomson calls muddleheadedness must have been somewhere
-existing. However, the duel was fought when Mendelism was young.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Three Blows to Darwin.</h3>
-
-<p>But other historic events are more relevant to my immediate
-purpose than these.</p>
-
-<p>Three blows were delivered against Darwinism in the years
-1894, 1895 and 1899 by Prof. Bateson, Weismann, and again Prof.
-Bateson, under which it seemed to reel, but from which it is more
-than likely it has derived but greater strength.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" title="10"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10"></a></span></p>
-
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Bateson.</span></h3>
-
-<p>In 1894 Prof. Bateson published his large and important work,
-<i>Materials for the Study of Variation</i>. As a distinguished student
-and teacher of biology he found the received doctrine of evolution
-in straits as regards the factor of natural selection in producing
-specific differences, as indeed happened to another equally eminent
-man during the next year. He was profoundly discontented as
-to the origin of specific differences on the theory of direct utility
-of variations, and he said “on our present knowledge the matter is
-talked out.<span class="nowrap">”<a id="FNanchor_4" href="#Footnote_4" class="fnanchor">4</a></span> He threw over the study of adapta­tion “as a means
-of directly solving the problem of species.” He came to the conclusion
-“Variation is Evolution,” and affirmed that the readiest
-way of solving the problem of evolution is to study the facts of
-variation. Hence arose this notable book, and hence one of his
-trenchant statements to the effect “that the existence of new
-forms having from their beginning more or less of the kind of perfec­tion
-that we associate with normality, is a fact that once and for
-all disposes of the attempt to interpret all perfec­tion and definiteness
-of form as the work of selection,<span class="nowrap">”<a id="FNanchor_5" href="#Footnote_5" class="fnanchor">5</a></span> and “Inquiry into the causes
-of variation is as yet, in my judgment, premature.<span class="nowrap">”<a id="FNanchor_6" href="#Footnote_6" class="fnanchor">6</a></span> It will
-hardly be denied that a work which contained such statements as
-these from such a source seemed momentous in its influence on the
-fate of Darwin’s theory. Prof. Bateson yielded to none in his loyalty
-to Darwin, as far as he knew himself, and here he is as candid as
-Huxley, and he declares that in his treatment of the phenomena
-of variation is found nothing which is in any way opposed to Darwin’s
-theory. The shade of Darwin might nevertheless have looked
-with some misgiving at this man over against him with a drawn
-sword in his hand, and have asked gently, “Art thou for us or for
-our adversaries?” Prof. Bateson’s work chiefly requires to be
-considered here because to any reader of it there must come the
-convic­tion on the one hand of Prof. Bateson’s merits and power, and
-on the other of his limita­tion as a student of organic evolution.
-In 1894 is evident already an exclusive attention to structure
-rather than function, to anatomy than physiology; the anatomical
-leaven in doctrine has leavened the whole lump. For him physiology
-of animals and plants does not exist, or at the best is the
-outcome of structures which arise through variation and selection.
-This, if I may say so, is as much his strength as his weakness.
-There have been other great biologists, such as Geoffrey Saint-<span class="pagenum" title="11"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11"></a></span>Hilaire
-and Richard Owen, of whom this is true. If that were all
-one would not wish the reader to be troubled with any criticism
-of one’s betters, indeed such remarks as are here made do not
-amount to criticism at all, but just plain text-book statements.
-It is also evident that the outlook of Prof. Bateson was being prepared
-for a revela­tion which had not yet come, in which he took a
-prominent, if not dominant part, I mean the great rediscovery of
-Mendel’s work by de Vries, Correns and Tschermak and himself in
-England. His keen and close attention to anatomical structures
-was preparing his mind for the germinal conceptions of unit-characters,
-dominance and segrega­tion. The intensive cultiva­tion
-of the fertile field of genetics proceeded apace, and Prof. Bateson
-in his contribu­tion to the jubilee-volume of 1909 betrayed the
-trend of his devotion to a system of <i>distribu­tion</i> rather than formation
-of the qualities of an organism. The organism as an historical
-functioning, striving being, had receded once for all from his vision.
-He hazarded the sugges­tion in <i>Heredity and Variation in Modern
-Lights</i> that “variation consists largely in the unpacking and repacking
-of an original complexity,” and that “it is not so certain
-as we might like to think that the order of these events is not predetermined.”
-Incidentally one may remark that, <i>malgré lui</i>, Prof.
-Bateson stands forth as a modern Paley as does Weismann in his
-great rival and opposing scheme. It is true that he says “I see
-no ground whatever for holding such a view, but in fairness the
-possibility should not be forgotten and in the light of modern
-research it scarcely looks so absurdly improbable as before.”
-Having drawn the sword he threw away the scabbard in 1914 when
-he occupied the presidential chair of the British Associa­tion of
-Science at Melbourne and Sydney. He had said in 1894 in his
-book on variation as stated before, “Inquiry into the causes of
-variation is as yet, in my opinion, premature,” and then in 1914
-at Melbourne, after twenty more years of study of the subject in
-the Mendelian direction, “It is likely that the occurrence of these
-variations is wholly irregular, and as to their causation <i>we are
-absolutely without surmise or even plausible specula­tion</i>.” (my italics)<span class="nowrap">.<a id="FNanchor_7" href="#Footnote_7" class="fnanchor">7</a></span>
-So, on this fundamental point, he stands where he did when he
-began the study of variation, but apart from this point he again
-threw out his sugges­tion of 1909 as to the unpacking and repacking
-of an original complexity. At Melbourne he said, “Lotsy has
-lately with great courage suggested to us that all variation may be
-due to such crossing. I do not disguise my sympathy with this
-effort.<span class="nowrap">”<a id="FNanchor_8" href="#Footnote_8" class="fnanchor">8</a></span> <i>All variation!</i> He said later, “In spite of seeming per<span class="pagenum" title="12"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12"></a></span>versity,
-therefore, we have to admit that there is no evolutionary
-change which in the present state of our knowledge we can positively
-declare <i>not due to loss</i>.<span class="nowrap">”<a id="FNanchor_9" href="#Footnote_9" class="fnanchor">9</a></span> (Italics mine.) These two statements of
-1914 are enough to show that the biologist of 1894, 1899, 1909 and
-1914 has evolved in a definite line, and it is to his honour that he
-has remembered “to thine ownself be true.” But he is not so true
-to himself in his scorn of those who propound theories. For myself
-I would give little for the biologist who did not hold or propound
-some theory. What was the penultimate and stirring message of
-the gifted G.&nbsp;B. Howes? “We live by ideas, we advance by a
-knowledge of the facts.” The self-denying ordinance affirmed and
-reaffirmed by Prof. Bateson is not observed even in the Melbourne
-and Sydney addresses. In the former, he says “at first it may
-seem rank absurdity to suppose that the primordial form or forms
-of protoplasm could have contained complexity enough to produce
-the divers types of life,” and asks us to open our minds to this
-possibility. Again “I have confidence that the artistic gifts of
-mankind will prove to be due not to something added to the makeup
-of an ordinary man, but to the absence of factors which in the
-normal person inhibit the development of these gifts.” And at Sydney,
-“Ages before written history began, in some unknown
-place, plants, or more likely a plant of wheat lost the dominant
-factor to which this brittleness is due, and the recessive thrashable
-wheat resulted. Some man noticed this wonderful novelty, and
-it has been disseminated over the earth. The original variation
-may well have occurred once only in a single germ,” and “so must
-it have been with man.<span class="nowrap">”<a id="FNanchor_10" href="#Footnote_10" class="fnanchor">10</a></span></p>
-
-<p>These are three stupendous stretches of imagina­tion and theory
-in one address, which would have been the poorer if they had not
-overcome the accomplished speaker’s dislike of the theories—of
-others. If they are not ideal constructions of a high order I do not
-know the meaning of that term. They are worthy of Weismann
-the Prince of ideal constructionists. Prof. Bateson might indeed be
-another Newton with his <i>Hypotheses non fingo</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Turning to another important biological doctrine one can see
-what it may be legitimate to call a bi-phyletic parallelism in the
-biological make-up of Prof. Bateson. Again is seen consistency of
-view and loyalty to his first love. Two references from these
-addresses will be enough to introduce the point.</p>
-
-<p>At Melbourne, “We thus reach the essential principle that
-an organism cannot pass on to offspring a factor which it did not
-itself receive in fertiliza­tion.<span class="nowrap">”<a id="FNanchor_11" href="#Footnote_11" class="fnanchor">11</a></span></p>
-<p><span class="pagenum" title="13"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13"></a></span></p>
-<p>At Sydney, “The factors which the individual receives from
-his parents, and no others, are those which he can transmit to his
-offspring<span class="nowrap">”<a id="FNanchor_12" href="#Footnote_12" class="fnanchor">12</a></span>—in other words the doctrine of the inheritance of
-acquired characters is estopped. As to this he speaks in 1909
-more doubtfully on p.&nbsp;90 and on p.&nbsp;95 almost dogmatically<span class="nowrap">.<a id="FNanchor_13" href="#Footnote_13" class="fnanchor">13</a></span> There
-is just a convenient haziness of meaning in the term “factor”
-with which some play might be made, but, taking it to mean what
-the context indicates, an acquirement made by the individual
-during its personal life, we have pretty clear evidence that Prof.
-Bateson will have nothing to do with the inheritance of acquired
-characters as that doctrine is understood by the unsophisticated
-biologist. This opposi­tion should be counted unto him for righteousness
-rather than the reverse, for it falls into line with his life’s work
-to which he has given of his best.—<i>Vestigia nulla retrorsum.</i> The
-point reached here which concerns my purpose is that the orthodox
-Mendelian still knows nothing of the cause or origin of variation,
-and will have none of Lamarck.</p>
-
-<p>This considera­tion of Prof. Bateson’s work of a quarter of a
-century has been necessary for showing how the work of Weismann
-and himself diverge gravely and yet meet at one point, and the
-year 1899, being linked with 1894, has been taken out of its chronological
-order.</p>
-
-<p>It may be permitted perhaps to say respectfully to the
-Mendelians in the words of the dying father in the fable, “Dig,
-my sons, dig in the vineyard.” If they follow still the course of the
-sons they may find more gold than they have found already and
-perchance that which is better than gold. But they will produce
-from it nothing that is not there.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Two Parables.</h3>
-
-<p>Here gentle reader (I seem to remember this style of address
-in the stories of our youth) pause with me in a little oasis of the
-desert-stage of our journey, and brush off some of the dust, while I
-briefly narrate two incidents, but I pray you also not to leave me
-in the midst of them so that you may escape the next short stage.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>A traveller, small and insignificant, armed only with an
-oak cudgel, was passing alone through a South American
-forest. As he trudged forward he noticed at a certain point
-in the path (shall we call it 1894–1899?) that a jaguar was
-watching him and was about to break his truce with man. He
-turned off to the right and there he saw a puma and this too<span class="pagenum" title="14"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14"></a></span>
-seemed to meditate evil. He hastened forward just in time
-as his two enemies sprang at him, and these two near relatives
-were locked in mortal grip—and so he passed on safe!</p></div>
-
-<p>The reader, naturalist or layman, can point the moral for
-himself.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>At the battle of Trafalgar, while fighting was in full progress
-on one of the ships, some sailors were occupied in throwing
-overboard the bodies of those who had been killed. A poor
-Scotchman badly wounded and hardly conscious was taken
-up by two seamen, an Englishman and an Irishman, and as
-they were about to throw him overboard his feeble voice was
-heard to say “I’m no deed yet.” “What’s that?” said the
-Irishman. “I’m no deed yet”; “Arrah, the doctor said
-he was dead, over wid him,” said the Irishman.</p></div>
-
-
-<h3>Weismann.</h3>
-
-<p>During the period 1894–1899 there was a dramatic proclama­tion
-on the part of one of the greatest living biologists, which was,
-in the cosmos of biology, what the Proclama­tion of the Empress-Queen
-of India was in 1876, and it is not out of place to remind the
-reader that the fates of the two Imperial utterances have been
-somewhat different. In 1895 Weismann issued his official statement
-of doctrine which was to crown the work of his life, an essay
-on Germinal Selection. From Freyburg in November, 1895, he wrote
-a preface to his address delivered on September 16th in that year
-to the International Congress of Zoologists at Leyden. This formed
-an epoch in biological thought and there lived none so well qualified
-as Weismann to stand forth as its interpreter. The well-translated,
-forcible language, and lucid thought leave the reader in no manner
-of doubt as to his meaning. It took a wider form in his final book
-on the Evolution Theory, but the germinal and essential thoughts
-of the latter were contained in the former. From 1895 onwards
-the praise of Weismann was in all the churches. Probably no
-modern worker in the fields of heredity and evolution has done
-so much as Weismann towards raising great issues and removing
-some ancient misconceptions; but it is one thing to raise great
-issues and another to solve them. In this he has signally failed,
-nevertheless biological theory would be the poorer if he had not
-made the attempt. Reflec­tion, the work of other biologists, and
-the remorseless hand of time have shaken the edifices then raised.
-I will here only bring forward a few of the most illuminating passages
-of the 1895 essay, and then refer to the handling of Weismann’s
-work by Romanes.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" title="15"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15"></a></span></p>
-
-<p>This trenchant essay contains fifty-seven pages, of which
-reasoning forms the greater part. As to the facts it might well
-pass for an essay from Professor Poulton’s pen, for Weismann’s
-special province of insects occupies nearly all the evidence from
-facts. Outside this highly specialised group there are exactly
-fifty-three lines, or one and a half pages, which deal with other
-animal groups, and there are four casual allusions to plants occupying
-twelve lines in all! In the essay of 1909 on the Selection Theory
-this treatment of animated life in the world is improved upon
-and thirteen out of its forty-seven pages refer to animals outside
-his favourite group of insects. Such exclusive dealing with these
-little things does not commend the reasoning, at any rate to a neo-Lamarckian;
-such a circle is too select for him.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Weismann’s Twelve Points.</h3>
-
-<p>The most striking remarks from the 1895 essay on germinal
-selection <span class="nowrap">are:—</span></p>
-
-<p>1. “The real aim of the present essay is to rehabilitate the
-principle of selection. If I should succeed in reinstating this
-principle in its imperilled rights, it would be a source of extreme
-satisfac­tion to me.<span class="nowrap">”<a id="FNanchor_14" href="#Footnote_14" class="fnanchor">14</a></span></p>
-
-<p>2. Speaking of the whole theory of selection he claimed to
-have found a position “which is necessary to protect it against the
-many doubts which gathered around it on all sides like so many
-lowering thunder-clouds.<span class="nowrap">”<a id="FNanchor_15" href="#Footnote_15" class="fnanchor">15</a></span> And he speaks on page&nbsp;26 of “the
-flood of objections against the theory of selection touching its
-inability to modify many parts at once.”</p>
-
-<p>Thus Weismann stood forth to defend the crumbling edifice
-of Darwinism and threw his shining sword into the scales, a scientific
-Athanasius “contending for our all.” Again is seen a friend of
-Darwin from another camp than that of Mendel, whose support
-needs to be received with some caution. <i>Toujours en vedette</i> is
-a useful rule.</p>
-
-<p>3. Speaking of adaptedness in animated nature he says,
-“We know of only one natural principle of explana­tion for this
-fact—that of selection.<span class="nowrap">”<a id="FNanchor_16" href="#Footnote_16" class="fnanchor">16</a></span></p>
-
-<p>4. “Germinal selection is the last consequence of the applica­tion
-of the principle of Malthus to living nature.<span class="nowrap">”<a id="FNanchor_17" href="#Footnote_17" class="fnanchor">17</a></span></p>
-
-<p>5. “Without doubt the theory (Germinal Selection) requires
-that the initial steps of a variation should also have selective
-value.<span class="nowrap">”<a id="FNanchor_18" href="#Footnote_18" class="fnanchor">18</a></span></p>
-<p><span class="pagenum" title="16"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16"></a></span></p>
-<p>6. “Something is still wanting in the theory of Darwin and
-Wallace which it is obligatory on us to discover if we possibly can.
-We must seek to discover why it happens that useful variations are
-always present.<span class="nowrap">”<a id="FNanchor_19" href="#Footnote_19" class="fnanchor">19</a></span></p>
-
-<p>7. “It is impossible to do without the assump­tion that the
-useful variations are always present, or that <i>they always exist in
-a sufficiently large number of individuals for the selective process</i>.<span class="nowrap">”<a id="FNanchor_20" href="#Footnote_20" class="fnanchor">20</a></span></p>
-
-<p>8. “<i>Some profound connexions must exist between the utility
-of a variation and its actual appearance, or the direction of the variation
-of a part must be determined by utility.</i><span class="nowrap">”<a id="FNanchor_21" href="#Footnote_21" class="fnanchor">21</a></span></p>
-
-<p>9. That “germinal selection performs the same services for
-the understanding of observed transformations . . . that a heredity
-of acquired characters would perform without rendering necessary
-so <i>violent an assump­tion</i>!<span class="nowrap">”<a id="FNanchor_22" href="#Footnote_22" class="fnanchor">22</a></span> (Italics mine.)</p>
-
-<p>10. Weismann speaks warmly of Professor Lloyd Morgan for
-his caution and calmness of judgment but complains of him that
-he “has not been able to abandon completely the heredity of
-acquired characters.<span class="nowrap">”<a id="FNanchor_23" href="#Footnote_23" class="fnanchor">23</a></span></p>
-
-<p>11. As to passive effects of environment, etc., he says “the
-Lamarckian principle is here excluded <i>ab initio</i>.<span class="nowrap">”<a id="FNanchor_24" href="#Footnote_24" class="fnanchor">24</a></span></p>
-
-<p>12. “It seems to me that a hypothesis of this kind
-(Lamarckism) has performed its services and must be discarded the
-moment it is found to be at hopeless variance with the facts.<span class="nowrap">”<a id="FNanchor_25" href="#Footnote_25" class="fnanchor">25</a></span></p>
-
-<p>I have only to add here that several years ago I wrote to
-Weismann drawing his attention to some facts I had observed which
-seemed to me to be instances of use-inheritance, and I received
-a reply in polite but brief and Prussian terms to the effect that the
-facts referred to must be capable of some other interpreta­tion, for
-<i>the machinery for their transmission did not exist</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Each of these twelve quotations from Weismann’s essay is
-important from the present point of view, and shows how far
-neo-Darwinians are likely to promote the greater glory of Darwin,
-and though more than a quarter of a century elapsed between this
-essay and his death Weismann was not the man to have repudiated
-any of these strong statements.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Lighthouse Value.</h3>
-
-<p>I hope at this point a small digression is not out of place in
-order to introduce an aspect of Weismann’s work which is not
-usually appreciated. A child is aware of the great and lesser lights
-that rule the day and night, but for modern man these are not<span class="pagenum" title="17"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17"></a></span>
-sufficient. Accordingly he has invented from immemorial times
-his oil lamps, rushlights, tallow and wax candles, gas and electric
-light for the illumina­tion of his streets and houses. Prehistoric
-man did not seem to need them, as he thought. These useful
-examples of applied knowledge were obviously brought into use
-for showing man better where he was going and where to go, what
-he was doing and what he wished to see. I hope this trite remark
-may be pardoned, for there is another form of light which suits my
-purpose of illustrating the aspect of Weismannism referred to above,
-that is the light of a lighthouse. The ancients in their crude way
-saw the need for this and as far back as the days of Ptolemy II. a
-tower to give light was erected on the island of Pharus, off the
-Egyptian coast, and it was called a <i>pharos</i>. Man found it necessary,
-as naviga­tion and seafaring advanced, to use this principle more
-and more, and on headland, sandbank and rugged coast has built
-noble structures to aid the sailor in his dangerous course. The
-oldest and finest of these in Great Britain is the Eddystone lighthouse,
-built first in 1695 by Winstanley and finally by Smeaton
-in 1756–9. For what reason is a lighthouse built and placed where
-it is? For the precisely opposite reason to that of the domestic
-candle. While this shows you where to go and how better to do
-your immediate business, a lighthouse is for the main purpose of
-showing a mariner where he should <i>not go</i>. It has no relation to
-adornment or pleasure. It does not invite you to come in your
-vessel and admire it. It tells you to go away and avoid the sunken
-rock or treacherous sands.</p>
-
-<p>I submit here the sugges­tion with all deference, that the final
-work of Weismann has lighthouse value of a high order, as to the
-<i>modus operandi</i> of evolution. His greatness as a biologist, his
-candour and skill in dialectics, have built up a veritable lighthouse
-which may usefully warn the seeker after the path of evolution that
-he must turn elsewhere if he would not founder upon a reef of facts.</p>
-
-<p>The two great contributions to evolutionary thought that
-Weismann has made should be considered separately, the theory
-of germ-plasm and that of evolution, though the latter seems to
-be the necessary outcome of the former. But the truth of Weismann’s
-view of heredity does not of necessity require the error of
-his theory of evolution.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Romanes on Weismann.</h3>
-
-<p>For this study the examina­tion of Weismannism by Romanes
-published in 1893 is of great value. I need only refer here to the
-main conclusions of that lucid and learned examina­tion.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" title="18"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18"></a></span></p>
-
-<p>Weismann’s work on the germ-plasm in pursuance of a theory
-of heredity is pronounced by Romanes to have remained up to
-1893 substantially unaltered, though largely added to in matters of
-detail, and at the present time as far as I gather from a study of
-the more recent literature this theory holds the field or at least a
-commanding position in it<span class="nowrap">.<a id="FNanchor_26" href="#Footnote_26" class="fnanchor">26</a></span> Originally he held that the germ-plasm
-possessed <i>perpetual</i> continuity since the first origin of life,
-and <i>absolute</i> stability since the first origin of sexual propaga­tion,
-but he has shown himself willing to surrender the first postulate,
-and has himself altered the second. As it stands now it must be
-admitted that the continuity of the germ-plasm is an interrupted
-continuity with the appearance of every inherited change; the
-continuity is theoretical, not actual, and the stability of the germ-plasm
-is not absolute but of a high degree. We can thus see in the
-story of this original theory of heredity the lighthouse value of the
-<i>pharos</i> of Ptolemy II.</p>
-
-<p>It is far otherwise with Weismann’s theory of evolution.
-Romanes shows that with the removal of its essential postulate
-the absolute stability of germ-plasm, Weismann’s theory of evolution
-falls to the ground. He has indeed surrendered much in his
-later building, his second temple of Solomon, and prominent among
-these was the claim that the only causes of individual variation<span class="pagenum" title="19"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19"></a></span>
-and of the origin of species in the uni-cellular organisms are the
-Lamarckian factors, just as in the multicellular <i>the only cause of
-these is natural selection</i>. Thus we see standing at the critical date,
-1892, the first Eddystone lighthouse of Winstanley, a greater and
-more important structure than the old pharos.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Germinal Selection.</h3>
-
-<p>It can hardly be doubted that one of the “thunderclouds”
-threatening Darwinism, of which Weismann spoke in 1895, was
-this examina­tion of Weismannism by Romanes. As the case stood
-then some fresh strategy was needed if victory for Darwin was to
-be won, at least so the great leader said. It must be remembered
-that it was the <i>personal</i> selection of Darwin which was held to be
-in danger. Accordingly germinal selection was brought forth and
-remained the basis of Weismann’s later <i>Evolution Theory</i> of
-1904 and 1909. Romanes did not live to see or assist in the disproof
-of this ambitious piece of work so that his “examina­tion” is so far
-incomplete.</p>
-
-<p>The position of germinal selection is defined in Weismann’s
-statement that “it is the adaptive requirement itself that produces
-the useful direction of variation by means of selectional processes
-within the germ.” Here it is in a nutshell. The theory itself
-is consistent, and clearness has been added to the earlier evolution
-theory by the claim that a struggle for nutriment occurs within
-the fertilised ovum between the innumerable determinants of the
-different parts, so that maintenance or victory over weaker determinants
-takes place. Thus we have a survival of the fittest <i>in petto</i>
-in the germ analogous to that of the individual organisms as we see
-them. There is of course a resemblance here to the cellular or
-histonal selection of Roux, but his doctrines are not weighted with
-the intolerable dogma of the non-inheritance of acquired characters.
-But ultimately this concep­tion of germinal selection has to come
-down and bow to the tribunal of facts, and the remark of Weismann
-on Lamarckism which has been already quoted, “It seems to me
-that an hypothesis of this kind has performed its service and must
-be discarded the moment it is found to be at hopeless variance with
-the facts,” confronts the consistent Weismannian. And I venture
-to say here that germinal selection is represented by the Eddystone
-lighthouse of 1756–9 erected by Smeaton.</p>
-
-<p>The grounds for this statement are afforded by numerous facts
-and experiments, to which in the later chapters I propose to add a
-few fresh ones, and by a growing body of opinion and authority
-in favour of Lamarckian factors in evolution.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" title="20"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20"></a></span></p>
-
-<p>Three “lighthouses” of this metaphorical sort have thus
-been afforded by the work of Weismann, represented by the Pharos
-of old, Winstanley’s Eddystone lighthouse and that of Smeaton.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Authority.</h3>
-
-<p>We have then Weismann and Professor Bateson definitely
-ranged against the position taken in this volume as to a cause or
-origin or variation and the inheritance of acquired characters.
-To these we must add the great weight of Sir E. Ray Lankester’s
-opinion lately given in a reply to Professor Adami that “it is very
-widely admitted (more correctly “claimed”) that no case of the
-transmission of what are called acquired characters from parent
-to offspring has been demonstrated in so far as those higher animals
-and plants which multiply by means of specialised egg-cells and
-sperm-cells are concerned.”</p>
-
-<p>It is not necessary to mention more than these “three
-mighties” of the biological world.</p>
-
-<p>Many others such as Prof. J. Arthur Thomson and Prof. W.&nbsp;K.
-Brooks, of Johns Hopkins University, are still unconvinced as to
-Lamarckian factors and ask for more evidence, and they have many
-to support them in their opinion and claim. There is often a tone
-of weariness, as well as wariness in their remarks on the matter.</p>
-
-<p>In favour of the neo-Lamarckian position, with which stands
-or falls the suggested cause of variation, there is a growing body
-of opinion, with the mention of which I conclude this review.</p>
-
-<p>1. The accomplished writer of <i>Form and Function</i>, Mr. E.
-S. Russell, says the theory of Lamarck “although it had little
-influence upon biological thought during and for a long time after
-the lifetime of its author, <i>is still at the present day a living and
-developing doctrine</i>.<span class="nowrap">”<a id="FNanchor_27" href="#Footnote_27" class="fnanchor">27</a></span></p>
-
-<p>2. Sir Francis Darwin from the Presidential Chair of
-the British Associa­tion of Science in Dublin in 1908 proclaimed
-his adherence to the mnemonic theory of heredity, foreshadowed by
-Samuel Butler and inaugurated by Semon, a condition of which is
-that acquired characters are inherited. This caused much stir
-in the camp of “our friends the enemy.”</p>
-
-<p>3. Observations and experiments at variance with germinal
-selection and its negative presupposi­tion have been rapidly
-accumulated from the work of botanists and zoologists who were
-prepared to appeal to the tribunal of natural processes; though
-Weismann and some of his followers, with some reason, look upon
-the evidence from plants as a weak link in the chain of evidence.<span class="pagenum" title="21"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21"></a></span>
-Many of the observations and experiments are well-known and only
-a mere mention of them need be made here, they are such as Mr.
-J.&nbsp;T. Cunningham’s observations on the effect of light on the under
-surface of flounders, Kammerer’s on the changes in the colour of
-salamanders to surrounding objects, and others by him on certain
-amphibia and reptiles especially <i>alytes</i> held by Professor McBride
-to be convincing, though the latter are to be repeated at the London
-Zoological Society’s gardens and are therefore <i>sub judice</i>—others
-on brine-shrimps, on the effects of change of food on bee-grubs
-and tadpoles, and of the change of level of environments of certain
-cereals—others by Henslow on plants which have never been refuted,
-and many by the late Prince Kropotkin. The latter have appeared
-at length in certain issues of the Nineteenth Century in September
-1901, March 1912, October 1914, and the last in January 1919, and
-they deal both with plants and animals, and are too numerous to
-be mentioned here individually.</p>
-
-<p>Again, Professor Dendy as President of the Zoological Section
-of the British Associa­tion of Science in September, 1914, devoted
-most of his address to the subject of Lamarckism and firmly claimed
-as a necessary factor of evolution “the direct response of the
-organism to environmental stimuli at all stages of development,
-whereby individual adapta­tion is secured, and this individual
-adapta­tion must arise again and again in each succeeding genera­tion.”
-He also maintains this position in several passages in his
-important work <i>Outlines of Evolutionary Biology</i> published in 1912.</p>
-
-<p>A statement by Professor Bower, President of the Botanical
-section of the British Associa­tion of Science in 1914 should also
-be noted: “I share it (the doctrine in question) in whole or
-in part with many botanists, with men who have lived their lives
-in the atmosphere of observa­tion and experiment found in large
-botanical gardens and not least with a former President of the
-British Associa­tion, viz., Sir Francis Darwin.”</p>
-
-<p>Professor Adami, in 1917, published an original work called
-<i>Medical Contributions to the Study of Evolution</i> in which from
-his extensive knowledge of the subject he deals with evidence of
-inheritance of acquired characters in lowly organisms as well as
-higher animals from the point of view of pathology.</p>
-
-<p>Enough has been stated here to show that the dogma of
-Weismann or Lamarckian factors in organic evolution, <i>quâ</i> authority,
-has been in poor case during recent years, and it remains for me now
-to add my small quota of the authority of facts.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" title="22"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22"></a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER III.<br />
-
-THE PROBLEMS PRESENTED.</h2>
-
-
-<p>In his classical work on Heredity, Professor J. Arthur Thomson
-exhausts the evidence on Lamarckism available then (1908) in
-a manner worthy of the summing-up of an English judge. This
-is presented to the jury of the biological world and they are still
-considering it. Their verdict and his sentence are not yet delivered,
-and it may be they will still be long delayed. One might almost
-use the words of Professor Bateson, previously quoted, “on our
-present knowledge the matter is talked out.”</p>
-
-<p>I will make one prophecy in this volume and predict that the
-fourth edition of this work in 1930 will contain the verdict of the
-jury and sentence of the distinguished judge to the effect that in
-the case Lamarck <i>v.</i> Weismann the plaintiff has won. As in the
-Great War the Old Contemptibles held their line with the utmost
-difficulty against the disciplined hosts of the greatest army ever
-known till then, and yet the latter found their First Battle of the
-Marne, so perchance it may be in the present struggle.</p>
-
-<p>I introduce this chapter with an important passage from the
-above work on the <i>Logical position of the Argument</i>, in which
-the two possible methods of establishing the affirmative position
-of Lamarck are given; these are, first, actual experimental proof
-of transmission, and, second, a collec­tion of facts which cannot
-be interpreted without the hypothesis of modifica­tion inheritance.
-The words are<span class="nowrap">:<a id="FNanchor_28" href="#Footnote_28" class="fnanchor">28</a></span> “<i>The neo-Lamarckians have to show that the phenomena
-they adduce as illustrations of modifica­tion-inheritance cannot
-be interpreted as the results of selection operating on germinal variations.
-In order to do this to the satisfac­tion of the other side, the neo-Lamarckians
-must prove that the characters in question are outside
-the scope of natural selection, that they are non-utilitarian and not
-correlated with any useful characters—a manifestly difficult task.
-The neo-Darwinians, on the other hand, have to prove that the phenomena
-in question cannot be the results of modifica­tion-inheritance.
-And this is in most cases impossible.</i><span class="nowrap">”<a id="FNanchor_29" href="#Footnote_29" class="fnanchor">29</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" title="23"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23"></a></span></p>
-
-<p>I have placed this passage in italics because of its importance
-from the point of view of the two problems which I am presenting
-and would remark here that if only all the writers had used
-Professor Thomson’s term “modifications” instead of “characters”
-in the statement of this doctrine much confusion and evasion of
-plain facts would have been avoided, and yet such workers as the
-Mendelians, if deprived of their clear-cut term “characters”
-would have been less able to carry on their studies. To this point
-of terminology I refer below<span class="nowrap">.<a id="FNanchor_30" href="#Footnote_30" class="fnanchor">30</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" title="24"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24"></a></span></p>
-
-<p>In a world teeming with the life of plants and animals, and
-in the branch of science which seeks to interpret them, where we
-enter upon the unknown much sooner than in any other sphere
-of science, Weismann has set out to prove or maintain the most
-stupendous negative ever framed by the human mind. It would
-require generations of men to <i>prove</i> this negative, if it were probable,
-and his case rests mainly on the assumed weakness of his opponents.
-So what is needed and demanded from the neo-Lamarckians is the
-produc­tion of a few well-attested and verified facts, and, as he
-admits himself, then it must follow as the night the day that his
-followers will surrender his characteristic dogma. The more
-cautious leaders and teachers of the day say that this has not taken
-place and ask for facts, more facts and still more facts, and this
-attitude is both judicious and judicial, for example in a teacher so
-eminent as Professor J. Arthur Thomson. Scientific men, in such
-a position as he occupies with grace and distinc­tion, owe a serious
-debt of loyalty to ultimate truth and to the inquiring minds of the
-young students of to-day and to-morrow. Those who are in a
-position of inferior responsibility and honour, and more freedom,
-just rank and file members of the Commons’ House of Parliament,
-may be pardoned if they do not exhibit an excess of deference to
-authority and if they think for themselves.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Two Questions.</h3>
-
-<p>There are before the Scientific jury to-day two very vivid
-questions.</p>
-
-<p class="pl5hi">(1) Can modifications in the structure of an individual organism,
-occurring as a result of its experience, be transmitted?</p>
-
-<p class="pl5hi">(2) What is the cause of variation?</p>
-
-<p>If, as Weismann taught, the answer to No. 1 is in the negative,
-there is little use here in trying to answer No. 2, for from the present
-point of view the two stand or fall together in the study of Initiative
-in Evolution. Such <i>distributional</i> answers to No. 2 as Bateson and
-de Vries may offer do not concern my purpose.</p>
-
-<p>If No. 1 be answered in the affirmative it is sufficient for the
-purpose of treating initial variations from the Lamarckian standpoint,
-for it is hardly conceivable that Nature would neglect so
-simple and obvious a method of leading upwards and onwards the
-organisms that inhabit a changing world.</p>
-
-<p>It is very clear from what is written on the subject of evolution
-to-day that a <i>point d’appui</i> in the process is earnestly desired by
-many workers and that Weismann’s dogma stops the way. A very
-significant and important remark is made by Professor W. McDougall<span class="pagenum" title="25"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25"></a></span>
-in his small book on Physiological Psychology, with reference to the
-inheritance of acquired characters, that it is a “proposi­tion which
-most biologists at the present time are inclined to deny because
-they cannot conceive how such transmission can be effected.
-Nevertheless the rejection of this view leaves us with insuperable
-difficulties when we attempt to account for the evolution of the
-nervous system, and there are no established facts with which it is
-incompatible.<span class="nowrap">”<a id="FNanchor_31" href="#Footnote_31" class="fnanchor">31</a></span> I am aware that in the scheme of observed
-nature there is evidence of no iron necessity, that the convenience
-of psychologists should be provided for, and they, like others of us,
-have to do the best they can with the tools and the materials which
-exist, and I agree with Professor Thomson in his remark on <i>Misunderstanding
-No. 1</i>, “that our first business is to find out the facts
-of the case, careless whether it makes our interpreta­tion of the
-history of life more or less difficult,<span class="nowrap">”<a id="FNanchor_32" href="#Footnote_32" class="fnanchor">32</a></span> but I am persuaded that he
-will not treat lightly <i>such</i> a statement, from <i>such</i> a source, on <i>such</i>
-a subject as that I have quoted from Professor McDougall. As
-to his second statement on the same page “that in the supply of
-terminal <i>variations</i>, whose transmissibility is unquestioned, there is
-ample raw material for evolution” it is important as an opinion,
-and no more, and there is in the present connec­tion, an elusiveness
-about it which prevents one allowing it to pass. It should be noted
-that stress is laid upon the term “variations” and from the context
-this means congenital full-blown “characters” such as those that
-Weismann says are provided in the germ guided by selection. At
-any rate, initial modifications are not signified by Professor Thomson’s
-remark. So for <i>evolution</i> of forms of life it is possible the
-assertion may be true, but apart from distribu­tion of variations,
-under the process called amphimixis, some starting point is required
-for the initial and wholly useless stages of many variations. These
-may or may not become “characters” or adaptive.</p>
-
-
-<h3>What the Problems are not.</h3>
-
-<p>The ground may be cleared here by saying what our problems
-are not. There is no question as to whether Lamarckism or
-Darwinism represents the predominant partner in the story of life;
-there is no question of the “relative importance of natural selection
-and the Lamarckian factors in organic evolution,” though such a
-question may arise when once Lamarckism has received its passport
-from the authorities; but the time is not yet. Nor is it a question
-as to the reason why adaptive modifications are so constantly<span class="pagenum" title="26"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26"></a></span>
-present in the germ. It is not a question of Nature <i>or</i> Nurture, but
-perhaps may be found to be a study of Nature <i>and</i> Nurture. It is
-not a question of Mendelian analysis, nor as to the distribu­tion
-of either mutations on the one hand, nor of minute fluctuating
-variations on the other. The problems are therefore limited
-in scope and ambition, and are none the worse for that, as being
-better open to correc­tion or support.</p>
-
-
-<h3>The Problems Considered.</h3>
-
-<p>It seems but natural to most persons who contemplate with
-any care the ever-changing and progressive drama of life in plants
-and animals that unquestionably the <i>dramatis personæ</i> by their
-individual response to the environments and exercise of their
-functions must contribute a share, however small, to their offspring.
-When first this view presents itself to their minds they resent as
-“unnatural” any other possibility. But, alas! they find that
-such a conclusion is not permitted in those regions where alone
-the white light of science shines. Here the writ of <i>a priori</i> does
-not run. The spirit of inquiry makes its challenge to every presupposi­tion
-and every assertion in its province—even those of
-current science. I have shown that this particular assump­tion of
-the natural man was firmly challenged by Weismann, who was not
-the first, but the greatest, biologist to teach that modifications are
-not transmitted. Accordingly, agreeable and convenient as it
-would be to assume the Lamarckian hypothesis as a working one,
-it needs in the present day to be supported by evidence before this
-can be allowed. Facts, then, against Weismann’s dogma are
-demanded and of such a kind as will satisfy so powerful an advocate
-of his own views. In passing it may be remarked again that there
-is nothing so misleading as facts, except statistics, and for both
-sides to bear in mind the warning of a French writer that in such
-inquiries as this we should be careful lest we find the facts for
-which we are looking.</p>
-
-<p>To meet the conditions laid down in Professor Thomson’s
-Canon I propose to describe certain phenomena which are adduced
-as instances of modifications in certain mammals whose structure
-and mode of life are intimately known, and whose ancestry is little
-in dispute<span class="nowrap">.<a id="FNanchor_33" href="#Footnote_33" class="fnanchor">33</a></span> The most convincing of these lines of evidence are
-those which are shown to be outside the range of any form of
-selection, as well as the <i>distributional</i> factors of Mendel and<span class="pagenum" title="27"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27"></a></span>
-de Vries. It is well to enumerate here the six different factors in
-organic evolution which might claim a share in the produc­tion of
-such humble phenomena as form the subject-matter of this volume—they
-are:</p>
-
-<p class="ml2em">
-1. Personal Selection of Darwin.<br />
-2. Sexual Selection.<br />
-3. Histonal or Cellular Selection of Roux.<br />
-4. Germinal Selection.<br />
-5. Inheritance according to Mendelian principles.<br />
-6. Inheritance of Mutations.
-</p>
-
-<p>There is a somewhat severe and ill-defined condition attached
-to the formula in question for it demands that such modifications
-as will satisfy the neo-Darwinians shall not be <i>correlated with
-any useful character</i><span class="nowrap">.<a id="FNanchor_34" href="#Footnote_34" class="fnanchor">34</a></span> If such a <i>conditio sine quâ non</i> were taken
-too literally it would at once foreclose the case as to the possibility
-of transmission of modifications at all, the questions of issue ought
-in that case never to have been raised—and, <i>cadit quæstio</i>. This
-cannot be the intention of the biologist who propounds the formula.
-It could not reasonably be carried so far as to insist that a modifica­tion
-arising from a certain habit, active or passive, in an animal,
-and which on that account, and on paper, may loosely be said to be
-‘correlated’ with it, is to be ruled out. That would be tantamount
-to saying for example, that, because an animal must lie down in a
-certain attitude when it rests, or walk or run in a certain manner,
-in other words that it is useful to exist, certain modifications claimed
-to be due to these fundamental parts of existence must be excluded
-from the inquiry. The neo-Darwinian is not a critic easy to be
-entreated, but <i>that</i> he would not claim. Let me take one example
-of what I mean. A short-haired dog will spend a considerable
-part of its daily life, and presumably a long line of ancestors did
-so too, lying with its forelegs planted in front of its chest and its
-head either raised in the air when awake or resting on the upper
-surface of the forelegs (of course the familiar attitude of a dog with
-its body and head curled up and fore-legs doubled is not referred
-to here). If the hairy coat be examined over its neck and jaw,
-which lie in this attitude, on and against the forelegs, a remarkable
-reversal of the direction of the hairs is found and the outline of
-this forms an accurate mould of the surface applied to the forelegs.
-This is transmitted of course from previous generations of domestic
-dogs. A precisely analogous reversal of the hairs is found on the
-under or extensor surfaces of the forelegs, matching with wonderful<span class="pagenum" title="28"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28"></a></span>
-exactness the area of pressure of these on the ground, and anyone
-can see it who has a canine friend of the fox-terrier type. Long-haired
-dogs display it less neatly outlined. An instance such as
-this cannot be excluded from the evidence forthcoming because
-it is correlated with the useful “character” of lying in a certain
-attitude. Such a phenomenon, many similar to which will be
-seen later, had at any rate an origin <i>de novo</i> at <i>some time</i> in the
-ancestral stock, and in <i>some way</i>. To discover these is part of my
-business. The boldest neo-Darwinian will not claim that this
-arrangement of a dog’s hair arose by selectional processes within
-the germ either in the initial or completed stages.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Correlation.</h3>
-
-<p>The term “correla­tion” is somewhat scornfully said by
-Weismann to be “unquestionably a fine word,” and it has indeed
-in biological writings a very varied set of meanings. I will not
-vex the reader with a reference to our old friend Mesopotamia,
-but mention what Dr. Vernon in <i>Variation in Animals and Plants</i>
-says of the term, referring to the relation between stature and
-head-index in man: “Such a statement must vary according to
-the notion of the observer as to what does and what does not constitute
-correla­tion.<span class="nowrap">”<a id="FNanchor_35" href="#Footnote_35" class="fnanchor">35</a></span> The most approved and precise meaning
-of the loose term in question is that associated with the work of
-the biometricians, and a few examples from Dr. Vernon’s book
-will show how far this concep­tion of correla­tion is removed from
-the literal applica­tion of Professor Thomson’s formula. Dr. Vernon
-treats of such phenomena as the correla­tion of the long heads of
-greyhounds with length of legs, contrasting them with the shortened
-heads and legs of bull-dogs. He describes also the correla­tion in
-man between the stature and length of forearm from elbow to tip
-of middle finger, correlated measurements of crabs, of external
-structures of prawns, the tufts of Polish fowls correlated with
-perforations in the skull, also certain constitutional peculiarities
-with colour of skin. These few cases are enough to give an idea
-of the more precise and fairer accepta­tion of the term, but while
-these form a useful subject for minute study it may be remarked
-that they agree also with Lamarckian factors as to their origin and
-development. They are much more in line with Darwin’s use of
-the word and are strangely reminiscent of the well-known example
-of the Irish elk with its great head and horns which was brought
-forward in favour of Lamarckism by Herbert Spencer. They<span class="pagenum" title="29"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29"></a></span>
-breathe an atmosphere of physiology rather than anatomy, or
-function than form.</p>
-
-<p>Enough has been said here by way of defining the terms of
-the issue. The negative we have to sustain is that the following
-facts and observations declare that certain small modifications
-cannot be governed by selection and are not correlated with useful
-characters. It will be shown later that Professor Thomson’s
-stringent condition is not in all of them compiled with, but that,
-in spite of this, the probability of their being valid examples of
-Lamarckism in practice is immense.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" title="30"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30"></a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER IV.<br />
-
-INITIAL VARIATIONS AND TOTAL EXPERIENCE.</h2>
-
-
-<p>The present chapter is on <i>a priori</i> lines and will perhaps be dismissed
-with a wave of the hand or hurriedly skimmed over, but I pray the
-reader at least to read the two or three last pages of it. It is at
-any rate suggestive, and perhaps I may anticipate the comments
-of the neo-Darwinian and throw myself on his mercy by mentioning
-a remark of the late Sir Andrew Clark, prince of physicians and
-genial cynic, which he made to a patient in my presence. A lady
-not distinguished for depth of thought asked him a rather silly
-question in medicine. As if offended he drew himself up, holding
-in his hand a cup of tea which he was enjoying, and replied at once
-“Madam, you must get a younger and more inexperienced man
-than I am to answer you that question.”</p>
-
-<p>A very high degree of probability may be attached to the
-presupposi­tion that Lamarckian factors, even in their humblest
-form, may enter into the story of the organisms as historical and
-living beings. Every hypothesis in matters of science, or, to put
-it at its lowest, every scientific guess must transcend the evidence
-at the time available.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Total Experience.</h3>
-
-<p>The sugges­tion I venture to make here is that if we take a
-comprehensive view of certain two great groups of phenomena
-in nature, which may be termed universal in their extent, it is difficult
-to conceive that they are not causally connected in the sense that
-one is the universal antecedent of the other. On the one hand
-are found universal minute differences, not only between any pair
-of organisms, but of any two corresponding parts of any organism,
-even to the size and shape of each leaf on each plant. On the
-other is universal discontinuity of <i>total experience</i> of all organisms.
-This term includes all the stimuli of use and environment to which
-an organism is exposed throughout its whole existence, and its
-response to them. It includes the whole succession of active and
-passive stimuli which begin with the formation of a zygote in higher
-forms, for example, and continue till the death or end of reproductive
-life of the individual. It stands for such stimuli as arise from<span class="pagenum" title="31"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31"></a></span>
-<i>habitat</i> on or in the earth, in various levels of salt or fresh water,
-in sea, lake, pool and river, and in the branches of trees, from
-<i>climate</i>, from degrees of <i>light</i>, <i>temperature</i>, <i>moisture</i> and <i>wind</i>, from
-presence and activity of <i>enemies</i> and <i>rivals</i>, from <i>supplies of food</i>,
-from <i>geographical</i> and <i>topographical</i> position. Such an enumera­tion
-of stimuli might be much extended if it would serve any purpose.
-But it is enough to say that the number of such stimuli, and the
-varying degrees in which these are received and responded to,
-have hardly any limit which we can conceive. It is a very different
-and harder task to find out the propor­tion in which such stimuli
-are advantageous, injurious or indifferent to the organisms, but
-it may be taken as certain that the vast majority are indifferent
-in the sense of producing structural change, and, that the advantageous
-stimuli transmit structural effects to offspring, is only a
-matter of very strong probability. If the above two groups of
-phenomena are not causally connected they are intertwined with
-remarkable closeness and perversity. This aspect of the “web
-of life” has received attention, and deserves more.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Discontinuous Environments.</h3>
-
-<p>Some reference must be made here to observations of Prof.
-Bateson in his work on variation. In the first place he makes a
-most valuable statement that “<i>the environment as the directing
-cause is essential to Lamarck’s theory and as the limiting cause is
-essential to the doctrine of Natural Selection</i><span class="nowrap">”<a id="FNanchor_36" href="#Footnote_36" class="fnanchor">36</a></span> (which I venture
-to place in italics on account of its importance to all who seek the
-pathway of organic evolution) and points out also that “diversity
-of environment is thus the measure of diversity of specific form.
-Here then we meet the difficulty that diverse environments often
-shade into each other insensibly and form a continuous series.<span class="nowrap">”<a id="FNanchor_37" href="#Footnote_37" class="fnanchor">37</a></span>
-This is clearly true and important to the subjects he is discussing.
-But in regard to the concep­tion with which I am here concerned,
-that of <i>total experience</i> of organisms, it must be remembered that
-there is no such thing as an environment apart from the living
-beings that it environs, and that from this point of view there is
-no such thing in the world of nature as a continuous environment.
-The environment of two amœbæ living under a cover-glass is,
-for them, far from continuous. In their infinitesimal existence the
-exact position they occupy in the environing drop of fluid, in which
-the propor­tion of their humble fare at one side of the cover-glass<span class="pagenum" title="32"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32"></a></span>
-is not the same as that on the opposite side, renders their environments
-discontinuous, or different from that of another amœba
-occupying a position and “environment” which <i>we</i> should consider
-identical. And this considera­tion applies to the other few
-“tropisms” which enter into their little lives. This statement
-may be difficult to prove, but it is a necessity of thought. An
-illustra­tion may assist one in visualizing such discontinuity. A
-fly is seen crawling at its own pace up one of the great pillars of
-St. Paul’s Cathedral. It comes to one of the thin layers of cement
-worn down with age and so delicate that a man can just see it in
-a good light. The fly pauses, and passes into what is for it a chasm,
-with as much relative delibera­tion as the man would show in
-passing across a deep railway cutting. The number of pictures
-that could be made of cases corresponding to that of the amœba is
-incalculable. A few will suffice. Two plants of the common nettle
-are growing on the south side of a ditch in a lane, one rooted a foot
-higher than the other. The upper one receives throughout its
-life from wind and sun stimuli slightly different from those received
-by the lower, and from the soil slightly less moisture. These
-again receive stimuli very different from another pair on the northern
-side of the lane. Again in windy weather a clump of sycamores
-facing the south-west in England, and situated on the ridge of an
-eminence, will receive very different stimuli from a similar clump
-on the north-eastern slope of this eminence, and will demonstrate
-the fact, as to force of wind, by a marked slope to the North East.
-Even in either of the clumps the individual trees present varying
-degrees of slope according to their position. The total experience
-of these two clumps of sycamores and of any two in each clump
-is obviously different. In a windy situation you can tell in July
-which is the prevailing wind by noting the main inclina­tion of the
-ears of corn in a field. Again two male sticklebacks in a pond will
-make nests for the eggs, there to be deposited, and one will choose
-a spot on the southern and another on the northern side of a little
-promontory of soil and stones at the edge of the pond. One will
-find ready for him materials for building his nest different from
-those of his rival, and he and his wife and family will receive for
-that season very different stimuli, and so will the stimuli differ
-in other phases of their existence in a pond occupying a few square
-yards. On a sandy bank in a garden facing south you may discover
-two little caves ingeniously hidden by a small opening, and in each
-of them you can see a toad. Though these are only a few feet
-apart one is more widely open to sun and wind than the other and
-one deeper than the other, and whatever the other activities of the<span class="pagenum" title="33"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33"></a></span>
-two toads may be in their little shelters, they receive stimuli different
-in strength and number. On another bank in the same garden
-less exposed to view, and altogether more sheltered from sun and
-wind and enemies, a robin has built a well-hidden nest. If the six
-fledglings in the nest are watched when the mother is absent they
-are seen to occupy very different positions of comfort, pressure and
-warmth. When the mother-bird returns from marketing she is
-hardly impartial in the amount of food she puts into their open
-beaks. But the slight and perhaps unimportant inequality of
-their experiences as fledglings is nothing to that which follows when
-they fly abroad, and which continues to the end of their lives, the
-life of a robin being somewhere about ten years long. The differences
-of the <i>total experience</i> of the six young robins is easy to picture.
-Again, surely, the total experience of two fleas on the body of one
-plague-rat must be for such small creatures of importance to their
-welfare, according as their respective “pitches” are on the abdomen,
-back or legs of the host. When the life-history of a human being
-is told in full the discontinuity of his total experience needs no
-proof. The proof is written large before our eyes. But, perhaps,
-one example may be given. There are two very eminent living
-writers, whose light has certainly for some years not been hidden
-under a bushel, Mr. Chesterton and Mr. George Bernard Shaw. We
-may be said to know them well. Leaving out of sight the Celtic
-strain claimed by one, and indeed all inherited differences, we see
-two men of perhaps equal ability, near of an age, both living in
-London, both living by their pen, both in easy circumstances.
-When one considers for a moment the different company these two
-men keep, their different and opposing outlook on life, their different
-and opposing forms of diet for their minds and bodies (I know which
-of the two diets of those men I would choose and with which of
-them I would prefer to be cast on a desert island) one can only say
-that the total experience of Mr. Chesterton differs from that of
-Mr. Shaw as cheese from chalk, which things, incidentally, are an
-allegory in the philosophy of life.</p>
-
-<p>The thought here briefly expressed falls well into line with
-Prof. Bateson’s statement that the directing cause of the environment
-is essential to the theory of Lamarck, and I do not hesitate to add
-to it the assertion that <i>all environment</i>, in the wide sense of total
-experience, <i>is discontinuous</i>. There are no such phenomena in
-total experience as unit-characters of allied forms, small variations
-are the rule. Without doubt a large propor­tion of the stimuli
-received by an organism are as figures written on a slate and at once
-wiped off. They are as the snows of yester year. The most they<span class="pagenum" title="34"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34"></a></span>
-do is to contribute in their measure to the metabolism of the
-organism, being too numerous and minute to affect any structural
-change. In a higher form of life none but those which are frequently
-repeated in the individual and in succeeding generations
-can effect any structural response.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Mould and Sieve.</h3>
-
-<p>It will be remembered that a single example was given of a
-short-haired dog in which its common habit of lying was associated
-with a certain pattern of hair. This introduces and illustrates
-the very wide concep­tion of a moulding process undergone by an
-organism. It is one familiar to biologists and very much so to
-Professor Thomson in his various writings. Not less is he an
-exponent of the metaphorical work of the sieve of natural selection.
-I therefore claim nothing new when, with the temerity of certain
-persons treading where others are said to fear to do so, I invent
-an inclusive term and propose to call the two fundamental factors
-of organic evolution <span class="nowrap"><i>Plasto-diēthēsis</i><a id="FNanchor_38" href="#Footnote_38" class="fnanchor">38</a></span> in which the conceptions
-of mould and sieve are included and hyphenated. This word is
-no more proposed for its elegance than are <i>panmixia</i>, <i>amphimixis</i>
-and <i>tetraplasty</i>, though perhaps it may be the etymological
-superior of one or more of these. It is at any rate inclusive and
-perhaps sufficiently audacious to assure the inventor of the title
-of Dr. Pangloss of controversial memory. But as hard words
-break no bones I have taken this risk and it would appear to be a
-convenient “conceptual counter” and even Professor Karl Pearson
-could not consistently forbid it. It has at any rate the merit of
-having a meaning clear to all friends and opponents alike of
-Lamarckism. It will be observed that the two words are placed in
-what I take to be their natural order as expressive of the Alpha
-and Omega of the story of organic evolution. The moulding
-process is claimed to precede that of the sieve, as physiology
-precedes anatomy and function structure, in that form of biological
-specula­tion which is held here to be the soundest<span class="nowrap">.<a id="FNanchor_39" href="#Footnote_39" class="fnanchor">39</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" title="35"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35"></a></span></p>
-
-<p>So the banns between Lamarck and Darwin are published,
-not for the first time of asking, and who shall say that there is
-cause or just impediment why these two should not be joined
-together in holy matrimony?</p>
-
-<p>I conclude this chapter with a passage from the life of Columbus
-by Washington Irving which affords a fitting parallel from history
-in the higher development and union of two formerly hostile
-Kingdoms, and the moral of it is clear and simple. But as a
-forensic junior I beg to enter a <i>caveat</i> to the effect that though the
-name of Columbus occurs no sugges­tion is made of the discovery
-of a New World.</p>
-
-<p>“It has been well observed of Ferdinand and Isabella that
-they lived together not like man and wife whose estates are in
-common, under the orders of the husband, but like two monarchs
-strictly allied. They had separate claims to sovereignty in
-virtue of their separate Kingdoms, and held separate councils.
-Yet they were so happily united by common views, common
-interests, and a great deference for each other, that this double
-administra­tion never prevented a unity of purpose and action.
-All acts of sovereignty were executed in both their names; all
-public writings subscribed with both their signatures; their
-likenesses were stamped together on the public coin, and the
-royal seal displayed the united arms of Castile and Aragon.”</p>
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" title="36"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36"></a></span></p>
-
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER V.<br />
-
-METHOD OF PROOF.</h2>
-
-
-<p>In a matter of scientific inquiry one cannot go far wrong if one
-follows the advice of Henri Poincaré, who lays down certain principles
-of method; four of these are the <span class="nowrap">following:—</span></p>
-
-<p class="pl5hi">(1) The most interesting facts are those which can be used
-several times, those which have a chance of recurring.</p>
-
-<p class="pl5hi">(2) The facts which have a chance of recurring are simple facts.</p>
-
-<p class="pl5hi">(3) Method is the selection of facts, and accordingly our first
-care must be to devise a method.</p>
-
-<p class="pl5hi">(4) We should look for the cases in which the rule established
-stands the best chance of being found fault with.</p>
-
-<p>The groups of facts described in the succeeding chapters are
-in agreement with these principles in the main, and are perhaps
-like a dust heap for their intrinsic value. But one knows that
-before now among a good deal of <i>débris</i> a rusty key has been found
-which has opened a cabinet containing certain treasures, and in
-the hands of someone else than the finder has produced useful
-results.</p>
-
-<p>The headings of the chapters describe the facts, and there is no
-need to enumerate them here. The first and largest group is studied
-according to a method which is in a measure applied to all the
-others. Most of them are external or superficial phenomena and
-accordingly are open to others beside the expert for observa­tion and
-corrobora­tion, or the reverse. The typical plan adopted is as
-follows: a large number of related phenomena are chosen, and
-the more prominent of these are observed and described. Keeping
-in mind the two plain issues laid down, the origin of initial modifications
-and their transmission, I have selected the facts because,
-especially such as those of the hair, they are very simple, of wide
-distribu­tion in animals well known to us, such as the domestic horse
-and man, and none are brought forward which any other observer
-cannot study for himself if he has some anatomical and physiological
-knowledge, some training and care in recording observations. In
-most centres of popula­tion there are still left a good supply of
-horses in streets and stables, of preserved specimens in museums
-and living ones in zoological gardens, and of hairy young men who<span class="pagenum" title="37"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37"></a></span>
-will hardly refuse a polite request to examine the minute hairs
-clothing their trunks and limbs. One has to pursue a certain
-amount of that study which may be called the sister of plant-ecology,
-that is, animal-ecology or the behaviour of animals at
-home. The student of these matters, it may be freely admitted,
-will complain, unless he has some hypothesis or line of thought to
-follow, that he has been set down in a valley in which the bones are
-very many and very dry. But, armed or primed with an hypothesis,
-he may find an affirmative answer to his question “Can these
-bones live?” Every group of natural phenomena, <i>without exception</i>,
-has some meaning for those who will interpret nature rather
-than bully and slight her, and whatever anointed king may claim
-sovereignty over it the humble fact cannot be denied that “whatever
-phenomenon is, <i>is</i>.<span class="nowrap">”<a id="FNanchor_40" href="#Footnote_40" class="fnanchor">40</a></span> Again I would refer to Howes’ inspiring
-note: “We live by ideas; we advance by a knowledge of the
-facts; content to discover the meaning of phenomena, since the
-nature of things will be for ever beyond our grasp.<span class="nowrap">”<a id="FNanchor_41" href="#Footnote_41" class="fnanchor">41</a></span> The facts
-adduced are simple, have a chance of recurring and are widely
-distributed among multicellular animals—the botanists and plants
-can very well take care of themselves. I must once more state that
-I am attaching to the considered facts a value of a somewhat
-unusual kind—<i>their intrinsic unimportance</i>. For anyone who has
-had to encounter the skilful dialectics and counter-attacks of a
-well-equipped neo-Darwinian it is well that he should remember
-the maxim of Napoleon, “Be vulnerable nowhere.” It is necessary
-to show evidence for Lamarckian factors in which no degree of
-selective value, survival-value, can be seen by hostile sharp-shooter
-while he works in his trench. The main line of defence, or more
-correctly what Hindenburg would call “offensive-defence,” is
-therefore made to rest on the phenomena of hair-direction, which,
-I submit, are impregnable to the forces of selection, probably in all
-the hairy mammals, but certainly in that hairy animal called Man.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Thesis.</h3>
-
-<p>If these groups of phenomena were being studied apart from
-the hypothesis they support, a much more full treatment of all of
-them would be required, such as I have given to those of hair-direction
-in a book published in 1903 on <i>Direction of Hair in Animals
-and Man</i>. The limited thesis, however, here upheld is that the
-phenomena are produced by the factors of stimuli and response in<span class="pagenum" title="38"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38"></a></span>
-the course of the total experience of the organism, that the essence
-of the matter is the produc­tion of initial modifications, that instances
-of these in well-known animals are produced before our eyes by
-ascertainable mechanical stimuli, and that, especially in those of
-hair-direction, experiment is adduced in proof of the thesis that
-some modifications are transmitted.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Procedure.</h3>
-
-<p>The order of proceedings may be tabulated <span class="nowrap">thus:—</span></p>
-
-<p class="pl5hi">(1) Observation of selected facts.</p>
-
-<p class="pl5hi">(2) Evidence that certain of these are produced in the
-lifetime of the individual.</p>
-
-<p class="pl5hi">(3) Evidence that among the facts of direction of hair and
-others there is to be seen an orderly evolution rather than a
-casual appearance of the changes noted.</p>
-
-<p class="pl5hi">(4) An hypothesis as to their production.</p>
-
-<p class="pl5hi">(5) Exclusion of selection as a possible cause of these, and
-of correla­tion as properly understood.</p>
-
-<p class="pl5hi">(6) Experiment in verification of the Lamarckian interpreta­tion
-of the phenomena.</p>
-
-<p>And here, before I hear some Prince Henry of the genus
-Weismann, Mendel or Gallio groan aloud: “This intolerable amount
-of sack,” I proceed to offer him a few loaves of home-made bread.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" title="39"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39"></a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER VI.<br />
-
-EVIDENCE FROM ARRANGEMENT OF HAIR.</h2>
-
-
-<h3><i>Ex Uno Disce Omnes.</i></h3>
-
-<p>The singular arrangement of hair on the forearm of man is the
-subject of some curious statements by Darwin, Wallace and
-Romanes, and these suggested to me twenty years ago the following
-line of thought. To many minds the text will appear a humble
-one, but it opens many avenues of inquiry.</p>
-
-<p>These three illustrious men are all more or less inaccurate
-and incomplete in their descriptions of the hair on man’s forearm,
-though <span class="nowrap">Romanes<a id="FNanchor_42" href="#Footnote_42" class="fnanchor">42</a></span> gives a drawing which supplements his written
-account. They looked upon it as a vestige of the pattern of hair
-on the forearm of existing anthropoid apes, especially the orang,
-in whom its fully-developed form was an adapta­tion governed by
-Natural Selection. Of the three, Wallace is the most uncompromising
-on behalf of this view, Romanes rather accepts it <i>en passant</i>,
-and Darwin in a long <span class="nowrap">passage<a id="FNanchor_43" href="#Footnote_43" class="fnanchor">43</a></span> adopts it with some reserve and his
-usual respect for the work of his great co-worker, as the most probable
-explana­tion of a fact which lay heavy on his scientific conscience.
-Indeed, for all these great men it was a <i>crux</i>, though
-Romanes, with his Lamarckian views, need not have found much
-difficulty with an alternative account of it<span class="nowrap">.<a id="FNanchor_44" href="#Footnote_44" class="fnanchor">44</a></span></p>
-
-<p>At the time when these statements were made, the lineal
-ancestors of man were much more definite personages than they
-are now, as Arthur, the legendary Celtic hero, was formerly held
-to be an historical personage more than is the case now. These
-ancestors were generally believed then to be found among the
-four existing anthropoid apes. The picture of our ancestor among<span class="pagenum" title="40"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40"></a></span>
-the apes, as given by Wallace, in connec­tion with this state of the
-hair on his forearm, represents him as spending much of his time
-like the gorilla, who, according to Livingstone, “sits in pelting
-rain with his hands over his head.” He would no doubt find the
-thatch-like arrangement of the hair a tolerably efficient umbrella,
-but one may doubt very much if so clever a denizen of the tropics
-would fail to find under the great branches of trees, in a tropical
-forest, a better covering and one more like the roofs of our houses.
-But when we cannot find a roof to our heads we—and the orang
-or gorilla—naturally employ a substitute, and not otherwise.
-Be that as it may, it is doubtful if the thatch of his forearms would
-supply him with that survival value on which the theory of Selection
-depends, to say nothing of the fact that in its incipient stage the
-reversal of the slope of hair, inherited from the lemur stock, would
-be trivial and useless.</p>
-
-<p>But one must ask: “Did man’s Simian ancestor really loaf
-away so much of his time in this dull manner? and was the running-off
-of rain so frequent and imperative a need as to make him set
-to work to invent this special adapta­tion?”</p>
-
-<p>After some millions of years have passed since his day we are
-not in a position to go beyond speculations, and this one seems
-barely credible, moreover, it is quite unnecessary, as certain following
-facts will show.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Steps of the Inquiry.</h3>
-
-<p>Having expounded the text and its context, I would mention
-that in 1897 I came across these views of biologists as to the very
-strange arrangement of hair on man’s forearm, and was struck with
-the inadequacy of the theory of Darwin, Wallace and Romanes
-to account for the state of things which every man can find, if he
-looks for it, on his own forearm. I examined a large number of
-apes and monkeys so as to test the theory, and the results were
-published in <i>Nature</i>, Vol. 55, under the title “Certain vestigial
-characters in Man.” Suffice it to say that from the evidence I
-brought forward one had to choose between two heresies: either
-to deny the Simian ancestry of man or to affirm the inheritance of
-some acquired characters; and I chose the latter. The choice
-of “evils” or heresies which had to be made then will serve as an
-introduc­tion to all that follows.</p>
-
-<p>This article was followed by a paper at the Zoological Society
-of London on “The Hair-Slope in certain Typical Mammals,” and
-after this came a paper at the same Society, giving evidence and
-reason why certain patterns of hair in some mammals should rank<span class="pagenum" title="41"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41"></a></span>
-as specific characters. Various other papers at the Anatomical
-Society of Great Britain and Ireland were read and published and
-others at the Zoological Society, in which different regions of the
-hairy coat of man and lower mammals were dealt with. In 1903
-the whole subject of the Direction of Hair in Animals and Man was
-treated in a book freely illustrated.</p>
-
-<p>I then followed the advice of Horace and left the subject alone
-for nine years, during which time my further observations and
-reflections served but to confirm, except in two or three unimportant
-details, the results and conclusions in the book and papers of an
-earlier date. The connec­tion between the habits of an animal
-and the distribu­tion of its hairy coat were always cropping up,
-and I saw then and see now no possible explana­tion of the connec­tion
-than that the former is the efficient cause of the latter.</p>
-
-
-<h3>How the Hair is Arranged on the Forearm.</h3>
-
-<p>Returning now to the text, the remarkable arrangement of
-hair on man’s forearm, attention may be directed to the accompanying
-figure of the forearm of a lemur, an ape and man, in which the
-extensor or back view of this limb-segment is shown, the heavy
-“war-arrows” being employed to direct the attention of the reader
-to the main lines in which the hair-streams flow. The front or
-flexor surfaces in the lemur and ape are not shown because they
-are precisely like the corresponding back surfaces, and the flexor
-surface in man is shown in the figure. The figures are so much
-like diagrams that a very little detailed descrip­tion will suffice.
-For the examina­tion of the hair on man’s forearm the best subject
-is a dark-haired youth, and it is easily traced, though in any
-hairy subject it can be shown up well by placing the forearm
-in water for a minute and allowing the water to drain off.
-The normal and congenital hair-slope on the forearm is then well
-displayed.</p>
-
-<p>On the front surface of man’s forearm the hairs point away
-from the elbow and divide in the middle of the surface into two
-streams, one passing to the outer and the other to the inner border
-in a downward gentle curve, and they join the streams of hair on
-the back surface. In this pattern there is nothing very peculiar,
-for it is shared by many monkeys.</p>
-
-<p>When the back surface is examined it is found to present an
-arrangement of the hair which is <i>unique</i> among hairy mammals.
-The figure shows the eccentric course taken by the hair on the
-back surface. In the centre, exactly along the extensor border of
-the ulna, from the wrist to the point of the elbow, the hair-stream<span class="pagenum hide" title="42"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42"></a></span><span class="pagenum" title="43"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43"></a></span>
-has been bold enough to turn straight <i>upwards</i> in a narrow line,
-and it was here that our three great leaders saw their chance of
-claiming for Selection a tiny bit of territory, a kind of Duchy of
-Luxembourg between two great States, though, as I proceed to
-show, the claim is disallowed and untenable.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
-<a id="Fig_1"></a>
-<img src="images/i_042.jpg" alt="" height="412" width="600" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="tac">Fig 1.—<span class="smcap">Arrangement of Hair on the Forearm.</span></p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>In the ape the hairs of the forearm are much longer and thicker
-than those of man, and both on the front and back all point <i>from
-the wrist to the elbow</i>.</p>
-
-<p>In the lemur all the hairs point <i>from the elbow to the
-wrist</i>.</p>
-
-<p>In the products of Nature there are no freaks, or impish tricks
-performed, and it is not for nothing she does her work. Every
-one of them asks for and should receive an explana­tion consistent
-with fact and reason, and here comes in the need for studying,
-as one may, the broad outlines of man’s ancestry. His ancestor
-being now sought in an earlier and more generalized stock than
-that of the four genera of anthropoid apes known to us, the most
-instructive and safest line to take is to trace him back to the stock
-lemur, who remains to-day among the most Chinese or unchanging
-of known mammals. In his illuminating work, <i>Prehistoric Man
-and History</i>, Professor Scott Elliott adopts an excellent term,
-“lemur-monkey-man,” to sum up, without missing links, the long
-ancestry of man. I take the liberty of adapting this term more
-closely to the present inquiry and use that of <i>lemur-ape-man</i> instead,
-for whatever may be the relation of man to present apes some ape-like
-ancestors enter into his genealogical tree<span class="nowrap">.<a id="FNanchor_45" href="#Footnote_45" class="fnanchor">45</a></span> For my purpose
-the monkey is less useful because his hair-slope differs so little
-from that of lemurs, whereas apes have made for themselves a
-very remarkable position as regards the hair of their forearms.
-Our series of animals for study is then well represented by the
-lemur-ape-man—hypothetical, necessary and serviceable. Through
-all the immense stretch of time occupied in this process of descent
-there has been ample opportunity for the lemur to change his
-fashion to that of the ape, and the latter to change to the present
-fashion of man.</p>
-
-<p>This simple arrangement of the lemur’s hair is common to that
-of all the more primitive long-bodied mammals, of which an otter is
-a good example, and I venture, greatly daring, to call this the
-normal slope of hair. Somewhere and somehow in the human
-tree there has appeared a total reversal of the lemur-type; the
-stock of apes acquired a new fashion, and gradually discarded<span class="pagenum" title="44"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44"></a></span>
-altogether their ancient inheritance, beginning their innova­tion
-perhaps, with <i>Dryopithecus fontani</i> in the Miocene Age.</p>
-
-
-<h3>The Dynamics of Hair-Pattern.</h3>
-
-<p>There are a few well-known facts which it is necessary to bear
-in mind if one is endeavouring to understand the mode of origin
-and order of the events before us. The hairy coat of a mammal is
-composed of individual hairs of varying length, colour and thickness,
-each being rooted in a tiny pit in the skin and growing from a
-papilla at its base. As the hair grows, its free end is pushed away
-from the papilla at the rate of one inch in two months. This is
-the rate in man’s hair, and it is probably greater in the case of
-lower mammals on account of the greater importance and physiological
-activity of their hairy coat than in man’s. But one inch
-in two months is a close enough calcula­tion. Here, then, is a structure
-which grows throughout the whole life of the animal, and has
-to dispose itself somehow on the surface of the skin. It does this
-<i>in the line of least resistance</i>, and to trace this line is the Alpha and
-Omega of the present inquiry.</p>
-
-<p>There is a concep­tion of much value in understanding the
-dynamics of the distribu­tion of hair, and that is to view the hair
-of mammals as composed of certain streams. As in every illustra­tion,
-this concep­tion may be challenged because of some difference
-the critic may find between these streams and a stream of fluid.
-It certainly does not leave its bed as do the component parts of
-a river, a glacier or molten lava, for the base of the hair is fixed.
-But it will serve, and is at least not more open to objection than
-certain useful metaphors in biology as when the genealogy of man
-and animals is pictured as a tree, or the living things of the earth
-as a “web of life.” It is, then, as <i>streams moving at the rate of one
-inch in two months in the lines of least resistance</i> that I propose to
-discuss the animal hair and its diverse patterns and offer no further
-apology for doing so. Just as in the cases of a stream of water
-with varying banks and rocks in its course, or a glacier with its
-mountain-sides and sinuous valleys, or a stream of lava with small
-projecting surfaces of a mountain, our stream of hair flows on,
-hindered only by adequate obstructions.</p>
-
-<p>Yet another concep­tion from the region of metaphor must be
-mentioned. It is one which will commend itself to every mind
-which has been steeped in thoughts of warfare for five years. We
-are all soldiers now; we think in terms of military affairs. In the
-case of our hair-streams there are in many regions two forces
-directly opposed to one another, others in which no struggle has<span class="pagenum" title="45"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45"></a></span>
-yet occurred, as, in the Great War, Italy was not at one period at
-open war with Germany.</p>
-
-<p>Between the opposing forces in our small battle-field of the
-hairy coat there have been waged battles to which those of Mukden,
-Verdun, the Somme and Arras, are not to be compared in point of
-time. They are but as one day to a thousand years. On one side of
-the conflict in our present chosen field the ancient primitive type of
-the lemur has remained entrenched for some millions of years,
-until there arose new forces in its descendants on the other side
-and this changed the war of positions into one of movement. It
-was indeed “a contemptible little army” which came forward to
-oppose the ancient barbarian forces of the lemur, long prepared
-and organised, and these new armies fought under the banner,
-Habit. In the slowly-formed patterns in many types of mammals
-we have records of the treaties made after these long struggles and
-the rectifications of frontier which became necessary. The critic
-may call these “battles of kites and crows,” and ask What war
-correspondents were allowed to describe them; but a battle,
-whether great or small, long or short, is important to the parties
-concerned, and it is open to us to “reconstruct” the facts of the
-battle as do the historians on their part, for example, Sir James
-Ramsay the battle of Agincourt—with tolerable verisimilitude.
-But in science, especially geological science, the process of reconstruc­tion
-is much more ambitious and bold than any that is here
-attempted. Who has not been fascinated, if he has read Sir E.
-Ray Lankester’s work on Extinct Animals, by the skill and daring
-with which he conveys to us a vivid idea of the form and mode of
-life, with scanty data, of the extinct Moa of New Zealand, the great
-Pterodactyle, Pteranodon, or the Diprotodon of Owen—“the
-probable appearance in life” of these uncanny but very real
-inhabitants of the earth in days long past. How skilfully did Owen
-from a piece of bone seven inches long, sent to him by a gentleman
-in New Zealand sixty years ago, pronounce it to be a part of the
-thigh-bone of a bird like an ostrich, and then after a few years had
-passed, confirmed it by more bones of the skeleton, till the large
-Moa, extinguished 600 or 700 years ago by the Maoris, lived again
-before us—an historical personage; or how by the examina­tion of
-the skull and most of its skeleton the giant marsupial from Australia,
-Diprotodon, was resuscitated and admired; or again, how from the
-bones of the arms, shoulder-girdle and fingers was built up the
-strange body of Pteranodon, the great flying dragon. All of which
-is the legitimate and approved business of biologists and palæontologists,
-and this digression is made here to show that my line of<span class="pagenum" title="46"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46"></a></span>
-treatment of a little subject agrees with that in a greater one; nay,
-it even proceeds in its explanations of events on the ever valuable
-principle of Lyell in a still greater one without which to-day geology
-would be a thing of naught, that is, the principle of <i>explaining
-changes in the surface of the earth by reference to causes now in action</i>.
-The objection that one subject is very great and the other very
-small is not valid; for one as much as the other there are millions
-of years to be had for the asking. Who in these days hesitates to
-talk and try to think in millions?—tens of millions of men, millions
-of soldiers, millions upon millions of money, millions of bacteria
-in vaccines and millions of money belonging to other people disposed
-of by the new spendthrift Minister?</p>
-
-
-<h3>From Lemur to Ape.</h3>
-
-<p>Returning now to our Eocene lemur we must remind ourselves
-of the problem before his simple mind and those of his Simian
-descendants. How was he to change so greatly the direction of the
-hair on his forearm (Fig.&nbsp;<a href="#Fig_1">1</a>) till it should turn right about face and
-imitate those great German “victories” of Hindenburg, well
-called Marshal Rückwarts? The problem lies open in the Figure
-and receiving no aid from Selection or survival of the fittest, in
-this little effort, he had to fall back on the eternal and tedious
-force of habit and use. I am afraid if here I were interrupted by
-some critic, more learned than wise, by a summary demand on the
-part of Selection for its share in the result, I should be tempted to
-reply with the word Φλυαρια employed by George Borrow, forbearing
-to give the transla­tion of the reply as he gives it. Anyhow,
-it is a case in which to “listen politely and change the subject.”</p>
-
-<p>Here comes in the aspect of strife between primitive and new
-obstructing forces in a little hair-stream. The lemur lives in trees
-and carries on a stealthy nocturnal business, moving on all fours
-in quest of his daily bread, and no external force or new habit avails
-to modify the hair-slope on his forearms, and so it remains until
-some primitive form of monkey, gradually evolving into a primitive
-ape, brings into the family new habits and customs. Other men
-and other manners appear in the Miocene Age. Our supposed
-Dryopithecus fontani becomes more upright in his bodily, and
-perhaps his moral habits, and spends an increasing amount of his
-leisure time in the sitting posture; his hands are frequently grasping
-a bough as he sits and reflects, it may be in a man-ward direction,
-or, as is more likely, on his last meal of nuts and fruits. But he did
-not spend quite so much time as Wallace and others think in this
-futile attitude, for he knew in his way as much as the modern<span class="pagenum" title="47"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47"></a></span>
-bachelor does, of making his posture comfortable and restful when
-he was not out at work, and he varied his plans by resting his
-forearms on his thigh, crouched up and cosy, and doubtless slept
-much in this attitude. All these bold departures from his lemur-ancestor’s
-habits had the necessary result of altering the slope of
-his hair on the forearms, which was now growing as long and coarse
-as we see it to-day in the orang. In course of milleniums the
-ancient forces yielded to those of the new armies, and the once
-normal slope became reversed in a way which shocked the conservative
-lemurs of his day. It requires little imagina­tion to see
-how the lengthening thickening hairs on this limb-segment became
-changed in their direction by friction against the opposing surfaces
-of the thighs, by gravita­tion, and the frequent dripping of rain
-when they were held up to grasp a bough. Here then we see at
-work new forces of friction, pressure, gravita­tion and dripping of
-rain, turning endlessly and slowly the lemur-fashion into the ape-fashion,
-with unlimited time for their effectual action. In this
-stock of Man’s ancestry Selection was taking care of the individual
-and Habit of the details of his making—two truly harmonious
-partners.</p>
-
-
-<h3>From Ape to Man.</h3>
-
-<p>Another step, and a long one, has still to be taken from the
-ape-fashion to that of man. Bearing in mind that the lemur-fashion
-has been totally reversed by the ape it startles one to find
-that man in his modern fashion has largely reverted to that of the
-lemur on the front and sides of his forearm. This is clearly shown
-in Figure <a href="#Fig_1">1</a>. There also you see graphically recorded in the hair
-of the extensor border of the ulna, a little <i>backward</i> streak, a poor
-little legacy of fifty pounds from the fortunes of many thousands
-once possessed by the ape. From the present limited point of view,
-man is a veritable pauper, and his possessions in this limb-segment
-may with some irony well be called a “vestige.”</p>
-
-<p>Professor Scott-Elliott in his book, <i>Prehistoric Man and His
-Story</i>, p.&nbsp;60, goes rather wide of the mark here in his graphic picture
-of our rude ancestor and his hard life. He gives too strongly the
-idea of him sitting asleep in raging gales, in driving rain which is
-neatly conducted by the thatch of his hair off his skin. As far
-as it goes this need not be questioned, as a matter of probability,
-but he states far too broadly “The hair on the arm, even of those
-civilised men who retain sufficient to trace the arrangement, turns
-down both upper and forearm to the elbow<span class="nowrap">”<a id="FNanchor_46" href="#Footnote_46" class="fnanchor">46</a></span>—true as to the<span class="pagenum" title="48"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48"></a></span>
-upper arm, but only true of the forearm in a very narrow streak
-of hair over the extensor surface of the ulna. The fact is that in
-every human being, not too old, its course can be traced with a
-lens. He overlooks also from this protective point of view the
-fact that the ape or early man, in the position of rest he describes,
-would have very much the reverse of protec­tion from the “lie”
-of the hair on his thighs, for this is towards the knee and is well
-calculated to catch the rain and conduct it carefully, or let it run,
-into his groins. So the protec­tion theory (under the empire of
-Selection) is again in straits. But I must not forget my self-denying
-ordinance alluded to in the Preface, but will show how
-the ape fashion began to be modified into its present and probably
-final form in man. Still further changes in the simple habits of the
-earliest men became frequent, and fresh forces were organised
-in our mimic battlefield. Gravita­tion gradually ceased to act
-as the hairs became thinner and shorter. Friction and pressure
-changed their lines of incidence with the increasing tendency of
-man to assume the upright posture, for the surfaces exposed to
-pressure and friction were only affected when the extensor surface
-or back of the forearm rested on some supporting object, an attitude
-extremely common in man as we know him now. Then came the
-opportunity of the primitive barbarian host, the lemur fashion,
-by a prolonged counter-attack to recover on the greater part of the
-forearm the ground lost millions of years before by the ape, and
-then was engraved on the forearm of man the permanent treaty
-which we have before us to-day.</p>
-
-<p>This small and apparently trivial battle-ground has been
-described at what may seem undue length, but it is a miniature of
-the rise and fall of little empires such as here engage our attention,
-and I make no apology for this to the reader who has gone thus
-far with me, for, on the principle of <i>ex uno disce omnes</i>, all that
-follows in other areas of the hairy coat of mammals will be the
-clearer, and little repeti­tion will be needed.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Note.</span>—Two terms have been used somewhat freely in this Introduc­tion,
-“vestige” and “normal,” and a few remarks upon them are not out of place,
-for they are both somewhat ambiguous and apt to be carelessly employed.</p>
-
-<p>A vestige in biological writings is almost the exclusive property of the
-Pan-Selectionists, and no one can doubt that on the one hand it is a far more
-correct term than that of rudiment which Darwin employed so freely, on the
-other that they have a perfectly legitimate claim to it in a large number of
-obsolete structures of animal forms. But vestiges, footsteps, footprints,
-have another and equally correct meaning, even if less often thus employed,
-in the fact that a vestige or footprint may just as well be a relic of what the
-race and individuals have <i>done</i>, as a relic of what they have <i>retained</i> in the
-way of possession, and I submit that the facts and arguments I have here
-advanced afford a valid claim to the term “vestige” in the results of certain
-<i>doings</i> on the part of animals—as will appear later still more clearly.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" title="49"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49"></a></span></p>
-
-<p>The term “normal” is a fine field for dialectics, but neither ordinary
-men nor scientific students can do their work without its use, and yet it
-would have been an intellectual treat to have heard how Huxley, for example,
-would have turned inside out any opponent who chose to employ it to his
-dissatisfac­tion. In a strictly-conducted tournament no evolutionary biologist
-would allow its use—to his adversary. A norm for him exists only
-as one of Professor Karl Pearson’s “conceptual counters,” a piece of mental
-shorthand or hardly more than a <i>pis aller</i>. Among the fundamental conceptions
-of organic evolution there is one which is almost a truism, the doctrine
-of Heraclitus, πἁντα ρε̑ι, the everlasting flux and change of Nature and her
-products. In strict logic, according to what we all now believe, there
-is no possible norm. All that one may do is to take stock at a certain epoch
-of evolution and label, for our own convenience, some group, or organism
-or structure as “normal”—and go on with our business, collecting some
-specimens, calling them type-specimens, and putting them in books or cases
-in the Natural History Museum—and then proceed to business.</p>
-
-<p>The biological teacher in his class room says he must live, he must have
-his tools for his work, to which the idle student replies under his breath,
-“I do not see the necessity,” but then few students are now idle, and this
-jibe does not sting any one! The examiner must have his normal human
-anatomy, and would ruthlessly plough any daring examinee who tried to
-sophisticate the meaning of the term “normal.” I have often been struck
-with what I must call the intellectual audacity of a most eminent leader in
-physical science and mathematics, who is not unlike a certain great Church,
-which grants nothing to her adversaries but is not averse from taking. In
-his <i>Grammar of Science</i>, written with a pen dipped in hydrochloric acid,
-Professor Karl Pearson four times over, and perhaps more, has the courage
-to call the human brain in this twentieth century “normal.” Has he never
-heard of the coming Superman of Mr. Bernard Shaw and other prophets?
-Thinking <i>sub specie aeternitatis</i> has he here in the West, and at a certain small
-epoch of time, any right to call the human brain “normal”? I can only
-long that there may be more normal brains such as Professor Karl Pearson’s,
-and am almost inclined to echo the prayer of Moses, “Would God all
-the Lord’s people were [such] prophets”! These comments on the term
-“normal” imply no complaint against its use, indeed are a claim for it, and
-I deprecate very much that form of criticism known in boys’ schools, domestic
-circles, and among politicians as the <i>tu quoque</i> reply, and I hope the few
-ambiguous terms used in this book will pass the censor, and help the reader.</p></div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" title="50"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50"></a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER VII.<br />
-
-THE EVOLUTION OF PATTERNS OF HAIR.</h2>
-
-
-<p>Some attention must here be given to the supposed mode of formation
-of individual patterns of hair, that is to say, their evolution.
-So here one has to move among the fields of hypothesis, without
-which detached facts of nature are useless to science.</p>
-
-<p>The simplest pattern consists of a reversed area of hair
-appearing between two adjoining streams; the more complex
-are whorls, featherings and crests. No detailed descrip­tion nor
-illustra­tion of the former are required, but I have prepared a
-diagram to illustrate the latter (see p.&nbsp;51.) (<span class="lowercase smcap">A</span>) shows a whorl by
-itself; (<span class="lowercase smcap">B</span>) a whorl, feathering and crest. The arrows at the sides
-indicate the direction of the adjoining hair-streams, the arrow in
-the centre of (<span class="lowercase smcap">B</span>) the direction of the reversed flow of hair.</p>
-
-<div class="figright" style="width: 230px;">
-<a id="Fig_2"></a>
-<img src="images/i_051.jpg" alt="" height="546" width="230" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="tac">Fig. 2.—<span class="lowercase smcap">A.</span> Diagram of a whorl.<br />
-<span class="lowercase smcap">B.</span> Diagram of a whorl (<span class="lowercase smcap">W</span>)
-a fea­ther­ing (<span class="lowercase smcap">F</span>) a crest (<span class="lowercase smcap">C</span>).</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>An understanding of the dynamics of a hair-whorl leads quite
-simply to that of a feathering and crest, for the two latter are
-only the results of the further extension of the battle of forces
-concerned in the whorl itself, and the end of their conflict. A
-whorl marks a point in the stream of hair where two contending
-forces have come into collision; on the one hand the centrifugal
-force of growth from each hair-papilla, the rate of which has been
-described, and on the other a certain centripetal dynamic force
-which may be either that of localised <i>friction</i>, <i>pressure</i>, <i>gravita­tion</i>, or
-<i>muscular traction</i>, directly opposing or divergent. Thus conceived
-a whorl may be looked at symbolically as a written treaty between
-two nations, one of which has defeated the other, and actually as
-a proof that the contending centrifugal and centripetal forces are
-in the state called the balance of power. But when the centripetal
-force of some habitual action prevails over that of the original
-force of growth in the hair, a whorl becomes extended into a
-feathering, and the length of this, metaphorically speaking,
-corresponds with the duration of open fighting, and terminated by
-a sharp crest when another and a decisive battle has been fought.
-A crest may again be looked upon as a “treaty.” The whole
-process pictured here shows a battle followed by a treaty or truce
-(<span class="lowercase smcap">W</span>) again a retreat (<span class="lowercase smcap">F</span>) and a counter-attack (<span class="lowercase smcap">C</span>) with a final treaty
-and peace.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" title="51"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51"></a></span></p>
-
-<p>This hypothetical treatment, with addition of some metaphors,
-does not carry us far enough to leave it thus to the tender mercy
-of that class of critic who relies too much on the “argument from
-ignorance.” He tells us such a process as I have pictured may
-be true or not, and that no one
-can do more than leave the case
-open, and treat it like that of
-Jarndyce &amp; Jarndyce where it
-would remain in Chancery till all
-of us concerned in the inquiry
-have returned to our dust. The
-critic might reasonably ask for
-experiments which will bear out
-the suggested views. But verifica­tion
-by calculated experiments
-is impossible, for, <i>ex hypothesi</i>, the
-variations or patterns which are
-described require long periods of
-time for their produc­tion. Such
-experiments being ruled out, the
-evidence in favour of the hypothesis
-must be sought in some
-region of the hairy coat of
-mammals where whorls, featherings
-and crests can be observed
-in all stages of their formation.</p>
-
-
-<h3>The Side of the Horse’s Neck.</h3>
-
-<p>The field chosen for observa­tion
-is, from one point of view,
-the most remarkable among all
-the numerous regions in the great
-series of hair-clad mammals. The
-side of the neck in the domestic
-horse displays all degrees and
-forms of whorls, featherings and
-crests in such variety as to be
-almost bewildering. I must have
-examined many thousands of specimens of this valuable large
-mammal in reference to this state of things on the side of its neck,
-and can only regret that I have not kept any record of them as to
-number or quality, and I fear the opportunity for doing so will
-not return in this country. There are three reasons for this choice<span class="pagenum" title="52"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52"></a></span>
-of field. In the <i>first</i> place there is or was an extensive supply of
-the specimens for examina­tion; in the <i>second</i>, the side of a horse’s
-neck is a region where no extraneous or artificial agents, such as
-harness, except a bridle, can operate, and therefore Nature and
-the animal’s habits have free play; in the <i>third</i> the neck of a horse
-in its locomotive life is subject to powerful mechanical forces which
-are <i>constant</i>, literally speaking, while it walks, trots, canters or
-gallops. Here then, if anywhere, one may read the records, in
-indelible characters of hair patterns, the history of its active life
-and that of its ancestors, and here also one may reasonably expect
-to find these patterns in every possible stage of formation, from a
-mere rudiment to the most finished product in a whorl, feathering
-and crest—<i>and this is precisely what is found to exist</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Even an observer not acquainted with the anatomy of this
-region who watches closely a horse in action cannot fail to notice
-how at every step taken there is a marked jolt of the neck produced
-in the neck by the impact of its hoofs with the ground and in supporting
-its heavy skull. I have computed several times the number of
-jolts that the neck of a trotting horse sustains, in my numerous
-rides behind various horses, during many hundreds of miles, and
-have reckoned the number which occur in a horse trotting for an
-hour, at the usual rate at which a doctor travels. This is on the
-average 6,000, and of course the numbers of jolts in walking, cantering,
-and galloping vary according to these different paces. But a
-great deal more of movement of the head and neck is observed
-beside the jolt at every step. See how the animal tosses up its
-head, twists it to this and that side for the mere <i>joie de vivre</i> when
-it is fresh, or, even when hindered by blinkers<span class="nowrap">,<a id="FNanchor_47" href="#Footnote_47" class="fnanchor">47</a></span> how he turns his
-head to look at every passing object in the road with his ancestral
-caution, how he will pass contemptuously a great horse-waggon
-or even now a villainous-looking motor lorry, but will peer at a
-beggar woman sitting beside the road, or a heap of stones, or a
-yapping cur! All this vivid muscular work of a horse’s head and
-neck hardly ceases while he is in action and at any rate not till he
-is dead beat, and the higher the courage and breeding of the horse
-the more frequent and brisk are his movements. Is it possible
-to conceive a region of the body of any large mammal where more
-numerous, varied, and powerful action of underlying muscles can<span class="pagenum hide" title="53"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53"></a></span><span class="pagenum" title="54"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54"></a></span>
-be found playing their ceaseless tricks on the sober normal slope
-of hair in the skin which covers them? If there be any region
-approaching this I have not found it.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 440px;">
-<a id="Fig_3"></a>
-<img src="images/i_053-a.jpg" alt="" height="365" width="440" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="tac">Fig. 3.—Superficial muscles concerned in the move­ments of the head
-and neck of the horse.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 440px;">
-<a id="Fig_4"></a>
-<img src="images/i_053-b.jpg" alt="" height="262" width="440" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="tac">Fig. 4.—Deeper layer of the muscles concerned in the move­ments
-of the head and neck of the horse; the scapula removed.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The main facts of the anatomy of the horse’s neck must be
-referred to here, so that a better picture may be obtained as to
-the powerful forces which are found in conflict during the locomotive
-life of the animal. Fig.&nbsp;3 shows the superficial layer of muscles
-concerned in the actions of its head and neck, and the manner in
-which adjoining muscles diverge from one another should be noted.
-Fig.&nbsp;4 gives the deepest layer of neck-muscles, the shoulder-blade
-having been removed, and Fig.&nbsp;5 the immensely strong <i>ligamentum
-nuchae</i>, of yellow elastic tissue, which extends from the base of
-the skull to the great projecting spinous process of the lowest
-cervical and second and third dorsal vertebræ.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 430px;">
-<a id="Fig_5"></a>
-<img src="images/i_054.jpg" alt="" height="341" width="430" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="tac">Fig. 5.—Ligaments and tendons supporting the head and neck of
-the horse.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>There are here indeed great forces for conflict—<i>first</i> a layer
-of strong superficial muscles, <i>second</i> a layer of smaller muscles
-which has not been figured, <i>third</i> a deep layer of muscles, and
-<i>fourth</i> a powerful, widely-spread and strongly-attached mass of<span class="pagenum" title="55"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55"></a></span>
-dense elastic tissue, adapted for supporting the head without
-muscular exertion, but by its elasticity allowing a downward jerk
-of the head and neck at every step. It is an exceedingly important
-structure for a domestic horse.</p>
-
-
-<h3>The Normal Arrangement of Hair.</h3>
-
-<p>So much for the active part played by a horse’s neck and
-head, and for the simpler anatomical facts of the region involved.
-Before proceeding to describe the results of these as seen in the
-hair, it is well to make sure of a point which a critic might raise.
-“How do you know,” says he, “that some of the variations in
-this highly variable region of the hair are not normal. What
-is the normal type here?” A very easy answer to this is found
-by studying, not only any Ungulate known, except the Gnu, but
-more particularly all wild Equidæ; and this reveals the fact that
-in all this series the normal slope of hair prevails here, that is to
-say, an even trend from head to shoulder. Variations in others,
-indeed, hardly exist, and I may add that the absence of variations
-here is a strong piece of negative evidence in my favour, for no
-Ungulate comes near the domestic horse for amount and activity
-of locomo­tion, which is indeed his <i>raison d’être</i>. He is the only one
-that has invented new patterns. But a little direct evidence can
-be brought which clinches this argument from inference based on
-ancestry. I made an examina­tion, at the stables of Messrs. Tilling,
-at Peckham, of 100 consecutive specimens of hackney, for the
-purpose of ascertaining the propor­tion in that group of those that
-showed the normal slope on the neck to those with variations.
-In 62 of these the normal existed on both sides of the neck, 18
-Normal on one side, and in the remaining 20 there were variations
-on both sides. If 100 specimens of horses contain 80 with one side
-and 62 with both normal the previous inference requires no further
-support.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Fourteen Varieties.</h3>
-
-<p>I have put together here, and described, fourteen out of a much
-larger number of the most instructive varieties of pattern that I
-have been able to collect during the course of many years and
-examina­tion of several thousand horses. They comprise examples
-the mostly likely, as I think, to convey to the reader an adequate
-picture of the results of the strength, number and variety of
-mechanical forces in our present battle-field of hair. The diagrams
-almost speak for themselves, but a short written descrip­tion will
-help to emphasise the salient points.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" title="56"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56"></a></span></p>
-
-<p>There are pictured here the normal type, divergent hair-streams
-partially reversed, simple whorls in different regions, a
-whorl and feathering, whorls, featherings and crests, and these in
-several areas. It is a veritable portrait gallery in which is portrayed
-the earliest and latest stages of this family of fashions in hair on
-the horse’s neck. They are grouped mostly in pairs.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 470px;">
-<a id="Fig_6"></a>
-<img src="images/i_056-a.jpg" alt="" height="341" width="350" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="tac">Fig. 6.—Side of Neck of Horse.</p>
-
-<p>Normal type, hair-stream passing evenly in line of neck.—Bay hack­ney,
-examined 3rd May, 1904.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 470px;">
-<a id="Fig_7"></a>
-<img src="images/i_056-b.jpg" alt="" height="331" width="390" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="tac">Fig. 7.—Side of Neck of Horse.</p>
-
-<p>Complete whorl with wide feathering which ex­tends from base of the
-neck to the ear where it ends in a crest.—W.F.C.</p>
-
-<p>Brown hackney, examined 12th January, 1904.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Fig. 6 shows the normal slope and by its side Fig.&nbsp;7 gives
-a view of the best specimen of a completed whorl, feathering and
-crest I have been able to examine, <i>the whole length of the neck
-being occupied by it</i>. So in this pair the normal and most extensive
-departure from it lie side by side.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" title="57"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57"></a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 470px;">
-<img src="images/i_057-a.jpg" alt="" height="314" width="370" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="tac">Fig.&nbsp;8.—Side of Neck of Horse.</p>
-
-<p>Offside, anterior portion of neck showing line of di­vi­sion, B to A, along
-up­per bor­der of sterno-mastoid muscle, nor­mal arrange­ment from A to C.</p>
-
-<p>Grey pony, examined 15th December, 1903.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 470px;">
-<img src="images/i_057-b.jpg" alt="" height="329" width="340" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="tac">Fig 9.—Side of Neck in Horse.</p>
-
-<p>Near side, winter coat, showing nor­mal ar­range­ment from B to A, where
-a division begins and ex­tends along up­per bor­der of ster­no-mas­toid
-muscle to base of neck.</p>
-
-<p>Brown hackney, examined 28th December, 1903.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Fig.&nbsp;8 shows the way in which two streams of hair close up
-to the ears begin to diverge. Fig.&nbsp;9 a similar divergence towards
-the base of the neck.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" title="58"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58"></a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 470px;">
-<a id="Fig_10"></a>
-<img src="images/i_058-a.jpg" alt="" height="443" width="470" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="tac">Fig. 10.—Side of Neck of Horse.</p>
-
-<p>Line of division of streams curving upwards to the mane near the base
-of the neck.</p>
-
-<p>Chestnut cart horse, examined 9th December, 1903.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 470px;">
-<a id="Fig_11"></a>
-<img src="images/i_058-b.jpg" alt="" height="299" width="370" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="tac">Fig. 11.—Side of Neck of Horse.</p>
-
-<p>Near side, line of division along the up­per bor­der of ster­no-mas­toid
-muscle di­vert­ed at C towards the mane.</p>
-
-<p>Bay cart horse, examined 11th December, 1903.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Fig. 10 gives not only a divergence, but a well-marked turn in
-the upper hair-stream and Fig.&nbsp;11 the way in which this divergent
-turn of hair is being converted into a feathering.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" title="59"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59"></a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 470px;">
-<a id="Fig_12"></a>
-<img src="images/i_059-a.jpg" alt="" height="313" width="350" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="tac">Fig. 12.—Side of Neck of Horse.</p>
-
-<p>Near side, at C upward curve towards mane. Brownish-yellow hackney, examined 18th August, 1903.</p>
-
-<p>The same horse as appears in Fig.&nbsp;13.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 470px;">
-<a id="Fig_13"></a>
-<img src="images/i_059-b.jpg" alt="" height="276" width="300" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="tac">Fig. 13.—Side of Neck of Horse—same spe­ci­men as in Fig.&nbsp;12.</p>
-
-<p>Offside, fully developed whorl, feathering and crest W, F, C, lying
-along upper border of ster­no-mas­toid muscle. Two stages of for­ma­tion
-of this form of pat­tern in one spe­ci­men.</p>
-
-<p>Brownish-yellow hackney, examined 18th August, 1903.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Fig. 12 presents a stream of hair still more twisted from its
-course than that of Fig.&nbsp;<a href="#Fig_10">10</a>, and Fig.&nbsp;13 a whorl going on to a
-feathering which loses itself, without coming to an abrupt stop
-in a crest which is the more usual course.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" title="60"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60"></a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 470px;">
-<a id="Fig_14"></a>
-<img src="images/i_060-a.jpg" alt="" height="339" width="390" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="tac">Fig. 14.—Side of Neck of Horse.</p>
-
-<p>Near side, whorl (W) in place of common line of di­vi­sion, with wide
-for­ward fea­ther­ing to A, where the hair streams di­verge sharply.</p>
-
-<p>Brown hackney, examined 19th November, 1903.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 470px;">
-<a id="Fig_15"></a>
-<img src="images/i_060-b.jpg" alt="" height="338" width="460" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="tac">Fig. 15.—Side of Neck of Horse.</p>
-
-<p>Near side, showing (B to C<sup>1</sup>) diversion of hair stream towards mane
-(W<sup>1</sup>F<sup>1</sup>C<sup>1</sup>) whorl, fea­ther­ing and crest; W<sup>1</sup> to W<sup>2</sup> stream in normal
-di­rec­tion W<sup>2</sup> a sec­ond whorl.</p>
-
-<p>Chestnut cart horse, examined 1st January, 1904.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Fig. 14 is a common type of whorl, feathering and crest in
-the most usual situation. Fig.&nbsp;15 a rarer and more complicated
-instance of a simple whorl, a gap and then a whorl, feathering and
-crest in the same “critical area.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" title="61"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61"></a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 470px;">
-<a id="Fig_16"></a>
-<img src="images/i_061-a.jpg" alt="" height="434" width="450" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="tac">Fig. 16.—Side of Neck of Horse.</p>
-
-<p>Near side (W<sup>1</sup>F<sup>1</sup>C<sup>1</sup>) showing
-whorl, fea­ther­ing and crest along
-up­per line of di­vi­sion (W<sup>2</sup>F<sup>2</sup>C<sup>2</sup>) a
-sec­ond fully-formed whorl, fea­ther­ing
-and crest, cross­ing both up­per and
-lower lines of di­vi­sion, and end­ing at
-W<sup>1</sup>. Grey pony, exam­ined 23rd
-May, 1903.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 470px;">
-<a id="Fig_17"></a>
-<img src="images/i_061-b.jpg" alt="" height="400" width="460" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="tac">Fig. 17.—Side of Neck of Horse.</p>
-
-<p>Near side (W<sup>1</sup>F<sup>1</sup>C<sup>1</sup>) whorl,
-fea­ther­ing and crest, fully-formed,
-cut­ting up­per line of di­vi­sion
-at ob­tuse angle and a sec­ond
-whorl, fea­ther­ing and crest (W<sup>2</sup>F<sup>2</sup>C<sup>2</sup>)
-along an­ter­ior part of com­mon line
-of di­vi­sion. Roan hack­ney, exam­ined
-7th November, 1903.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Fig. 16 and Fig.&nbsp;17 are rare cases of irregularly placed double
-whorls, featherings and crests, and give evidence of unusually
-complicated traction of adjoining muscles underneath this battle-field
-of hair.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" title="62"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62"></a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 470px;">
-<a id="Fig_18"></a>
-<img src="images/i_062-a.jpg" alt="" height="320" width="450" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="tac">Fig. 18.—Side of Neck of Horse.</p>
-
-<p class="tac">Off side, simple whorl, behind ear at edge of mane.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 470px;">
-<a id="Fig_19"></a>
-<img src="images/i_062-b.jpg" alt="" height="300" width="440" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="tac">Fig. 19.—Side of Neck of Horse.</p>
-
-<p class="tac">Simple whorl (W) at edge of mane midway between ears and base of neck.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Figs.&nbsp;18 and 19 show a simple whorl, situated at the very edge
-of the mane, a very “critical” area because this looser and heavy
-part of the neck is very much subject to jolting during the
-horse’s action.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" title="63"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63"></a></span></p>
-
-<p>I have little to add to the graphic evidence afforded by these
-pictures, each of which I observed noted and sketched as the bearers
-of them came before me during many years of a “Captain-Cuttle-like”
-disposal of some of my leisure. No clearer proof can be
-desired of the view here advanced, that habit or habitual muscular
-action, and jolting, is the cause of the varied patterns in this field,
-and that according to the Law of Parcimony no other is required,
-this canon of Occam being expressed more succinctly—<i>Neither
-more, nor more onerous causes are to be assumed than are necessary
-to account for the phenomena</i>.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" title="64"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64"></a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER VIII.<br />
-
-CAN MUSCULAR ACTION CHANGE THE DIRECTION
-OF HAIR IN THE INDIVIDUAL?</h2>
-
-
-<p>It might seem unnecessary to most persons who are good enough
-to follow this inquiry that the question asked above should receive
-an explicit answer. We all know, of course, how a man’s hair is
-said to stand on end in excessive states of horror or rage, and how
-a short-haired terrier’s back bristles at the sight of certain foes.
-But it is not so simple a matter to show that the direction of the
-hair is permanently changed. I submit that the persons I mention
-are right in their opinion for this work contains evidence throughout
-that muscular action beneath the skin is the efficient cause in many
-regions of the formation of hair patterns. But like Kirkpatrick
-when Bruce struck down the Red Comyn we had best “make sicker,”
-and give as much evidence of the affirmative question as any
-critic can demand.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Hairs of Human Eyebrows.</h3>
-
-<p>As in the previous chapter I chose an open and plain field for
-the evidence bearing on the formation of whorls and the like,
-so here I turn to one still more clear for him who runs to read.
-In these days old men are of less account than in earlier and simpler
-times, but I claim to have found “a new use for old men” as I
-had almost thought of calling this chapter. In this somewhat
-neglected group we have an almost unlimited number of specimens
-for examina­tion, and in their eyebrows they furnish a valuable
-field for tracing some striking results of underlying muscular
-traction.</p>
-
-<p>Darwin made one of his few mistakes when he included among
-rudimentary and inherited <span class="nowrap">structures<a id="FNanchor_48" href="#Footnote_48" class="fnanchor">48</a></span> those few long hairs which
-are often seen in the eyebrows of man, looking upon them as representatives
-of those found in some species of macacus and the
-chimpanzee. That great and modest man was, I am sure, not in
-the habit of making much use of the looking-glass—not more than
-women who, as we know, rarely do such a thing. But if he did<span class="pagenum" title="65"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65"></a></span>
-he would have observed in his own splendid frontal region and
-brows excellent examples of the phenomena which form the subject
-of this chapter. This I know, though I never saw him in the flesh,
-for it so happens that in the great volume published in the jubilee
-of The Origin, and called <i>Darwin and Modern Science</i>, two good
-photographs of him, at the ages of thirty-five and about seventy-one
-are reproduced. These both show, but the later one much more
-clearly, good examples of these long and not very ornamental
-aberrant hairs. Thirty-five years of arduous thought and work
-had told their tale on him and twisted from their normal paths the
-lengthening thickening hairs of his eyebrows.</p>
-
-<p>Also, if he had looked a little beyond the eyebrows he would
-have seen some very deep wrinkles of the skin on his forehead and
-round his orbits. It is these two groups of facts, wrinkles and
-twisted, changed hairs of man’s eyebrows, which give the answer
-to the question “Can muscular action change the direction of hair
-in the individual?”</p>
-
-<p>In 1903 I drew the attention of the Anatomical Society of
-Great Britain and Ireland to these two groups of facts under the
-title “Notes on the Eyebrows of Man,” and presented some large
-drawings of individual elderly men of my acquaintance, and the
-present chapter is only an extension of that little piece of work.</p>
-
-<p>No area of the mammalian skin is so useful and easy to follow
-as this in answering the present question, for though the previous
-chapter supplied part of the answer in a very fruitful field, the proof
-still remained one of “tremendous probability” and not more.
-But in the frontal and superciliary region of man there is complete
-proof of the truth of the affirmative answer, as I shall show.</p>
-
-<p>Here again we must encounter our old friend the normal slope
-of hair. As I stated in 1903, “The normal arrangement of the hair
-on the eyebrows of a moderately hairy subject is as follows: in
-the middle line the hairs of the two sides tend to meet and form a
-somewhat confused group of hairs; passing away from the middle
-line the hairs assume a nearly sagittal direction, then become
-more sloped away, and a sharp change in the direction of the
-<i>frontal</i> and <i>orbital</i> streams brings the remaining hairs into that
-regular accurate arrangement of a united stream so characteristic
-of a hairy subject, and this passes along the superciliary ridge
-to the external angular process”—all of which can be seen at a
-glance by any one who looks closely enough, as with the eyes of a
-lover, for example, at the brows of a dark-haired maid or youth.
-In the young these hairs lie close to the skin, and with that very
-interesting group of persons we have no more to do here, except<span class="pagenum" title="66"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66"></a></span>
-for one piece of practical advice to them which they will find at
-the end of the present chapter.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Evidence from Artists.</h3>
-
-<p>More than one kind of evidence may be brought forward in
-this case, and I propose to “put in” a certain class of witness
-that not the most acute cross-examining counsel, Daniel O’Connell,
-Hawkins, or even Sergeant Buzfuz, can shake. I pity that young
-man or woman to-day who has not mended several holes in his
-education by reading the books of Dickens and Lever in editions
-illustrated by the immortal Phiz. If I do no more for him by this
-passage than induce him to mend such holes I shall have been of
-some use to his mind. For my part I look upon Phiz as far superior
-to Hogarth or Cruikshank in the fidelity to nature of his drawings
-of the faces of his numerous characters, especially the old men.
-Look through <i>Dombey &amp; Son</i>, <i>Bleak House</i>, <i>Pickwick Papers</i>,
-<i>Barnaby Rudge</i>, <i>Tom Burke</i>, <i>Jack Hinton</i>, <i>Harry Lorrequer</i>, <i>The
-O’Donohue</i>, and, perhaps best of all for the illustrations, <i>The Knight
-of Gwynne</i>. Examine, with a lens if necessary, the delicate way
-in which Phiz shows the projecting hairs on the eyebrows of his
-many elderly men, and note at the same time the truth to scientific
-fact which he shows in his <i>female</i> characters, for only in the drawings
-of “Mrs. Gamp proposes a toast” and of Mrs. Pipchin in “Paul
-and Mrs. Pipchin,” and one or two doubtful instances, can I find
-that he represents even his elderly women with this feature of their
-eyebrow hairs. But see Captain Cuttle and Mr. Bunsby in “Solemn
-references to Mrs. Bunsby,” both with strongly-marked shelves
-of hair sticking out from the brows, Captain Cuttle in “The shadow
-in the little parlour,” one of the fat coachmen in “Mr. Weller and
-his friends drinking to Mr. Pell”—the sharp brush projecting
-from the brow of Bagnet in “Mr. Smallweed breaks the pipe of
-peace,” that of Vholes in “Attorney and Client, fortitude and
-impatience”—(the equally remarkable absence of this feature in
-Pecksniff, Chadband and Skimpole, men without character or
-feeling)—Gashford in “Lord George Gordon,” the fat figure in
-“The Gallant Vintner,” Pioche in “Minette in attendance on
-Pioche,” the courtier in “Louis XIV. and de Genchy,” “The
-death of Shaun,” the blind man in “Joe the mighty hunter,”
-the right hand figure in “Mr. O’Leary creating a sensation,”
-Sir Archibald Mc’Nab in “A fireside group,” “Roade’s return
-to O’Donoughue Castle,” Sandy Mc’Grane and Old Hickman in
-“Sandy expedites the doctor,” Daly in “Daly bestows a helmet
-on Bully Dodd,” the knight in <span class="pagenum" title="67"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67"></a></span>“The Knight is taken Prisoner.”</p>
-
-<p>Another witness to the scientific facts of the frequent presence
-of these hairs on the eyebrows of elderly men, and the rarity of
-them in those of women, is the dear friend of our youth, our friend
-even to hoar hairs, the <i>Book of Nonsense</i>, by Edward Lear. Here
-in 110 vivid drawings of several hundred characters, each of them
-sketched with a few bold strokes, is inscribed again and again this
-peculiar feature. Look at the “Old man with a nose,” the “Old
-Man of th’Abruzzi,” the “Old man of Melrose,” the “Old man of
-Calcutta,” the “Old Person of Anerley,” the “Old Person of
-Chester,” all with strange and striking bushes of long hairs standing
-out from their brows. Again see how hardly one of the female
-characters shows a trace of it even in that most truculent “Grandmother
-of the Young Person of Smyrna” who threatened to burn
-her, though her vertical wrinkles are formidable, or in the remarkable
-face of the wife of the “Old Man of Peru.” The “Old Lady of
-Prague” shows it in a moderate degree. Support of this kind
-may be trivial, and so will the opposing counsel say is that of a
-burglar’s finger-prints, but, <i>quâ</i> evidence, it is as strong as that
-which commits the criminal to a prison on this modern proof.
-No one can suppose that Phiz and Lear fifty or sixty years ago
-had a prophetic and treacherous insight into the harmless labours
-of a man in the year 1920 who would exploit their labours to the
-advantage of his hypothesis, and that they faked their caricatures
-for such a purpose. This is the only alternative line for Sergeant
-Buzfuz to take unless he acknowledge the facts to be facts, and
-betake himself to abuse of the plaintiff’s attorney.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Eyebrows Interpreted by Wrinkles.</h3>
-
-<p>When one comes to the interpreta­tion of the curious shapes
-taken by these hairs one is not left to inference, for Nature has
-put some indelible stamps on the forehead and round the orbits of
-the men examined. These are wrinkles which have been long in
-prepara­tion and only begin to show themselves fully when the
-“evil days” have come, in the ’fifties, ’sixties and ’seventies.</p>
-
-<p>I will describe the wrinkles first, and then their results, with
-examples, in the numerous fashions of the hairs. Wrinkles are of
-two kinds, pathological and physiological, in other words the
-former are the results of degenera­tion and wasting of the subcutaneous
-fat and loss of its normal elasticity, and are found in the faces
-of nearly all men and women, with advancing age, and they are
-the subject of much distress in the fair sex and a good deal of
-“beauty doctoring.” The latter are the result of long-continued
-and repeated action of certain small muscles. The former are<span class="pagenum" title="68"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68"></a></span>
-numerous, shallow and fine, the latter few and comparatively deep.
-The difference between elderly women and men in respect of the
-projecting hairs is not that men have many more physiological
-wrinkles, but that the hairs of women in this region do not stiffen
-and grow long nearly so much as those of men.</p>
-
-<p>There are three groups of wrinkles found on the human forehead
-and face, <i>vertical</i>, <i>arched</i> or horizontal and <i>orbital</i>. This division of
-wrinkles is a natural one, for each group is produced by the action of
-different muscles, the <i>vertical</i> by the corrugator muscle, which is a
-narrow band passing from under the frontalis muscle inwards, where
-it is attached to the bone between the two eyebrows; the <i>arched</i> by
-the action of the frontalis muscle, one which moves the scalp and in
-doing so elevates the eyebrows; the <i>orbital</i> by the elliptic orbicularis
-muscle which closes the eyelids. These muscles are shown in Fig.&nbsp;<a href="#Fig_20">20</a>.</p>
-
-<p><i>Vertical</i> wrinkles are found in the central region of the forehead
-and sometimes occupy the middle line with a deep furrow, more
-often they are bilateral and symmetrical, near the inner fourth
-part of the eyebrow, and sometimes they are placed at different
-distances from the middle line.</p>
-
-<p><i>Arched</i> wrinkles extend over the forehead in a series of lines
-which are usually concentric with the curve of the eyebrows, but
-are sometimes nearly horizontal.</p>
-
-<p><i>Orbital</i> wrinkles may lie in a radiating plan all round the
-outer lower and inner borders of the orbit, and in some persons
-they are found lying over the curves of the orbicularis muscle itself.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Some Examples.</h3>
-
-<p>The variations in the long hairs of men’s eyebrows present
-some very singular tufts, and I have added below nine figures
-of certain cases examined and noted by myself, and these are,
-I hope, plain enough without any more detailed account than is
-given in the few words describing each.</p>
-
-<p>Unless one’s attention be specially directed to these aberrant
-hairs, which are extremely common, one would not expect that
-hairs could be so variously twisted by muscular action beneath
-them. You may see a tuft of long hair projecting from the plane
-of the eyebrows towards the inner end, looking like a small horn,
-and I have measured individual hairs in elderly persons and found
-many an inch in length and a few an inch and a half. Such a tuft
-gives a fierce look to the countenance if the hairs are bushy and
-plentiful. The celebrated Dr. Keate, the flogging Head of Eton,
-a fiery strenuous person, was noted for the extraordinary long<span class="pagenum" title="69"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69"></a></span>
-horn of thick hair in his eyebrows, which he appeared to use as a
-supplementary finger to point to this or that object of his terrifying
-attention. You may also see a man with a great drooping curtain
-of hairs overhanging his eyes, half hiding the upper lids and eyes.
-Another will show at the outer end of the eyebrows a bristling bush
-of hairs turning upwards in the aggressive manner of Wilhelm II.
-of evil memory, or of Mr. Roosevelt in former times. Again the
-outer points of the eyebrow hairs may turn downwards like a
-cavalry moustache, or the hairs may stand out at right angles as a
-level shelf. The fashions of these “orbital moustaches” appear
-to be as numerous as those of the upper lip.</p>
-
-
-<h3>A Conflict of Forces.</h3>
-
-<p>If the eyebrows are studied in the light of the three muscles
-displayed in Fig.&nbsp;<a href="#Fig_20">20</a> it is seen to contain an interesting congeries
-of small forces in conflict. (1) The <i>frontalis</i> moves the eyebrow
-directly upwards. I had a friend once about seventy years old
-who was a very vigorous, strong-willed man and he spoke with
-decision and energy. It was most interesting to watch how his
-frontalis muscle strongly and frequently contracted as he spoke
-and drew up his eyebrows so that one might, as it were, measure
-the strength of his expressed convictions by the rate of action of
-his <i>frontalis</i> muscle! (2) The <i>corrugator</i> draws the skin of the eyebrow
-inwards to the middle line thus acting at a right angle to the
-line of the <i>frontalis</i>. (3) The <i>orbicularis</i> in the upper part directly
-opposes the action of the <i>frontalis</i> and in the lower acts “on its
-own” in closing the lower lid. This little spot is a Hill 60, destroyed
-at the battle of Messines, and has been the scene of much fighting
-throughout life, and it bears abiding witness in the twists and
-curves of the long hairs to the severity of the struggles. These
-actions of the three contending muscles are involuntary and of a
-reflex character, and much employed in such habits as those of
-knitting the brows or in elevating or depressing them, all this being
-set going and controlled by cerebral action. Incidentally then the
-preponderance of one or more of these actions over others, as shown
-in the hair, is evidence, as far as it goes, of the disposi­tion and
-character of the possessor. So that between the wrinkles and
-the twisted hairs of his brow the elderly man, and less so the woman,
-carries about an engraved statement, for his friends or enemies
-to read, of his natural disposi­tion and his acquired habits, in a
-limited field—his written character!</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" title="70"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70"></a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 470px;">
-<a id="Fig_20"></a>
-<img src="images/i_070-a.jpg" alt="" height="197" width="420" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="tac">Fig. 20.</p>
-
-<p>Muscles surrounding orbit with lines of action. Left—muscles con­cerned
-in move­ments of parts round orbits. Right—lines of ac­tion of these muscles
-in­di­cated by arrows.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 470px;">
-<a id="Fig_21"></a>
-<img src="images/i_070-b.jpg" alt="" height="179" width="350" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="tac">Fig. 21.—C.&nbsp;B. <i>æt</i> 81.</p>
-
-<p><i>Hairs</i>: Thick and bushy eyebrows. At junc­tion of outer and middle third
-of each side the thick hairs turn abruptly down­wards in a tuft and cover the
-upper lid.</p>
-
-<p><i>Wrinkles</i>: Arched and lateral fairly well-marked, one very deep, cen­tral and
-ver­ti­cal wrinkle.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 470px;">
-<a id="Fig_22"></a>
-<img src="images/i_070-c.jpg" alt="" height="151" width="350" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="tac">Fig. 22.—G.&nbsp;W. <i>æt</i> 79.</p>
-
-<p><i>Hairs</i>: On each side at junction of outer and middle thirds a de­fin­ite wisp
-of hair turn­ing up­wards.</p>
-
-<p><i>Wrinkles</i>: Arched and orbital well-marked, cen­tral wrin­kles hard­ly visi­ble.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" title="71"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71"></a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 470px;">
-<a id="Fig_23"></a>
-<img src="images/i_071-a.jpg" alt="" height="162" width="350" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="tac">Fig. 23.—F.&nbsp;F. <i>æt</i> 57.</p>
-
-<p><i>Hairs</i>: Left side two long hairs from 1 to <span class="nowrap">1 <span class="fraction"><span class="fnum">1</span><span class="bar">/</span><span class="fden">2</span></span></span> inches long, turned sharp­ly up
-at outer end of eye­brow. Right side short hairs turned up­wards.</p>
-
-<p><i>Wrinkles</i>: Strongly marked, curved, or­bit­al wrin­kles round outer half of
-each orbit. No other wrin­kles.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 470px;">
-<a id="Fig_24"></a>
-<img src="images/i_071-b.jpg" alt="" height="173" width="350" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="tac">Fig. 24.—B.&nbsp;W. <i>æt</i> 69.</p>
-
-<p><i>Hairs</i>: on both sides, projecting tufts at junc­tion of the mid­dle and outer
-thirds of eye­brows, hairs an inch long. The outer fourth of sur­face bare of
-hair.</p>
-
-<p><i>Wrinkles</i>: Vertical hardly visible. Arched wrin­kles nu­mer­ous and es­pe­cial­ly
-deep towards the tem­poral region.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 470px;">
-<a id="Fig_25"></a>
-<img src="images/i_071-c.jpg" alt="" height="153" width="350" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="tac">Fig. 25.—T.&nbsp;R. <i>æt</i> 57. Voluble talker, twitches eyebrows in talking.</p>
-
-<p><i>Hairs</i>: Thick and stand out stiffly from eyebrows, turning slightly
-upwards in outer third—almost absent from inner third of surface.</p>
-
-<p><i>Wrinkles</i>: Vertical faint; arched deep and long, equal on the two sides,
-orbital, on each side two groups of deep radiating wrinkles, beside many
-small lines.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" title="72"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72"></a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 470px;">
-<a id="Fig_26"></a>
-<img src="images/i_072-a.jpg" alt="" height="174" width="470" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="tac">Fig. 26.—A.&nbsp;P. <i>æt</i> 63.</p>
-
-<p><i>Hairs</i>: On each eyebrow at about the junction of the middle and outer
-third, there is a re­mark­able tuft measur­ing 1 to <span class="nowrap">1 <span class="fraction"><span class="fnum">1</span><span class="bar">/</span><span class="fden">2</span></span></span> inch pro­ject­ing from plane
-of eye­brow some­what up­wards, scanty hair on outer third.</p>
-
-<p><i>Wrinkles</i>: Smooth open forehead, with moderate-sized arched and or­bit­al
-wrin­kles. Ver­ti­cal wrin­kles hardly visible.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 470px;">
-<a id="Fig_27"></a>
-<img src="images/i_072-b.jpg" alt="" height="155" width="350" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="tac">Fig. 27.—G.&nbsp;G. <i>æt</i> 54.</p>
-
-<p><i>Hairs</i>: Right eyebrow upward twist of hairs on outer half, left eye­brow
-hairs lie straight; project, on both sides, well away from plane of eyebrow.</p>
-
-<p><i>Wrinkles</i>: Arched on right side more numerous and extending higher than
-on left. No vertical wrinkles.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 470px;">
-<a id="Fig_28"></a>
-<img src="images/i_072-c.jpg" alt="" height="160" width="360" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="tac">Fig. 28.—R.&nbsp;N. <i>æt</i> 65.</p>
-
-<p><i>Hairs</i>: On right side hairs long and pro­ject­ing nearly in hori­zon­tal
-direc­tion, on left sharply turned up at inner end and rather less so at outer.</p>
-
-<p><i>Wrinkles</i>: on right sides, three faint arched wrin­kles, one ver­ti­cal, short and
-small. On left, three deep arched wrin­kles, one ver­ti­cal, deep and long.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" title="73"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73"></a></span></p>
-
-
-<h3>A Side-Issue.</h3>
-
-<p>This conclusion brings me to the piece of gratuitous advice
-I offer to the unmarried reader. It will be more likely to appeal
-to the woman than the man, I believe. Let such an one who is
-contemplating matrimony make a short study of wrinkles and the
-long hairs if possible—unfortunately she cannot do this of her
-prospective mate if he be at all young, for neither of these features
-will be pronounced as yet. I recommend instead a study of the
-wrinkles and hairs of the father and mother and a deliberate summing-up
-of the evidence in this way. If she wishes to have a
-cheery, genial, hopeful companion in life like B.&nbsp;W. (Fig.&nbsp;<a href="#Fig_26">26</a>) let her
-seek as many arched wrinkles in his parents as possible and avoid
-very deep vertical wrinkles. If she be herself of that disposi­tion
-she will want a mate of different qualities and may venture on one
-whose balance of family wrinkles inclines to the vertical, <i>see</i> Fig.&nbsp;<a href="#Fig_28">28</a>,
-R.&nbsp;N. She can risk that, and perhaps get a more capable and
-strenuous comrade in life’s battle. But let her beware of him
-whose wrinkles are all of the vertical kind; for he will be thoughtful,
-moody, abstracted and not too good-tempered. I would rather
-myself join my fortunes to one who could claim a large share of
-arched wrinkles.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 470px;">
-<a id="Fig_29"></a>
-<img src="images/i_073.jpg" alt="" height="139" width="350" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="tac">Fig. 29.—B.&nbsp;F. <i>æt</i> 52.</p>
-
-<p><i>Hairs</i>: On both sides much twisted down­wards, pro­duc­ing shelf over eye.</p>
-
-<p><i>Wrinkles</i>: None on forehead; strongly-marked con­cen­tric or­bit­al wrin­kles
-on both sides.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>After this digression, which follows logically on the facts
-and arguments of this chapter I am now in a position to affirm
-that <i>changes in the direction of the hair in the individual can be
-caused by muscular action</i>.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" title="74"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74"></a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER IX.<br />
-
-HABITS AND HAIR OF UNGULATES.</h2>
-
-
-<h3>Horses.</h3>
-
-<p>The Ungulate order has been variously divided by zoologists,
-and is still said to be composed of two main sections, even-toed
-and odd-toed Ungulates, with the addition of a good many “outsiders”
-if one may use the term.</p>
-
-<p>These sections form two sub-orders, and the division suits
-my purpose here very well. I take the odd-toed sub-order of the
-Ungulata Vera first.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Lessons from the Domestic Horse.</h3>
-
-<p>The domestic horse is the only member of this section that
-requires detailed attention, and its value for studying the direction
-of the mammalian hair is great, on account of the immense number
-of specimens available, the quality and varied distribu­tion of its
-hair, the size of the animal, and, most of all, our intimate knowledge
-of its habits of life for many thousands of years.</p>
-
-<p>Many volumes have been written by man about this, his best
-and second oldest friend among lower animals. His ancestry,
-his story as servant of man, his virtues, strength, speed, intelligence,
-his use for war and peace, his colour, varieties of breed and money
-value; his anatomy, physiology, pathology, his medicine and surgery
-have all been written by many able men. Indeed before the great
-revela­tion of what man can be and do that the great war has given
-us, many observers of mankind were prepared to adapt the saying
-of a French cynic and to declare: “The more I see of men the
-better I like horses.” Swift at any rate came near this in his bitter
-account of a voyage to the Houyhnhnms, which lasted sixteen
-years and seven months, towards the end of which he said: “For
-who can read of the virtues I have mentioned in the glorious
-Houyhnhnms without being ashamed of his own vices, when he
-considers himself as the reasoning governing animal of his country?”
-But in all these writings, even in that last striking book by Mr.
-Roger Pocock, <i>Horses</i>, little or no attention is given to the patterns
-of its coat from the point of view of science. I remember reading<span class="pagenum" title="75"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75"></a></span>
-a paper on this subject many years ago before a distinguished
-company of veterinary surgeons, and though they had glanced at
-these patterns in a passing way, as peculiarities, no real knowledge
-of them nor attempt to understand them was shown by this body
-of experts. They were too “practical” for this view of things.
-I may remark here that many of the most vocal and active among
-us, and especially the Germans, have been overmuch disposed to
-study science <i>ad hoc</i>, for its commercial and military value, though
-here, as elsewhere one must be tolerant and each follow his own
-taste, seeking light, more light. One must live and let live.</p>
-
-<p>The horse does his work <i>coram publico</i> in every street of
-every town, in fields, roads and race-courses, and displays on his
-hairy coat some graceful patterns which are at the same time
-subjects for scientific inquiry, and brands of his long servitude to
-man. I have examined many thousands of horses in some twenty
-years with never failing interest. Belonging to the large family
-of Equidæ, including <i>asses</i>, <i>zebras</i> and <i>quaggas</i>, he is the most
-highly-developed of them all. His habits first, and then the most
-notable of his hair-patterns must now be considered.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Some Habits of the Horse.</h3>
-
-<p>He has few habits which bear on the present subject, and of
-these his active habits of locomo­tion are far the most important.
-He has his share of passive habits, for he stands many hours a
-day, and often sleeps standing, and he does his share in lying down,
-though Mr. Roger Pocock says he takes no more than four hours’
-sleep in this attitude. His rule in lying down is to “lie anyhow,”
-if one may so describe it, and thus his two passive attitudes of
-standing and lying, have little or no bearing on the questions before
-us. His glory is in his gallop, canter, trot and walk. His business
-is indeed a <i>going concern</i> in more than one sense, perhaps in three.
-The world is moving fast in its old age, and some men are calculating
-how long it may take for him to become as nearly extinct as the
-<i>quagga</i>.</p>
-
-<div class="figright" style="width: 290px;">
-<a id="Fig_30"></a>
-<img src="images/i_076.jpg" alt="" height="486" width="290" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="tac">Fig. 30.—Front view of horse show­ing
-pec­toral pattern A, B, C.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>With the clue given to this inquiry in Chapter VI. we need
-have little difficulty in tracing the manner in which his locomotive
-life, ancestral and personal, is engraved on his hairy coat.
-We shall bear in mind the <i>primitive direction of his hair</i>, <i>hair-streams</i>,
-<i>lines of least resistance</i>, and the powerful forces of <i>underlying
-traction</i> of muscles, opposed or divergent.</p>
-
-<p>It is, of course, most convenient to examine a specimen with
-a fine, short coat rather than one with its wild and more shaggy
-hair remaining.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" title="76"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76"></a></span></p>
-
-<p>The two regions where the play of great forces comes most
-powerfully into action during locomo­tion are round about the elbow-joint
-(which we should be disposed to call the shoulder) and the
-hip-joint, in which regions the range of extension and flexion, as
-well as the number of muscles engaged, is much greater than at
-any other part of the limbs. It is in the neighbourhood of these
-two regions that the most
-characteristic of all the
-patterns of hair are
-found, and the names
-given to the patterns
-(whorls, featherings and
-crests) in these critical
-areas are <i>Pectoral</i> (Fig.&nbsp;30)
-and <i>Inguinal</i> (see Fig.&nbsp;31)
-with a third (G, H, I,
-Fig.&nbsp;31) which is called
-<i>Axillary</i>, and is not constantly
-present. The
-main muscles involved
-in Figs.&nbsp;30, 31 are shown
-in Fig.&nbsp;<a href="#Fig_33">33</a>. The <i>Frontal</i>
-(Fig.&nbsp;<a href="#Fig_32">32</a>) is another of the
-critical areas, <i>indirectly</i>
-concerned in locomo­tion,
-and will be considered
-first.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 624px;">
-<a id="Fig_31"></a>
-<img src="images/i_077.jpg" alt="" height="460" width="624" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="tac">Fig. 31.—Side-view of horse showing inguinal whorl, feathering and crest A, B, C, and axil­lary
-whorl, feather­ing and crest, G, H, I.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The <i>Frontal</i> pattern
-forms the star on a
-horse’s forehead, often
-very noticeable when the
-hair of it is white. No
-detailed descrip­tion is
-required if the illustra­tion
-of it in Fig.&nbsp;32 be
-studied. It is enough to
-point out that it lies at or very near the level of the eyes,
-sometimes a little above and sometimes a little below this, and
-there is occasionally a double whorl, the second lying above the
-normal one.</p>
-
-<div class="figcontainer">
-<div class="figsub" style="width: 230px;">
-<a id="Fig_32"></a>
-<img src="images/i_078-a.jpg" alt="" height="447" width="230" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="tac">Fig. 32.—Frontal region of
-horse with frontal whorl (<i>a</i>);
-feather­ing (<i>b</i>); crest (<i>c</i>).</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figsub" style="width: 242px;">
-<a id="Fig_32a"></a>
-<img src="images/i_078-b.jpg" alt="" height="447" width="242" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="tac">Fig. 32<span class="lowercase smcap">A</span>.—Muscles of the
-fronto-nasal region of the horse.</p></div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Fig. 32<span class="lowercase smcap">A</span> shows the muscles of the fronto-nasal region of the
-horse and the manner in which the skin of this central region is
-pulled upon in divergent and opposing directions, by a long muscle,<span class="pagenum hide" title="77"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77"></a></span><span class="pagenum" title="78"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78"></a></span>
-called the <i>Maxillaris</i>, downwards and outwards, by a small thick
-muscle, the <i>Corrugator</i>, inwards, by a deeper and more oblique
-muscle, the <i>Nasalis</i>, downwards and inwards, and a little more
-remotely by the <i>Temporal</i> muscle, and the <i>intrinsic muscles of the
-mobile ears</i>. There are thus at least five muscles on each side, all
-pulling more or less against one another on this much-disturbed
-area of skin. The struggle has been long ago given up and a compromise
-arrived at which is registered in the frontal pattern.</p>
-
-<p>Now if anyone doubts whether these comparatively small
-muscles act often or strongly enough to produce effects on the hair
-over them he need only consult Mr. Roger Pocock’s book to understand
-the story of this battle of small forces and its result on the
-hair.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 606px;">
-<a id="Fig_33"></a>
-<img src="images/i_079.jpg" alt="" height="440" width="606" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="tac">Fig. 33.—Side view of horse, showing chief superficial muscles.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>In his wild state the horse is dependent to a remarkable degree<span class="pagenum hide" title="79"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79"></a></span><span class="pagenum" title="80"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80"></a></span>
-to his sense of smell for his safety from foes (Pocock), and very
-much less so on his sight. Indeed that writer says his range of
-good vision is about six yards. At that range his sight is of great
-value to him for protec­tion from certain of the dangers of his life,
-and we see in a domestic horse to-day the evidence of his past
-wild life by his rapid and keen glances at objects at the sides of the
-road, both when we ride and drive him. His <i>corrugator</i> muscle
-must be almost constantly in action. But his sense of smell is
-the sling and stone with which he encounters his Goliaths before
-they can get near him, and he ceaselessly expands and draws up his
-flexible nostrils employing his <i>nasalis</i> and his <i>maxillaris</i> for snuffing
-the air. He has also much useful protec­tion from his sense of
-hearing and we all know how those mobile ears of his are hardly
-ever at rest, pointing now forwards, now backwards, and again
-outwards, as he goes on his way. The degree of these movements
-is largely a matter of individual character and breeding. The
-case for a conflict of forces in this region is, I submit, fully made
-out, and it is easy to see that a radiating pattern of hair, such as
-there is in the simple whorl, is only the natural outcome of all this
-complex muscular action. The extension of the whorl upwards
-in the shape of a feathering which is sufficiently common, indicates
-that the struggle has been carried beyond the original battle-field
-by the muscles of the ears.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>pectoral</i> (Fig.&nbsp;<a href="#Fig_30">30</a>) pattern lies over the great fleshy masses
-formed by the pectoral muscles, which draw the fore-limbs upwards
-and inwards in conjunc­tion with others in the actions of flexion
-and extension of these limbs. The patterns, A.&nbsp;B.&nbsp;C., are wide
-expansions of reversed hair beginning in the whorl (A), extending
-(B) upwards and terminated in a crest (C). This pattern is, like
-the frontal, invariably present in a domestic horse, and is shared
-by many other ungulates such as deer and antelopes, as mentioned
-in the appendix of a small <span class="nowrap">book<a id="FNanchor_49" href="#Footnote_49" class="fnanchor">49</a></span>, I published in 1901. But in
-none is it so striking or definite as in the horse. The contractions
-of these pectoral muscles and their jolt at each step are easily
-observed in a trotting horse. It is interesting to compare this
-pattern on the horse’s pectoral region with what is found on the
-closely allied ass and mule. In the horse it is long and wide and
-never absent, and is especially well-developed in high-stepping
-horses whether cart-horses or others selected because of their high
-action in trotting. Its size, indeed, is a measure of the activity of
-the pectoral muscles and flexors of the fore-limb. In the ass it is<span class="pagenum" title="81"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81"></a></span>
-often absent, and, when it is present, it is rudimentary; in the mule
-it is more frequently present than in the ass, but does not approach
-the pattern of the horse for size. These degrees of development
-in horse, ass and mule correspond closely with the locomotive habits
-of the three animals.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>inguinal</i> (Fig.&nbsp;<a href="#Fig_31">31</a>) pattern is one which the most casual
-observer of a horse cannot fail to notice, and it is so graceful in its
-shape as to add to the many beauties of its possessor. But in
-spite of this no breeder of horses has ever taken this pattern as
-one of the “points” of the animal, so that here again selection,
-even of the artificial kind, has had no share in its development.
-It is but a by-product of the locomotive life of the horse, and a very
-ancient character, for it is present in Przewalski’s horse, a probable
-ancestor of Equus Caballus. A domestic horse without this pattern
-would be a freak of Nature. It occurs in <i>equus hemionus</i>, the
-Thibetan wild ass, but not in <i>zebras</i> or in the <i>quagga</i>.</p>
-
-<p>The inguinal pattern deserves rather more descrip­tion than
-the two others. It is shown in Fig.&nbsp;<a href="#Fig_31">31</a> as A.&nbsp;B.&nbsp;C. and the muscles
-which produce it and govern its development are shown in Fig.&nbsp;<a href="#Fig_33">33</a>.
-It starts in a whorl (A) at the fold of skin which passes from the
-lower part of the abdomen to the hind limb. This radiates and
-expands into a bilateral and symmetrical expansion shaped like
-the barbs of a feather. This proceeds upwards in the inguinal
-hollow in a direction which curves gently with the concavity forwards,
-dividing the trunk of the animal from the great rounded
-mass of muscle forming the hind quarters. It extends upwards to
-the level of the iliac crest where a projec­tion covered by muscles
-can always be recognised, and over this “iliac crest” of the anatomist
-it terminates abruptly in a ridge or crest of its own, lying
-parallel with the long axis of the trunk. It is very pretty to see
-above it the hair-streams from the back of the animal breaking
-away like two currents of water on either side of an outstanding
-rock, the anterior passing with a wide curve forwards and downwards
-along the flank and the hinder one losing itself more gradually in
-the original course of the hair-streams of the hind-quarters. No
-illustra­tion or verbal descrip­tion gives so good a picture as one
-can get from inspec­tion of the smooth coat of any well-developed
-domestic horse.</p>
-
-<p>When a few trotting horses are watched by an observer who
-bears in mind the accompanying pictures of the muscles and the
-inguinal pattern it can be seen at once how all the conditions are
-present for fulfilling a gradual change from a primitive slope of
-hair to these highly-developed patterns, if he has also followed<span class="pagenum" title="82"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82"></a></span>
-the conclusion reached in Chapter I. that <i>muscular action can
-change the direction of hair in the individual</i>. If at the same time
-the degree and extent of the jolt which occurs here at every step
-be noted, it is seen to be sharply limited to the area covered by
-this pattern, and ceasing, as it does, abruptly and significantly at
-the level of the iliac crest. The forward range of the jolt, easily
-seen in a thin horse, is much wider than the backward, and marks
-out very closely the extent of the forward curve taken by the
-anterior hair-stream as it descends from the crest. One may also
-remark that there is a small but interesting point which one can
-see during or after a shower of rain, for then the flank of a horse
-presents a curious distribu­tion of the moisture. At the very point
-where the forward stream joins the main stream from the thorax
-and abdomen a definite line of darker moist hair is to be seen and
-the moist-looking surface is limited to the stream of the trunk and
-separated from that of the flank. This line of demarca­tion clearly
-indicates the place where the <i>forward jolt</i> terminates during rapid
-movement.</p>
-
-
-<h3>The Domestic Ass and Mule.</h3>
-
-<p>There are two closely related animals, the domestic ass and
-the mule, which ought to show this inguinal pattern if affinity and
-variation could be fairly invoked to account for it on the theory
-of selection. These are also animals whose mode of life is locomotive,
-but in a much less degree than the horse and their paces
-are quieter and less free in character. What then is found in them
-as to the size or persistence of this pattern? In the ass it is absent
-or nearly so (I have found one example of its presence), and in the
-mule it is variable and never occupies more than half the area of
-that in the horse. These facts agree closely with the hybrid
-character of the mule and the differing activities of the horse, mule
-and ass. The pattern in Przewalski’s horse is small and oval and
-resembles that of the mule. The <i>onager</i> (<i>equus asinus</i>), which
-is very much like these three domestic animals in form, has an
-inguinal pattern, much less in size indeed than that of the horse,
-but well-defined, and this fact is in keeping with its character for
-remarkable fleetness of foot and activity. The three zebras,
-Mountain, Grevy’s and Burchell’s, show no inguinal pattern, in
-spite of their <i>power</i> of rapid locomo­tion and resemblance in size
-and form to the horse. Though they have that power they exercise
-it in their wild lives for their own sakes alone, in the intermittent
-way which is bound up with their habit of life, and not for the sake
-of man, as in the case of the horse.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" title="83"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83"></a></span></p>
-
-<p>The pectoral and inguinal regions of the domestic horse are
-two of the most valuable fields in the mammalian body for studying
-the formation by muscular action of patterns of hair, for this
-animal is the locomotive animal <i>par excellence</i>. Here the process
-has been carried to the extreme limit, and these two are prominent
-examples among the characters to which I drew attention in a
-paper published in the <i>Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London</i>,
-“On proposed additions to the accepted systematic characters of
-certain Mammals,” June 9th, 1904, Vol.&nbsp;I. I am still of the opinion
-that they deserve “Flag rank,” though they have not yet been
-promoted. Be that as it may I think it may be well here to compare
-two animals belonging to the family Equidæ, the horse and zebra,
-which resemble one another very closely in form—in respect of
-these patterns.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Horse and Zebra Compared.</h3>
-
-<p>If a horse of the hackney type and a zebra were skinned and
-the bodies of the two animals then examined I suppose a competent
-anatomist would find some difficulty in distinguishing one from
-the other so closely do these two allied species of equidæ, one
-wild and the other domesticated, resemble one another in structure.
-But in this as in many other questions <i>form</i> is not to be considered
-alone. The coloura­tion of the two animals is strikingly different,
-but, in its humble way, the difference of their patterns of hair-arrangement
-is worthy of notice. The horse in different specimens
-chosen from a large group will exhibit patterns in the frontal,
-pectoral and inguinal regions constantly, and variably in less common
-regions, axillary, cervical and gluteal, that is to say, in six different
-areas. I have examined many zebras, living and dead, and find no
-constant pattern in the whole of its large surface of skin except an
-ill-developed frontal and a very small cervical one—<i>two in all</i>.
-The mere numerical difference is not the only important one,
-for the insignificance of the size of the two zebra patterns and the
-constancy and high development of many of those of the horse
-are not less significant from the present point of view. I submit
-that these two animals carry about with them on their hairy coats
-indubitable records of their personal and ancestral habits. Attention
-to the facts of a horse’s life and certain related and contrasted
-facts of the lives of other animals, of which the zebra may be taken
-as a type, will show the reasons why these patterns are to be looked
-upon as registers of long-past and present activities of the species
-concerned. The horse has been developed out of a wild plastic
-stock with some such ancestors as the wild horse of Przewalski,<span class="pagenum" title="84"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84"></a></span>
-lately brought to Europe, by a process of selection by man during
-a thousand generations, first in its Central Asian cradle and later
-all over the civilized world. It has been as much <i>made by man</i>
-for his purposes in locomo­tion as a locomotive engine has been made
-by him. The one has been produced in accordance with the laws of
-applied physics and the other by those of biology. His locomotive
-life has come to pass for the needs of higher, or at any rate more
-cunning creatures, who have availed themselves of the potentialities
-provided by Nature. The zebra in its habits differs from the horse
-in the simple, but fundamental point that the former lives the
-ordinary active life of a wild animal for its own needs of protec­tion
-against foes and search for food, the latter has not only this activity
-of life in its organisa­tion, but has, super-added to it by domestica­tion,
-all the locomotive life of a beast of burden. The zebra presents
-few, if any, of those phenomena which I have often termed Animal
-Pedometers<span class="nowrap">,<a id="FNanchor_50" href="#Footnote_50" class="fnanchor">50</a></span> so characteristic of the hairy coat of the horse
-I am reverting here again to the region of metaphor for which I
-offer no excuse, but only a few remarks as to the use and value of
-that elusive method of illustra­tion. Metaphor is a figure of speech
-or writing which consists in a transference of thought from one
-idea to another. It is, therefore, not a simple substitu­tion of
-synonymous expressions, nor is it merely a simile. It is in hourly
-use in the speech and writing of common as well as highly educated
-persons, and adds much to the ease of communica­tion among us
-of our thoughts upon subjects which rise somewhat above the level
-of mere statement of obvious facts. So long as metaphors are not
-abused by being used as arguments to prove some proposi­tion,
-but only as illustrations of our meaning, we gain greatly by their
-legitimate use. It is not for nothing the well-drilled Press of
-Germany in their journals and its histrionic Emperor in his rhetorical
-outbursts, make extensive use of metaphors. We are everlastingly
-reading of Germany’s “biological necessity,” her “iron will to
-victory,” the “steel ring of field-grey heroes who guard her against
-a world of devils,” of her “brilliant second,” her “granite walls,”
-her “future on the water,” the “Admiral of the Atlantic,” “grasping
-the trident,” and so on in nearly every public utterance of her
-leaders. They know well their audience and employ these harmless,
-if often ridiculous, expressions with a definite and legitimate
-purpose, and are well qualified for creating the public opinion of a
-nation that dearly loves a phrase.</p>
-
-<p>Well, this term, Animal Pedometers, is used here not for proving
-anything, but for the purpose of impressing on the mind of the<span class="pagenum" title="85"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85"></a></span>
-reader the fact of certain patterns on the horse’s skin being intimately
-related to its locomotive life which, I hope I may assume, has
-been sufficiently demonstrated in this chapter. A pedometer is
-one of those works of men devised for his physical and mental
-advancement which are marked by a precision as well as purpose
-often absent from Nature’s handiwork. Just as a pedestrian,
-cyclist, or motorist carries with him his pedometer and tells you
-with some pride the number of miles he has “done” in a day or
-hour, so the horse displays <i>urbé et orbi</i> his rougher registers of the
-locomotive triumphs of his ancestors and himself, and these I call
-Animal Pedometers by way of metaphor, and patterns by way of
-fact.</p>
-
-<p>The less striking and rarer patterns of the horse’s hair have
-been fully described elsewhere<span class="nowrap">,<a id="FNanchor_51" href="#Footnote_51" class="fnanchor">51</a></span> and it would serve no useful end
-to refer to them at length, nor to multiply proofs of the position
-here maintained.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" title="86"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86"></a></span></p>
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER X.<br />
-
-HABITS AND HAIR OF UNGULATES.</h2>
-
-
-<h3>Oxen.</h3>
-
-<p>The even-toed section of hoofed animals is a much larger group
-than the odd-toed, and the difference may be illustrated by looking
-at the great work on Natural History by Lydekker. There are
-273 pages given up to this group and only 112 to the odd-toed,
-and when we remember that there are contained in it the hippopotamus,
-all the pigs, oxen, sheep, goats, antelopes, camels, llamas,
-giraffes and deer, we can see that Lydekker was well justified in
-the great amount of space devoted to them. But we all have our
-different forms of <i>penchant</i>, and I propose to say very much less
-about this section than about the other represented by the domestic
-horse. It is well to claim the shelter of a great name in such an
-apportionment of interest, and Professor Poulton has given a
-clear precedent in his great book called <i>Essays on Evolution</i>. It
-contains 393 pages and even though the subject of the work is
-Evolution, he has given up 330 pages approximately, or five-sixths,
-of his space to insects. This can be gathered from a rough analysis
-of his various essays, and no one need blame a great biologist for
-having a <i>penchant</i> for the subject he knows best, or a small one for
-writing of that he knows a little.</p>
-
-<p>The reason that the even-toed ungulates require less study
-from the present point of view is that they are so much more
-marked by the normal or primitive slope of hair than the previous
-group of Chapter IX. They demonstrate very widely and
-thoroughly the empire of the primitive or “barbarian” forces and
-so far are valuable witnesses of the negative kind. No case can
-well be proved to satisfac­tion by a large series of negatives, and this
-was the hopeless task Weismann set out to prove, when he staked
-his all on the non-inheritance of acquired characters—and failed.
-But negative evidence is of great value in supporting an hypothesis
-when it is found to be the precise complement to extensive positive
-evidence brought in favour of that hypothesis. That is the case
-in regard to the patterns of hair found on oxen, sheep, antelopes,
-gazelles and deer, to say nothing of hippopotami, pigs and llamas.
-There are some of these patterns described in the previous group<span class="pagenum" title="87"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87"></a></span>
-which appear in this larger one, but for size, persistence and frequency
-they cannot be compared to those of the horse, who has, if I may
-so say, inherited all the family property in his own person and
-added to it.</p>
-
-<p>The variations in the present group are fully dealt with in
-the two earlier books already quoted<span class="nowrap">,<a id="FNanchor_52" href="#Footnote_52" class="fnanchor">52</a></span><span class="nowrap">,<a id="FNanchor_53" href="#Footnote_53" class="fnanchor">53</a></span>, and I will not complicate
-this chapter by any further remarks on them.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Oxen.</h3>
-
-<p>Of the numerous divisions of even-toed ungulates the oxen
-present the best cases for study of the various ways in which the
-hair is disposed, and among them the best as well as the most
-accessible is the domestic ox. Again we have a familiar friend
-of man and innumerable specimens for examina­tion as in the case
-of the horse. So this chapter will, like the preceding one, resolve
-itself into the study of one typical animal, with whose habits of
-life we are intimately acquainted.</p>
-
-<p>Before describing the habits and hair of the domestic ox or
-cow, I would like to point out why I value so highly the negative
-evidence which consists in the comparative rarity of whorls, featherings
-and crests in even-toed ungulates. This brings us back to
-the general fact of the <i>raison d’être</i> of the horse and his group on
-the one hand, and the ox and his numerous relatives on the other.
-There are deer, antelopes and gazelles which for a spurt would
-beat any horse and even the Thibetan wild ass, so I am not trying
-here to disparage the power of this graceful swift group in the matter
-of sprinting. But this term, however colloquial it may be, clearly
-marks off the powers and habits of deer, antelopes and gazelles
-from those of the horse, for, except when trying to escape from an
-enemy, no deer, antelope or gazelle is fool enough to sprint or even
-trot for mere pleasure or want of occupa­tion, and certainly not in
-the service of man. Thus it comes to pass that animal pedometers
-are few and small in this second group of ungulates, and I submit
-this negative fact gives strong support to the views advanced
-throughout this volume.</p>
-
-
-<h3>A Cow’s Habits.</h3>
-
-<p>A cow is a very restful animal except when disturbed by
-extraneous causes, and the active habits of her life are of little
-interest here, the chief importance of her for study being the passive
-side of her life or small minor tricks. As a domestic animal she<span class="pagenum" title="88"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88"></a></span>
-lives to eat—and be eaten and drunk—but her wild ancestors
-and relatives have had far from an easy life, though this (in them
-even) has not expressed itself in animal pedometers. But on her
-neck, back, flanks, legs and haunches the cow has some interesting
-specimens of areas where the normal hair-slope is reversed in
-accordance with her habits.</p>
-
-<p>The most striking of these is shown in Figs.&nbsp;34 and 35, where
-the bare form of the animal is shown and the dark thick arrows
-are made paramount in order to make the remarkable arrangement
-of her hair along the back so clear, that little verbal descrip­tion is
-needed.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 480px;">
-<img src="images/i_088.jpg" alt="" height="409" width="480" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="tac">Figs.&nbsp;34 and 35.</p>
-
-<p>(<span class="lowercase smcap">A</span>) Side view of cow, showing arrangement of hair-streams on the back.
-(<span class="lowercase smcap">B</span>) View of back of cow, showing the same.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Behind the level of the horns the normal or backward slope
-proceeds until the middle of the length of the neck is reached,
-when it encounters transversely a sharp upstanding crest and
-beyond this the hair is directly reversed from a point over the<span class="pagenum" title="89"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89"></a></span>
-shoulders, and here a whorl is found. From this point the stream
-returns to its ancient and normal course and so passes to the tail.
-When the base of the tail is reached a very significant and apparently
-whimsical arrangement of the hair down the centre of the tail is
-observed. This consists in a line of stiff hairs which stand up at
-right angles to the surface of the tail, and it gradually passes into
-the normal again when the more muscular part of the tail is passed.
-I should add here that the crest and reversed hair on the back are
-common to many wild ungulates of this ruminant group, and a
-good example of it is seen in an antelope, Oryx Beisa, which I
-figured and described in a paper at the Zoological Society of
-London.</p>
-
-<p>Arrangements of its hair so audacious as these need explana­tion,
-and it is found in the mode of life of the cow. So large a part of
-its daily life is spent in the business of grazing with her muzzle
-close to the ground, during which the neck of the animal is constantly
-stretched downwards from the back at the level of the shoulders,
-that the skin, which is very loose in this and most other portions
-of its body, is dragged upon to allow of the extreme flexion of its
-neck. This traction is for all this time acting against the normal
-or backward slope of the hairs, and has given rise to this victory
-of a new force through a thousand generations. It is equally
-clear that a mechanical explana­tion of the line of erect hairs on the
-first nine or twelve inches of the tail is forthcoming, for one has only
-to watch a cow standing on a hot day, undergoing her torment
-of flies, to see it writ large. Very strong little muscles are found
-at the base of the tail, those along the more free portion becoming
-smaller and smaller until they disappear towards the tip. These
-give a powerful flicking action to the long heavy tail and I once
-made some observations as to this on a number of cows which
-were grazing in summer on a comparatively cool wind-swept hillside
-in the western end of the Isle of Wight. I watched several cows
-on different occasions and found that one would flick her tail 348
-times and another 1082 times per hour. Giving these cows an
-eight hours’ working day, “working” for their living in grazing
-and ruminating by turns, one gains a vivid idea of the number of
-times per diem these powerful muscles of the tail contract. If we
-call it a day of four hours of grazing and four of ruminating, for
-the sake of argument, we get 1392 to 4328 flicks of the tail each day
-in the time of flies, leaving out of account the casual flicks in which
-she would indulge when flies were not tormenting her. It is hardly
-necessary to point out how the underlying muscles would drag
-upon the skin of the tail over them and gradually reverse more or<span class="pagenum" title="90"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90"></a></span>
-less the “lie” of the hairs. They have not formed into a feathering
-or complete reversal, but have come near to it.</p>
-
-<p>Further down the haunches of the cow there is on each side
-at the back of the thigh a curving reversed area of hair which
-turns upwards and towards the middle line. This is the place
-where the tail as it swings from side to side sweeps over the limb
-and brushes upwards the hair of the thigh towards which it is
-swinging. So that the activity of the tail is responsible for another
-of the patterns in which the cow’s hair is arranged.</p>
-
-<p>The lower segment of the hind leg exhibits one more reversed
-area of hair due to the cow’s habit of lying on the ground slightly
-inclined to one side, for the more comfortable disposing of her
-limbs, the effect of this attitude being seen in the manner in which
-the hair on the back of the leg turns inwards.</p>
-
-<p>On the dewlaps and flanks are certain variable curls and turns
-of hair produced by the frequent twitchings of a muscle situated
-just under the skin called the “Fly Shaker” or <i>panniculus carnosus</i>.
-This muscle is seen any day in the carcase of an ox hanging up in a
-butcher’s shop, and it is interesting to notice the fact that it is
-distributed over only the lower half of the flank, for the purpose
-of shaking off flies from a region which the tail does not reach
-efficiently. None of this sheet of muscle is found within the
-effective range of the cow’s light artillery, as on the haunches or
-hinder portion of the spine. This sums up the equipment of
-patterns of hair on the species of this group of ungulates, which is
-more adorned with them than any I have examined, and it will be
-admitted that compared with those of the horse, it is a poor exhibi­tion,
-but one which it is easy to understand if the fundamental
-principles of this inquiry are kept in mind.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Light Occupations of the Cow.</h3>
-
-<p>I watched lately a little act of this drama among a herd of
-cows on the Stray at Harrogate during a hot day. There were
-105 of them and this was what they were doing all day—some were
-browsing with their muzzles close to the ground, their necks making
-a considerable angle with the line of their trunks, others standing
-stock still with their heads raised at a level with the body, gazing
-vacantly into space, others lying on the grass more advanced in
-the strenuous work of their day, ruminating with head level, also
-gazing at nothing in particular, with their bodies gently rolled to
-one side, their fore legs doubled straight under them and their
-hind legs planted to one or other side, and a fourth group still
-nearer the end of the cycle of work, lying with their chins resting<span class="pagenum" title="91"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91"></a></span>
-on the ground. When this cycle was completed the stages would
-again be begun, continued and ended. They were flapping their
-wide ears in various directions, and twitching endlessly the skin
-of the flanks and dewlaps with their fly shakers. This large group
-afforded, if one may so describe it, a cinematographic picture of
-the lives of countless generations of this conservative animal.
-Conservative as she is, I doubt not that in the long-past ages her
-quiet though persistent habits had once a battle to wage for the
-produc­tion of even these mild innovations that I have described.
-These present fashions must have been well developed three thousand
-five hundred years ago and have adorned that “calf, tender and
-good,” which Abraham in the plains of Mamre fetched for the
-midday meal of his visitors.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" title="92"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92"></a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XI.<br />
-
-HABITS AND HAIR OF CARNIVORES.</h2>
-
-
-<h3>Cats.</h3>
-
-<p>Another large and important order of hair-clad mammals must
-now be considered, and the same course as in the case of the ungulates
-will be followed; the two leading families of Felidæ and
-Canidæ will be taken, and a type of each examined in reference
-to its hair-distribu­tion. Lydekker gives about 100 pages to the
-cats and 80 to the dogs, so from the point of view of general biology
-there seems little to choose between them. The bears, racoons,
-weasel tribe, seals and walruses may be put out of account. They
-are painfully old-fashioned or Normal as to the arrangement of
-their hair.</p>
-
-<p>First things first is always a good rule, and there is little doubt
-where we ought to begin among the families and species Carnivores.
-Among Felidæ one cannot unfortunately choose the harmless
-necessary cat of tiles, areas, firesides and ladies’ laps, to say nothing
-of those lovers of cats like Huxley who would never eject his cat
-from his armchair if she had been there before him. It is true
-that we know much of her daily and nightly mode of life—many
-of us too much—and in that respect one could set to work with
-confidence in interpreting her hair patterns, but on account of
-her long and thick coat we can only speculate what patterns or
-innovations of her family uniform she might have devised; but
-here we are not concerned with romance or the “might have beens.”
-It will be remarked that one perforce unconsciously calls the
-domestic cat “she” as sailors do their ships. I understand that
-in Somersetshire they call everything of their common life “he”
-except the tom-cat who is always “she.” The reasons for the use
-of genders in different creatures would be an interesting little study.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Lion.</h3>
-
-<p>The King of Beasts will, therefore, be the hero of this chapter.
-Lydekker tells us that the lion, like many heroes of antiquity
-who are no heroes to their valets, in spite of his character for
-grandeur, nobility and courage, has been subjected to the merciless
-higher criticism of modern travellers, Selous, Livingstone, and others,<span class="pagenum hide" title="93"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93"></a></span><span class="pagenum" title="94"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94"></a></span>
-and he has been shown up as cowardly by nature and mean in
-his general conduct. It remains for some learned scholar to
-whitewash the hyæna, as someone has done for Caesar Borgia,
-and to put him in the place of the lion. But Lydekker does not
-admit that this disparagement of the lion goes very far. He <i>is</i>
-the King of Beasts by grandeur of appearance, strength and ferocity.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 625px;">
-<a id="Fig_36"></a>
-<img src="images/i_093.jpg" alt="" height="300" width="625" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="tac">Fig. 36.—Lioness, showing by arrows the direction of hair-streams on muzzle, parting from one another
-at the level of the orbits.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The lion’s skin is covered by close fine hair, except in certain
-seasons in cold climates, and is easily studied. There are three
-regions where this representative cat has departed from the Primitive
-mammalian slope of hair, and the figure of a lioness shows two of
-these, the peculiar <i>downward</i> trend of hair on the muzzle and the
-whorl on the shoulder. Fig.&nbsp;<a href="#Fig_37">37</a> shows the third, A C, on the middle
-of the back as well as the whorls at D.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Snout of the Cats</h3>
-
-<p>The muzzle of all the cats is very short and broad, and at the
-level of the orbits shows a peculiar reversal of the hair from the
-rest of the head, for instead of being like that of a dog in which the
-hair slopes all the way <i>upwards</i> from the tip of the snout to the
-rest of the head, it breaks away from this normal type and passes
-in a uniform close stream to the edge of the wet muzzle. The
-arrows in Fig.&nbsp;36 show this change. One asks at once the reason
-for such an unexpected trend of the hair on a small area, when the
-carnivores in other groups have a uniform slope towards the head
-from their more pointed muzzles. The cats have discarded the
-earlier family pattern and for a reason which does credit to their
-self-respect. Very few naturalists know, or have described so well
-the meticulous care which animals take of their coats, as Miss
-Frances Pitt did in the <i>National Review</i>, where she gave a delightful
-account of “How Animals Clean Themselves.” The toilet of the
-lion she did not discuss, perhaps for prudential reasons. Her
-account dealt chiefly with a number of small hairy mammals and
-lower forms of life. Watch a dog cleaning his coat and you will
-see the ingenious way in which he pushes his head and body forward
-as he lies on some rough surface such as grass, or our best drawing-room
-mat. <i>He</i> can thus clean his snout and other parts, but no
-cat adopts so rough and ready a method. We know how long and
-how scrupulously she licks her fur to clean it in the parts she can
-reach and cleans her head with her paws. But with such a broad
-snout as she and the larger cats possess she cannot clean the short
-surface of it in the manner of the dog. So she “dresses” this
-little surface in a special way of rubbing it from the neighbourhood
-of her eyes <i>forward</i> with her paws. And so we may assume does<span class="pagenum" title="95"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95"></a></span>
-the chieftain of her clan finish off this little bit of his toilet. We
-are so much accustomed to dwell on the naturally clean habits
-of a domestic cat that without such an account as Miss Frances
-Pitt has given we should have hesitated to transfer the character
-for personal cleanliness from the domesticated to the wild cat. If
-this be not the sole reason for the course of the hair-stream I have
-described, I am at a loss
-to imagine any other.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Lion’s Neck.</h3>
-
-<p>On each side of the lion’s
-neck where it joins the
-shoulder there is a well-developed
-whorl, and this as
-a rule is extended forwards
-into a feathering (Figs.&nbsp;<a href="#Fig_36">36</a>
-and 37), and ends in a crest
-on the lower part of the side
-of the neck. It is common
-also in tigers and leopards.
-This is, as elsewhere, a
-record of strong and oft-repeated
-action in powerful
-muscles which lie beneath
-it, and bears witness to the
-great functional activity of
-the fore-limbs as compared
-with the hind-limbs in these
-three formidable cats. It
-is not an animal pedometer,
-but may perhaps be termed
-an <i>ergograph</i>.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Lion’s Back.</h3>
-
-<div class="figright" style="width: 270px;">
-<a id="Fig_37"></a>
-<img src="images/i_095.jpg" alt="" height="497" width="270" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="tac">Fig. 37.—Back of Lion, showing
-reversed area of hair with whorl
-at A. Feather­ing B. Crest C.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The strange pattern of
-reversed hair (Fig.&nbsp;37) is
-much the most notable of
-the three peculiarities found on the lion’s skin. It consists
-of a whorl (A) lying over the lumbar region in the middle
-line which expands into a very broad feathering (B) and terminates
-in a crest (C) a short distance behind the level of the shoulders.
-This is not found in any of the numerous short-haired Felidæ that
-I have examined, and it is a feature which demands explana­tion.<span class="pagenum" title="96"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96"></a></span>
-I know no other mammal, ungulate or carnivore, that has any
-pattern resembling this; indeed, if one were to photograph the
-pattern in question and a few inches of the skin surrounding it,
-and be told that it came from the back of a mammal one could not
-doubt that it was a hall-mark of the King of Beasts. It would
-not produce that thrill of intense interest which we felt at the
-meeting on 7th May, 1901, at the Zoological Society of London,
-when from a water colour sketch and three pieces of skin taken
-from the body of a hitherto unknown mammal, Sir Harry Johnston
-proceeded to reconstruct the Okapi, at first dubbed knight, as a
-member of the Equidæ, but later promoted downwards to the
-Giraffidæ. But one could do no less, with some knowledge of
-the hair of mammals, than reconstruct from such a photograph a
-large, powerful and ferocious carnivore, and where but in the lion
-can the greatest example of those attributes be found? I say
-this advisedly, for this remarkable pattern of the lion’s back is as
-much a stamp of his moral or mental quality as the Inguinal Pedometer
-is of the locomotive <i>rôle</i> in life of <i>equus caballus</i>.</p>
-
-<p>I hear the sharp voice of the critic here, “Come, come, you
-may have shown reason for the latter, but how on earth do mental
-and moral qualities of an animal come into your scheme?” Well,
-we have in this pattern of the lion’s back to deal with a unique
-phenomenon for the produc­tion of which neither pressure, nor
-friction, nor gravita­tion, nor underlying muscular traction will
-account. Nevertheless, it is a result of muscular action of a rare
-kind. Who does not know the striking appearance of the hair
-along the centre of a short-haired dog when he bristles up with
-rage or fear, or both combined, at the sight of a foe? This common
-event has its own mechanical cause, though it is one strictly governed
-by the mental and moral qualities of the dog, and we see the vivid
-proof before us of the action of the minute <i>arrectores pili</i>, in this
-particular region of the dog. It is precisely in the same situation
-that the special pattern of the lion’s hair is found. It is not for
-nothing that Nature has provided every tiny hair of the mammalian
-skin with that insignificant little band of muscle which lies within
-the hair-pit, and is attached to the sloping hair on its posterior side,
-and thus when it contracts serves to drag it into an erect position.
-I refrain from discussing what may be held to be the survival value,
-under the theory of selection, of this power of the <i>arrectores pili</i>
-to confer on the possessor an added appearance of ferocity and
-general frightfulness. This is quite a likely explana­tion of the
-presence of these little muscles. Be that as it may the <i>modus
-operandi</i> of the reversed hair which has become fixed on the lio<span class="pagenum" title="97"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97"></a></span>n’s
-back is made clear, theory of origin apart. And I submit that
-the presence of it in this region in this animal <i>is</i> a stamp of his
-persistently ferocious nature, as much as the various peculiarities
-of arrangement of hair on man’s eyebrows in a previous chapter
-are of the mental and moral habits of the individual man. As
-rulers of old used, in their genial fashion, to brand a supposed or
-actual criminal on his shoulder or forehead, so is the lion branded
-with an hereditary mark of his nature and the past life of himself
-and his ancestors. I doubt not that if short-haired terriers were
-living a wild life among numerous foes their bristling hair would
-have become fixed in a similar fashion. I would only here draw
-the attention of the reader to the fact that this reversed area of
-hair on the lion’s back cannot be held to add to the general frightfulness
-of the possessor. It would be invisible to an approaching
-foe, as it lies hidden behind the great head and mane. This
-pattern on the lion’s back will be referred to later in a somewhat
-different connec­tion.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" title="98"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98"></a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XII.<br />
-
-HABITS AND HAIR OF CARNIVORES.</h2>
-
-
-<h3>Dogs.</h3>
-
-<p>Among the canidæ one is able to select a type with whose habits
-of life we are more familiar than any other, Canis Familiaris, as
-he is affectionately called, the companion of man his master, and
-faithful guardian—often unto death. Professor Scott Elliott
-gives reason to think that the dog was the first animal tamed by
-man, and that he was descended from some wild jackal-like form,
-probably crossed by the wolf. The dog is then aptly called by
-Huxley, the brother of the wolf, who has been changed by the
-intelligence of man into the guardian of the flock. It seems that
-in his rudimentary stage of domestica­tion he was an unofficial
-scavenger among the habitations of neolithic man, as the pariah
-is in the East to-day, and that little acts of kindness towards his
-offspring on the part of those early men and women were the first
-dawnings of a friendship of thousands of years. It is a long story
-from the slinking jackal to the bloodhound, mastiff, St. Bernard,
-staghound, collie and terrier of to-day, and one which reflects
-much credit on both parties to this friendship, just as do those other
-long friendships between servant and master, of which we still see
-a few examples. Living with us as he does the dog and his habits
-of life are an open book: he is then all the better for my humble
-purpose here. I would refer again to the curious use of the gender
-which we unconsciously apply to the dog. It is no longer “she,”
-but “he.” When a dog is looking a little unfriendly how we
-always try to wheedle him with “Poor old fellow,” and so on,
-as a matter of course, assuming his masculine character. James
-Payn pointed out once a little point which proves how good a
-comrade we have in the dog, when he reminds us of the cautious
-approach we usually make to a cat, and the “hail-fellow-well-met”
-tone we adopt towards the dog, rolling him over and using kindly
-opprobrious terms, such as friends among schoolboys hurl at one
-another when they are on the best of terms. A fox-terrier is,
-perhaps, the most human of all the numerous types evolved through
-the skill of man, and it is a smooth-coated specimen of this variety
-which I will examine now as to what his hairy coat can tell us of
-his habits.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" title="99"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99"></a></span></p>
-
-
-<h3>Some of the Dog’s Habits.</h3>
-
-<div class="figright" style="width: 320px;">
-<a id="Fig_38"></a>
-<img src="images/i_099.jpg" alt="" height="506" width="320" />
-<div class="caption"><p>Fig. 38.—Gluteal region of dog,
-show­ing whorls over the tu­ber­os­ities of the ischia.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>His attitudes which bear on this question are all of the passive
-order. His locomo­tion is so fitful and different from that of the
-horse that we shall find on his coat no animal pedometers.</p>
-
-<p>His passive attitudes consist of standing, sitting and lying.
-He stands little, sits more, and lies for a great part of each day.
-The standing habit has, of course, no influence upon his hair.
-In sitting he rests the chief weight of his body on the rounded,
-bursa-covered surfaces of his tuberosities of the ischium, in which
-there is nothing peculiar to himself. His fore legs are planted
-nearly upright on the ground and his hind legs doubled under him<span class="pagenum" title="100"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100"></a></span>
-or projecting slightly to one or other side, as we saw in the case of
-the cow. The fore legs are obviously in no way affected as to the
-direction of the hair in the sitting posture, and the hind legs, being
-doubled up and subject to the direct downward weight of the body,
-are also free from the <i>sliding pressure</i>, which we shall see affects
-the fore limb when the dog lies prone. Thus of the three supports,
-fore legs, hind legs and tuberosities of the ischium, two are necessarily
-unaffected in their patterns of hair. The anatomical conditions
-of his tuberosities are very different in this respect. They are
-covered with a large slippery bursa just beneath the thick skin,
-and the slightest movement of this alert and restless animal, even
-of his head, conveys to this region a small change of position. He is
-virtually like a sick person on a water or air cushion, and we all
-know how very small movements of the body are felt in a slight
-stirring of the supported parts by these. The effect of this is that
-the hair over these bursæ is seldom at rest from external or extraneous
-forces, to say nothing of its own imperious constant growth
-of one inch in two months. In Fig.&nbsp;38 one sees the hair-stream
-curving round the buttocks towards the region of these bursæ,
-and trying to reach the middle line. It meets with so much
-opposi­tion that the very conditions for producing a reversed area
-are present and the result is just what one would expect to find.
-The pattern is formed exactly over the bursæ limited to this area,
-and it does not expand anywhere because there is no need for it to
-do so. So when one observes on the surface just below the tail a
-pattern, often in a black-and-tan terrier marked by a tan patch of
-hair, one reads the record of the long time spent by the dog in
-sitting as he meditates on some fresh or past escapade of “A Dog’s
-Day.”</p>
-
-<p>The statement just made that the hind leg does not share in
-the effects of pressure is not strictly correct; it applies to the <i>leg</i>
-properly so called. But the upper part of the thigh exhibits a
-very clear reversal of hair due to the weight of the body acting here
-against the streams from the side of the thigh, which are seen
-endeavouring to make their way to the inner side. They are
-arrested by a long ridge of hair which marks the obstacle presented
-by the weight of the body acting here. This completes the story
-of the way in which sitting affects the hair of the dog, and is
-shown in Fig.&nbsp;<a href="#Fig_38">38</a>.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Lying Attitude.</h3>
-<div class="figcontainer">
-<div class="figsub" style="width: 220px;">
-<a id="Fig_39"></a>
-<img src="images/i_101-a.jpg" alt="" height="564" width="127" />
-<div class="caption"><p>Fig. 39.—Foreleg of do­mes­tic
-dog, show­ing re­versed hair on
-under sur­face, which rests on
-the ground in ly­ing pos­ture.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figsub" style="width: 260px;">
-<a id="Fig_40"></a>
-<img src="images/i_101-b.jpg" alt="" height="564" width="260" />
-<div class="caption"><p>Fig. 40.—Showing chest of
-domestic dog, with reversed
-area of hair on
-each side.</p></div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>There are four attitudes adopted by the dog in lying. In
-the first, when he sleeps he lies stretched out on his side on<span class="pagenum" title="101"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101"></a></span>
-some surface, with his limbs projected nearly straight out, and
-in the second, he curls himself up in <i>his</i> armchair in a cosy, rounded
-posture. But in both these attitudes there is no such sliding
-pressure as will affect in any way the direction of his hair. In
-two other favourite attitudes it is far otherwise. When he lies
-prone he plants his fore limbs out before his chest and either raises
-his head to the level of his trunk or rests it on his fore paws. Each<span class="pagenum" title="102"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102"></a></span>
-of these attitudes contributes to a very well-marked change of
-the hair on the under surface of his fore arms, to use a convenient
-human term, one which carries us back to the story of man and the
-apes when their fore arms were discussed. On this surface, from
-the mechanical conditions involved, a new force, that of <i>sliding
-pressure</i>, comes into play. The skin here is very loose, as indeed
-it is in the greater part of his body, which may almost be said to
-form one large subcutaneous bursa. The weight of the fore part
-of his body and head acts <i>downwards and forwards</i>, and thus opposes
-the normal or downward course of the hair on the limb, such as
-one sees on the upper surface of his fore arm. The resultant of
-these two forces has the effect of acting against the normal slope,
-and a reversed direction of the hair is produced very much like
-that which is seen in many monkeys and in a small area in man.
-This is shown in Fig.&nbsp;39, which appeared in the small <span class="nowrap">book<a id="FNanchor_54" href="#Footnote_54" class="fnanchor">54</a></span>, to
-which reference has been made, and it is confined to the part of
-the limb where the sliding pressure is seen to act. In this feature
-again there is a record of his resting habits, and, of course, the time
-he spends in the fourth attitude with his chin resting on his fore paws
-contributes its share, the mechanical conditions being similar.</p>
-
-<p>This fourth attitude brings in another force of its own towards
-the “make-up” of the dog’s patterns of hair. When lying with
-his head supported on his paws the lower part of his chest is closely
-applied to the upper or flexor surface of the fore legs, and the long-continued
-pressure of the latter against the downward or normal
-streams of hair on the chest leads to its slope being reversed. This
-is shown in two wide patterns of the whorl, feathering and crest,
-Fig.&nbsp;<a href="#Fig_40">40</a>, resembling closely the corresponding patterns on the
-chest of a horse. I had the opportunity many years ago of examining
-in the Capitol Museum at Rome two fine sculptures of Molossian
-hounds, when these matters of hair-arrangement were occupying
-my attention, and was much struck with the fidelity with which
-the ancient sculptor reproduced such small facts as the reversed
-areas of hair in a dog. Phiz himself was not more true to Nature
-in his delinea­tion of the projecting hairs on the human eyebrows.
-It should be added that the reversed hair in question occupies
-only that part of the chest which is in contact with the fore limb.
-If one cannot reckon any animal pedometers, to the credit of the
-domestic dog I think one may fairly and metaphorically say that
-his hairy coat gives an accurate mould of his habits.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" title="103"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103"></a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XIII.<br />
-
-HABITS AND HAIR OF PRIMATES.</h2>
-
-
-<p>In spite of the satires of Swift we may not cavil at the natural
-pride which has led man, Homo Sapiens, as he also calls himself,
-to confer boldly on himself, and his lineal ancestors at any rate,
-the name of Primates. This large and highest group of hair-clad
-mammals includes broadly and somewhat loosely lemurs, monkeys,
-apes and man. The last has not lost his hairy endowment, though
-it is sadly curtailed, and it is well to remember that, except on the
-palms of the hands, the soles of the feet and the terminal rows of
-phalanges of fingers and toes, man <i>is</i> a hair-clad mammal. Shakespeare
-calls him “paragon of animals,” and Huxley “head of the
-sentient world,” and no reasonable person will attempt to improve
-upon such pregnant tributes to his greatness. I desire only to
-adhere that <i>quâ animal</i> he is the best of all for my humble purpose
-of historian of the chequered course of the mammalian hair,
-better even than the domestic horse. His hair varies from a coat
-so fine as to need a lens for the discovery of the separate hairs,
-to a truly Simian profusion of thick and long hair such as that of
-the Ainu or hairy aborigines of Japan.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Hair and Habits of Man.</h3>
-
-<p>The streams of his hair demonstrate two important facts
-about man: first <i>what he has been</i>; secondly <i>what he has done</i>,
-that is to say, his ancestry and habits of life, through an immense
-stretch of time. These stories in hair are the culmina­tion of a
-large number of characters inherited and acquired, and their study
-in two selected regions of lemurs, apes and man will be pursued in
-this chapter on the lines which I laid down in Chapter VI.
-I have thought it well not to give any connected account of the
-rest of his hairy covering so as to concentrate attention on the
-two simplest and most striking regions. The charts of his hair-streams
-and those of the lemur and ape have been described with
-sufficient fulness elsewhere<span class="nowrap">,<a id="FNanchor_55" href="#Footnote_55" class="fnanchor">55</a></span> and no cartographer has hitherto
-sought to improve upon them.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum" title="104"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104"></a></span></p>
-<p>The back and the front surfaces of the trunk afford the two
-best and most instructive fields of study, for the forces which act
-upon them are of a simple kind, and may be traced upwards from
-the lemurs to man as in the case of the forearms. The three drawings
-(Fig.&nbsp;<a href="#Fig_41">41</a>) represent the backs of a lemur, chimpanzee and man, most
-of the details of the hair being omitted and their place taken by
-thick dark arrows which show the line of the different hair-streams.
-This diagrammatic method will make any misunderstanding of
-the main facts impossible.</p>
-
-<p>The lemur has on the back of its neck a forward or headward
-slope of hair and this passes on to the head itself, and on the back
-of the trunk, as the arrows show, there is no departure from the
-normal arrangement of the lower mammals. The lemur, therefore,
-requires neither further descrip­tion nor explana­tion.</p>
-
-<p>The ape shows no material change in this region from the
-arrangement of its lemur or monkey ancestor, in spite of the greater
-propor­tion of its life which is spent in the upright posture; indeed,
-this is what one would expect.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Hair of the Back of Man.</h3>
-
-<p>When the hair on the back of man is examined a remarkable
-change from the patterns of any of his known or supposed ancestors
-is found. It is by no means easy to trace the course of the hairs
-on the human back. A young, hairy and dark-haired person
-gives much the best field, and a lens may be necessary. In older
-subjects the hair is often so much worn away by friction that the
-direction can no longer be followed. Suffice it to say that the
-examina­tion, though somewhat difficult, can well be carried out
-if the proper conditions are observed; and that it bears out the
-results which have come from the corresponding examina­tion of
-infants. <i>The arrangement is congenital.</i></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 653px;">
-<a id="Fig_41"></a>
-<img src="images/i_105.jpg" alt="" height="311" width="653" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="tac">Fig. 41.—Arrangement of hair on the back of lemur—chimpanzee—man.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>From the neck the hair passes on each side nearly downwards,
-and in the middle directly downwards in a narrow stream between
-the two muscular borders of the vertebral furrows, and continues
-in this normal direction to the end of the spinal region. It will
-be seen that below the two upper arrows there are three levels of
-arrows, the first with one, the second with two, and the third with
-one, on each side of the surface of the back. At the level of the
-shoulder-joints the side-streams curve upwards towards the spine
-and join the central stream; at the second the direction is rather
-more upwards before it curves inwards and downwards to the
-vertebral furrow; at the third the streams curve slightly upwards
-and towards the middle-line and coalesce with the other streams.<span class="pagenum hide" title="105"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105"></a></span><span class="pagenum" title="106"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106"></a></span>
-The contrast between the straight, simple slope of the hair on the
-lemur’s and ape’s back, and that of man is very great. In the
-latter the side-streams make an angle of 45° or less with the axis
-of the spine and <i>this arrangement is unique among mammals</i>. It
-will be, therefore, necessary to inquire into its history and causation,
-for it goes far towards reversing the well-established and accredited
-pattern of apes, monkeys and lemurs. If the reader will carry
-his mind back to the arrangement of hair on man’s forearm he will
-see that it exhibits some features analogous to those on the back
-of man. In the forearm there is that curious little stream on the
-extensor surface which may be looked upon as a relic from the
-ape-stock, but in the rest of that limb-segment man has boldly
-gone back, beyond the ape, to an arrangement found in the lemur;
-and in the case of the back of man there is the small primitive
-area down the vertebral furrow and an entirely novel arrangement
-on each side such as might startle the leaders of animal fashions
-in hair.</p>
-
-<p>The question at once arises: “How has this change come to
-pass?” In the case of the strange arrangement on man’s forearms
-I have shown that the Pan-Selectionist thought he detected there
-one of his particular kinds of vestige. He cannot find any such
-here. I can conceive a biologist making play with Heredity,
-Variation and Selection in the case of an ape, monkey, or lemur
-whose hairs are long and thick and functionally very active. <i>There</i>
-he might make use of the well-known “argument from ignorance,”
-and maintain that we cannot be sure that such and such factors
-might not have survival-value, but I defy the most hardy among
-the Pan-Selectionist High Command to put in that plea in connec­tion
-with the fine short hairs of man which even require a lens for their
-detection; they have little value as a protec­tion of the skin from
-friction; their arrangement has none. And if some leader did
-attempt this task I doubt if the most docile Prussian would not
-rebel against the statement that the withdrawal in question was
-“according to plan.” My purpose, however, in this book being
-to build up and not to pull down, I must perforce show a reasonable
-and better explana­tion of a remarkable little fact.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Passive Habits.</h3>
-
-<p>The habits of man concerned in the <i>modus operandi</i> of this
-change are passive, and two in number; that of sitting with his
-back against some supporting object, and of lying in sleep with
-his head more or less raised on a pillow or its equivalent. In
-contrast with man, lemurs and apes inhabit trees during their<span class="pagenum" title="107"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107"></a></span>
-many hours of rest, and I doubt if the number of hours thus spent
-by these and other wild animals to that spent in active exercise is
-less than three to one, so that their attitudes of rest would, if
-calculated to do so, contribute much towards any change occurring
-in the patterns of hair. But, seeing that the ape-fashion is similar
-to that of the lemur, and that this normal arrangement is calculated
-only to be confirmed by the action of gravity and the dripping
-of rain, and that they do not greatly indulge themselves, if at all,
-in their equivalent for man’s armchairs, nothing else would be
-expected in the hairy covering of their backs than what we find.</p>
-
-<p>The increasing tendency to the upright position in Eoanthropus
-Dawsoni and Pithecanthropus Erectus to say nothing of the men
-of Cromagnon—led man to use as supports for his back the walls of
-his rough caves which he had adopted as dwellings instead of the
-branches of trees and the nests of the ape. He no longer affected
-entirely those hardy habits of sitting without support for his
-back that were <i>de rigueur</i> in his ancestors, who probably looked
-upon him with as much disapproval as certain erect old ladies of
-the old school display towards the use of easy chairs by the rising
-genera­tion. Wearied with the struggle for food, and against his
-savage rivals, he rested his back against the sides of his rude abode.
-When he slept in this attitude the relaxa­tion of his voluntary
-muscles allowed mechanical forces to come into action which tended
-to oppose the downward trend of the hair. We know from our
-own experience that when sitting asleep with our backs supported
-there always occurs a certain amount of sinking down of the trunk.
-In this attitude are present, then, such conditions of the back and
-its hairy covering as give rise to mechanical forces which would
-interfere with the direction of the hair. These are, a heavy body,
-tending to slip downwards slightly while resting against a fixed
-surface, a growing tissue easily diverted from its normal course,
-and many hours spent in the attitude in question.</p>
-
-<p>The effects of these conditions increased with the increasing
-tendency of developing man to attend to his bodily comfort.</p>
-
-<p>But man spends also on the average at least a third of his
-whole existence lying in sleep with his head on a pillow of some
-kind, perhaps the skull of a <i>Felis Groeneveldtii</i> in the case of
-Pithecanthropus Erectus, and other such better objects, as he made
-more study of the art of being comfortable. Those who know much
-of children and sick persons and have watched them in sleep know
-that the habit of lying on one or other side prevails largely over
-that of lying on the back. The head being more or less raised by a
-pillow, the human sleeper, even when lying on his back and more<span class="pagenum" title="108"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108"></a></span>
-so when lying on his side, is in a potentially and actually sliding
-position, a fact well known to most persons from their own
-experience. It is easy to see how such conditions are tending for a
-third of a man’s whole life to reverse in some degree the direction
-of his hair and how they act as we saw in the case of the sitting
-posture. But the very common <i>lateral</i> position in sleep contributes
-its own peculiar share in pushing the hair towards the spine, ceasing
-to do so only when the prominent muscular border of the vertebral
-furrow is reached. I think it will escape no careful observer of
-these simple facts of man’s resting life, who also notes the remarkable
-course of the arrows on his back, that the facts and their present
-explana­tion fit one another like a Chubb lock and its key. The
-only alternative sugges­tion of the facts is that some being with
-diabolic power has been at work and laying a trap for poor human
-biologists in the 20th century A.D.</p>
-
-<p>In confirma­tion of this process I would refer to an example
-which agrees very closely with the above explana­tion. I knew an
-invalid suffering from pleurisy and lung-disease who was much
-confined to bed, spending much of his time propped high up on
-pillows. He had long dark hair on his back and I was often
-struck, when examining him, with the remarkable way in which
-the hairs were dragged upon so that they pointed nearly in a
-vertical <i>upward</i> direction. Here was a little instance of an
-undesigned experiment in the dynamics of hair.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Hair of the Chest.</h3>
-
-<p>In the hair-streams on the chest of our chosen three, lemur,
-ape and man, there are also some remarkable contrasts in the course
-they take. Fig.&nbsp;42 shows these in a vivid manner. Precisely
-as in the case of the hair on the backs of lemurs, apes and man,
-we find on the chest of those three types a normal direction on the
-two lower ancestors and an entirely novel arrangement in man;
-the former, therefore, will need no verbal descrip­tion.</p>
-
-<p>Man, the ever bold explorer and innovator has initiated on
-his chest, as on his back, a fashion in hair unknown in any of the
-primates. He is, in respect of his hair on these two regions, <i>sui
-generis</i>. On the chest there is a critical area extending across the
-sternum at the level of the second rib from a whorl which is found
-on each side somewhat above the nipples. This is not less an
-ancient battle-field than the Border which separated England and
-Scotland, and it has been the site of its little conflicts, more especially
-<i>north</i> of the Border, corresponding to those of the wild days of
-Border warfare of which Scottish history is full.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" title="109"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109"></a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 653px;">
-<a id="Fig_42"></a>
-<img src="images/i_109.jpg" alt="" height="320" width="653" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="tac">Fig. 42.—Arrangement of hair on the chest of lemur—chimpanzee—man.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" title="110"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110"></a></span></p>
-
-<p>At this level of the chest two streams of hair are <i>directly</i>
-opposed to one another. That which covers the chest below the
-dividing line maintains in true old English style its conservative
-fashion and passes downwards as in the ape and lemur. The
-more independent or Scottish stream goes upwards on its way to
-the neck, the side streams passing somewhat outwards towards the
-side of the neck, the central upwards and inwards, converging
-gently on to the front of the neck. The arrows in the figure show
-this very clearly. On the front of the neck the stream pursues
-its upward way until it meets the downward flowing stream from
-the lower jaw, and the <i>junction</i> of these two streams lies over the
-level of the upper border of the larynx in front, winding gently
-outwards and upwards to the surface just below the lobes of the
-ears. The opposi­tion of the two streams in the neck is very familiar,
-as a piece of practical experience, to those who shave, for it affords
-a decided little resistance to the razor as it is drawn downwards,
-and many persons change the position of the razor in consequence
-of it, without troubling their heads with any scientific reason
-for the fact.</p>
-
-<p>These are the facts of the distribu­tion of hair on man’s chest,
-but what is the interpreta­tion? I would remark here that in my
-former <span class="nowrap">book<a id="FNanchor_56" href="#Footnote_56" class="fnanchor">56</a></span> I gave what seemed to be then the best reason for
-it, but further reflec­tion on the matter has shown me that it was
-incorrect and inadequate. I refer to this and one or two other
-corrections of earlier views in a later chapter.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Interpretation of Records.</h3>
-
-<p>In discussing such a striking little fact as the one in question,
-an illustra­tion may serve as an introduc­tion. From the glaciers
-of Mont St. Gothard two great rivers take their rise. The eastern
-side of its slopes gives rise to the Rhine, which flows in a northerly
-direction to the Lake of Constance, the western to the Rhone,
-whence it pursues a south-westerly course to the Lake of Geneva.
-No geographer would doubt that certain physical features of the
-country were to be sought in accounting for the contrary courses
-of two rivers arising from a comparatively small region, and he
-finds it by a simple study of the topography concerned. By similar
-methods we must ascertain why from our little Mont St. Gothard
-at the level of the second rib, two streams of hair separate and
-pursue nearly opposite directions.</p>
-
-<p>A little knowledge of the superficial anatomy of the chest
-and neck throws some light at once on the problem. It so happens<span class="pagenum" title="111"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111"></a></span>
-that if one made a simple map of these hair streams, and at the
-side of it a drawing of the platysma myoides muscle, it could not
-fail to strike one that the correspondence of the surfaces occupied
-by the two phenomena was very significant. It is going too far
-to say that the correspondence is complete, but it is so nearly so
-that one may fairly say that the reversed stream of hair which
-begins at the second rib and goes up the neck, lies over the platysma
-muscle. The stream of hair does not extend up to the lower part
-of the face and lower jaw, it does not cover the outlying portion
-of the platysma on the side of the neck and it begins on the chest
-a little above the rather uncertain origin of the platysma fibres
-from the fascia of the chest. But the correspondence of its surface
-with the main part, or about five-sixths of the platysma, is most
-suggestive.</p>
-
-<p>This muscle is one of the subdermal sheets that are found
-in many mammals, and though it is not a continua­tion or descendant
-of the fly-shaker or panniculus carnosus, which is often referred
-to in these pages, it is an analogous feature of man. It is <i>closely
-attached</i> at its lower part to the skin over it and more loosely at
-its upper. It has various functions attributed to it, as I will
-mention later; but there is one effect of its action which is very
-evident in a thin person, that is to say, it wrinkles the skin over it
-in a vertical direction. This it does, whatever else it may do.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Struggles of the Platysma.</h3>
-
-<p>In interpreting this novel hair stream of man’s chest and
-neck we are again brought into an atmosphere of struggle of forces.
-Something has occurred in the course of man’s descent from the
-ape to interfere very sharply with the course of the hair; and
-certainly if there be anything in organisms that Heredity, Variation
-and Selection are unable to do (even when adorned with capital
-letters, to make them, as Huxley said, “like grenadiers with bearskins,”
-appear much finer fellows than they are), it is to provide
-in this reversed stream of hair on man’s chest some cunning
-“adapta­tion” to his needs. Selection will not serve; but I think
-use and habit will. There can be little, if any, doubt that the
-frequent and active contractions of the platysma muscle in the
-course of man’s life are the efficient cause of the change of arrangement
-of hair from a downward simian to an upward human slope.
-To this opinion the anatomist will promptly reply: “Ah! I have
-thee there, friend Lamarckian; are there not any number of apes
-and monkeys that also have an active and efficient platysma?”
-Undoubtedly there are, and I give here, through the kindness of<span class="pagenum" title="112"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112"></a></span>
-Professor Keith, a short account of that muscle in simiadæ. It
-is taken from an unpublished work of his on <i>The Myology of the
-Catarrhini—a Study in Evolution</i>. The account may be only
-interesting to the professed anatomist, but the conclusions in the
-summary bear closely on the present problem. I give the exact
-words from Chapter II., pp.&nbsp;472, 479. The simian forms
-examined are <i>semnopithecus</i>, <i>gorilla</i>, <i>chimpanzee</i>, <i>orang</i>, <i>gibbon</i>,
-<i>macacus</i>, <i>cercopitheci</i>, <i>cynocephali</i>. “<i>Summary</i>: Every gradation
-is found between the cynocephalic and human forms. The evolution
-lies in the disappearance of the supra-trapezial origin and the
-superficial labio-mental insertion. The opposite nuchal and
-mental angles of a trapezoidal sheet are obliterated and a rhomboidal
-figure is left. The change may be seen step by step through the
-<i>macaci</i>, <i>semnopitheci</i>, <i>hylobates</i>, <i>troglodytes</i> and the <i>orang</i> to Man.</p>
-
-<p>“The maxillary insertion in man is more extensive than the
-others, and the insertion is more distinctly demarcated from the
-quadratus menti origin. But slips between the two muscles are
-not uncommon.</p>
-
-<p>“The sub-mental interdigita­tion occurs frequently in man,
-and although its extent varies in the other Catarrhini it is always
-present.</p>
-
-<p>“The upper nuchal fibres, being cut loose in the higher members
-of the orthorachitial group from their primary origin, became
-aberrant in their behaviour. Auriculo-labial slips, slips of union
-with the zygomatici, or simulating a <i>risorius</i>, or a relapse to the
-primitive medial dorsal origin and connec­tion with the occipito-auricular
-muscles may occur in man as in the others.</p>
-
-<p>“Fasciculation of the muscle may occur in man and the
-<i>troglodytes</i>.</p>
-
-<p>“That the functions of this muscle are indefinite is shown
-by the numerous individual and generic variations. But that
-its presence is essential may be judged by its persistence. It may
-depress the angle of the mouth or the lower jaw, or help to flex
-the head upon the chest, or help to empty the laryngeal air-sac
-if it be present. But as a matter of fact all these functions are
-otherwise provided for. When tense it protects the deep part of
-the neck somewhat, and it is usually active in temper. The
-axillary part of the same sheet in the <i>cynomorphæ</i> offers a similar
-puzzle as regards its functions.”</p>
-
-<p>We have it thus on the highest authority that the platysma
-muscle is active and persistent in a large series of monkeys, apes
-and man. But the whole work has for its sub-title, “A Study in
-Evolution,” and in the story of the platysma there is a picture of<span class="pagenum" title="113"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113"></a></span>
-its progressive development to that of man. There is evidence
-in the above account of the muscle that a structure is found in
-monkeys and man which might operate on the overlying streams
-of hair in any of these animal forms—or might not—in accordance
-with the concep­tion of struggle between opposing forces which I
-have kept in view all through this volume.</p>
-
-<p>It is evident that in all animals below man the platysma
-has not achieved any victory by its action over the streams of
-hair on the chest and neck, and to my mind it is equally evident
-that in the case of man it has carried through a very manifest
-“turning-movement.” It will be objected, quite properly, that
-this is a matter of opinion, and the pertinent question will be asked,
-“How do you account for the absence of this reversed hair-pattern
-in apes and monkeys and its absence in man, both having an
-efficient platysma muscle?”</p>
-
-<p>The essence of a struggle is that it ends with the victory of
-one adversary over the other, and as the race is not always to the
-swift nor the battle to the strong, there is of necessity some uncertainty
-as to the result of any struggle. The factors of time as
-well as of overwhelming force are required for most of the victories
-of man over man, and it is not less so in the victories of habit
-over ancestry in the direction of hair, as I have repeatedly shown.
-The required time is clearly at one’s disposal for this victory, and
-the “overwhelming force” of habit and use is purely a question
-of the degree of repeti­tion and the efficiency of the contractions
-of the platysma, and its greater use in man than in apes and monkeys.
-The uses to which it was put in the lower forms not having been
-sufficiently overwhelming for victory, no change in them has been
-shown. The cumulative effects of the actions of a developing
-platysma in man, under the guiding influence of his more complex
-habits of life, have turned the scale in favour of the reinforced
-forces of habit, and the direction of the hair becomes reversed
-nearly all over the area covering the muscle.</p>
-
-<p>We must consider all the forces engaged in this struggle for
-mastery on the neck and chest of man, and remember on one hand
-the power of the normal slope of hair, the greater difficulty of
-altering the direction of the thick long hairs of monkeys and apes,
-and their relatively long resting hours; and on the other the
-shorter and finer hairs of man and the increasing efficiency of his
-platysma muscle in varied actions. Professor Keith mentions
-four functions of the platysma: that of <i>depressing the angle of the
-mouth and lower jaw, helping to flex the head upon the chest</i>, and to
-<i>empty the laryngeal air-sac</i>, and <i>protecting the deep parts of the neck<span class="pagenum" title="114"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114"></a></span>
-when it is tense</i>—adding the significant comment that “it is usually
-active in temper”—I presume this to mean bad temper!</p>
-
-<p>Leaving out of account the emptying of the laryngeal air-sac,
-is it not evident that the remaining three actions of the platysma
-are very much more exerted in the case of man with all the numerous
-occupations and movements of his head and neck, in obedience
-to his higher brain, than in the apes, monkeys and lemurs, endowed
-with a fitful activity, with fewer and less variable movements of
-their head, and long, long hours spent in their particular form of
-medita­tion?</p>
-
-<p>So, when the muscular sheet, which, as I have said, is <i>closely
-attached to the skin of the chest and more loosely to that of the neck</i>,
-contracts and becomes shortened between its origin on the chest
-to its insertion in the face and jaw, it gives a most obvious pull on
-the skin over it and wrinkles it vertically in a manner which will
-strike any thin person who contracts it voluntarily before a looking-glass.
-The connec­tion shown between the action of the platysma
-muscle and the change of hair is so close that it can hardly be
-questioned that one is the cause of the other. If it be not proved
-to demonstra­tion it is “tremendously probable” and the connec­tion
-falls into line with the previous demonstrated cases.</p>
-
-<p>I must add here a remark suggested by the views of man’s
-descent put forward since this was written. The claim that man
-has changed the direction of his hair on his back and chest by use
-and habit owing to altered modes of life is not dependent on the
-simian theory of his descent. The change to his present patterns
-on those two regions from those of any “active arboreal pioneer”
-among insectivores is just as striking and is open to the same line
-of explana­tion.</p>
-
-<p>It would serve no useful purpose here to travel further over
-the varied streams of hair on the body of man.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" title="115"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115"></a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XIV.<br />
-
-MISCELLANEOUS EXAMPLES.</h2>
-
-
-<p>In this chapter a few of the rarer examples of hair-clad mammals
-which present remarkable changes at critical areas of their hairy
-coats may be considered with advantage. I have chosen six, of
-which three appeared in my former book.</p>
-
-
-<h3>The Giraffe.</h3>
-
-<p>The two drawings of a giraffe, Figs.&nbsp;43 and <a href="#Fig_44">44</a> were made for me
-for the purpose of illustrating one of its habits and two of its
-peculiarities of arrangement of its hair. This stately creature
-is the tallest known animal and is the sole representative of its
-ancient family, more common in the days when giants abounded.
-Its range is becoming more limited and its enemies not less dangerous,
-and it is expected in the course of some years to add to the number
-of the recently-extinct creatures.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Habits.</h3>
-
-<div class="figright" style="width: 340px;">
-<a id="Fig_43"></a>
-<img src="images/i_116.jpg" alt="" height="684" width="340" />
-<div class="caption"><p>Fig. 43.—Giraffe showing at A and B, hair-patterns of a remark­able kind
-at the place where the main move­ments of the neck occur.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Living mainly in dry sandy regions giraffes find their food
-exclusively in leaves plucked from trees, and are said by some
-authorities to exist for a long period without drinking, but an
-interesting account quoted by Lydekker from Selous should be
-mentioned here. Selous writes that on a certain occasion he
-reached camp “a little before sundown, just in time to see three
-tall, graceful giraffes issue from the forest a little distance beyond,
-and stalk across the intervening flat, swishing their long tails to
-and fro, on their way down to the water. It is a curious sight to
-watch these long-legged animals drinking, and one that I have
-had several opportunities of enjoying. Though their necks are
-long, they are not sufficiently so to enable them to reach the water
-without straddling their legs wide apart. In doing this, they
-sometimes place one foot in front, and the other as far back as
-possible, and then by a series of little jerks widen the distance
-between the two, until they succeed in getting their mouths down
-to the water; sometimes they sprawl their legs out sideways in a
-similar manner.” Lydekker adds that this position has to be<span class="pagenum hide" title="116"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116"></a></span><span class="pagenum" title="117"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117"></a></span>
-assumed not only when drinking, but likewise when the animal
-desires to pick up a leaf from the ground or on the rare occasions
-when it grazes. This habit so graphically described is the one
-which alone concerns my subject. The patterns of hair peculiar
-to the giraffe need a short descrip­tion.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Hair Patterns.</h3>
-
-<div class="figleft" style="width: 450px;">
-<a id="Fig_44"></a>
-<img src="images/i_117.jpg" alt="" height="496" width="450" />
-<div class="caption"><p>Fig. 44.—Giraffe in the act of drink­ing or brows­ing off the ground.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Fig. 43 shows a whorl (B) at the side of the neck on a level
-with the prominent spines of the seventh cervical and first dorsal
-vertebræ. It lies exactly over a spot which may be well called
-a “critical area,” for an important hinge of the whole mechanism
-of the giraffe’s great neck is situated here. Though the remarkable
-length of its neck is intimately associated with its daily needs for<span class="pagenum" title="118"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118"></a></span>
-protec­tion against enemies and the supply of food from high-placed
-branches of trees, it forms a real obstacle to the less important need
-of obtaining water to drink or food from the ground as Selous and
-Lydekker show. The protective value of the neck is picturesquely
-described by Mr. Beddard when he speaks of it as the giraffe’s
-watch-tower, whence its keen eyesight surveys the surrounding
-country for its enemies. But its attitude in drinking, Fig.&nbsp;44,
-gives a vivid idea of the play of forces which takes place at the
-great hinge between the neck and the trunk, and at this point the
-whorl has been produced on the skin in the course of its laborious
-efforts to supply itself with water. The absence of any other whorl
-or reversed hair on the whole of its neck and trunk is most significant
-from the point of view of the dynamics of hair.</p>
-
-<p>The second departure from the normal direction of hair is
-found on the prominent portion of the spine, and it lies over this
-hinge-area. In Fig.&nbsp;<a href="#Fig_44">44</a> is shown the mane proceeding along the
-whole of the neck in the normal downward direction, and the
-arrows indicate the way in which it becomes suddenly reversed at
-the critical point and the lowest portion of the mane stands up and
-points upwards. This change is shown by the two arrows whose
-points meet one another, and the facts of its occurrence, here and
-nowhere else, at once suggest that the habit which produced the
-whorl on the side of the neck has also contributed to the change
-in the direction of the mane. The pattern here is precisely of the
-same order as that of the cow’s neck which we saw to be caused
-by its habit of browsing off the ground.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Bongo—Tragelaphus euryceros.</h3>
-
-<div class="figright" style="width: 240px;">
-<a id="Fig_45"></a>
-<img src="images/i_119.jpg" alt="" height="498" width="240" />
-<div class="caption"><p>Fig. 45.—Bongo. Showing on the
-strong mus­cu­lar chest, well-formed
-pec­toral pat­terns.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>This West African antelope is a forest-dwelling species, about
-which little is known as to its habit of life, though its form and
-anatomy are well described by Lydekker. It has a powerful chest,
-long and strong horns, and short hoofs, and it is shown in Fig.&nbsp;45
-with its large pectoral whorl, feathering and crest, in which it
-strongly resembles the domestic horse. One may be allowed here,
-as exact knowledge is wanting, to point out that “reconstruc­tion”
-of its habits may be reasonably attempted along the lines laid down
-in these pages. It is doubtful if any large mammal could possess
-so powerful a fore-end with very muscular forelimbs, highly-developed
-pectoral patterns and short strong hoofs without being a
-very fleet animal much accustomed to relying upon its speed for
-its protec­tion, and if a greater knowledge of it be obtained in the
-future it is highly probable that this predic­tion will be verified.
-Part of its habitat is described as the Ashkankolu Mountains, a
-region where speed would be of great value.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" title="119"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119"></a></span></p>
-
-
-<h3>Kiang—Thibetan Wild Ass.</h3>
-
-<p>This member of the Equidæ is shown in Fig.&nbsp;46 and there is
-an excellent specimen of it at South Kensington. I have chosen
-it because it is very unusual among others of its family in the
-possession of an inguinal and axillary whorl, feathering and crest.
-No other than the domestic
-horse that I have examined
-shows these patterns. They
-are nearly as well developed
-as in the horse, and require
-no special descrip­tion. It
-lives in high altitudes up to
-fourteen thousand feet, and
-travels often in large herds,
-its food being composed of
-the various woody plants of
-these dry and barren regions.
-Lydekker says that it “is
-remarkable for its fleetness
-and its capacity for getting
-over rough and stony ground
-at a great pace.” From these
-facts one can gather that a
-large portion of its working
-day would be spent in rapid
-locomo­tion from place to place
-in search of its sparse food-supplies
-and in avoiding
-enemies—two paramount objects
-of its existence which
-are pictured in the two animal
-pedometers displayed on its
-hairy coat.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 686px;">
-<a id="Fig_46"></a>
-<img src="images/i_121.jpg" alt="" height="530" width="686" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="tac">Fig. 46.—Kiang. Side view showing inguinal (W F C) and axillary (W F C) patterns.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-
-<h3>Llama—L.</h3>
-
-<div class="figright" style="width: 310px;">
-<a id="Fig_47"></a>
-<img src="images/i_122.jpg" alt="" height="609" width="310" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="taj">Fig. 47.—Fore foot of
-llama shown from behind
-(<span class="lowercase smcap">A</span>) and from side (<span class="lowercase smcap">B</span>) with
-whorls of hair and reversed
-areas on each side.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>I refer here to the true
-llama or domesticated form of
-the genus Llama, of which the vicunha and huanaco are the existing
-wild species. In the stirring time when a handful of Spanish
-Conquistadores under Pizarro conquered and trampled upon the
-ancient civilisa­tion of the Incas this useful animal was employed
-to an immense extent as a beast of burden. Lydekker says that
-at the time of the Conquest of Peru it was estimated that three<span class="pagenum" title="120"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120"></a></span>
-hundred thousand llamas were employed in the mines of Potosi
-alone. Prescott gives an excellent account of the use of this
-animal in his <i>Conquest of Peru</i>. They were valued highly for their
-strength and sureness of foot which were much needed in their
-long and rugged journeys over the great passes of the Cordilleras,
-as well as for the excellence of their flesh.</p>
-
-<p>The only region of a llama’s body which is of interest in the
-present inquiry is the fore-foot, figured in Fig.&nbsp;47. It presents a
-very remarkable arrangement of hair on its under surface, just
-above the double hoof and spongy pad at the joint above the hoof.
-This is found on each side towards the outer border of the hollow
-region, and consists of a whorl from which the hairs radiate in a
-reversed direction towards the upper part and transversely across
-the rest of the hollow. Prescott speaks of “its spongy hoof,
-armed with a claw or pointed talon to enable it to secure hold on
-the ice,” and adds that “it never requires to be shod.” If one
-reflects upon the ceaseless action during rough and slippery locomo­tion
-of this animal throughout its working life on mountain
-passes, on rough stony paths and ice-covered places, one can have
-no doubt of the reason why this particular joint, so greatly used in
-maintaining a foothold, should have acquired on this sheltered
-portion of its hair an animal pedometer.</p>
-
-
-<h3>The Parti-coloured Bear—Æluropus Melanoleucus.</h3>
-
-<p>This is a rare and peculiar form of the family of Ursidæ about
-which I made a statement some years ago at the Zoological Society
-of London. It is a “stocky” animal with a small head and broad
-short muzzle, a feature to which it has no right according to its
-affinities. It is not a member of the high-class Felidæ whose special
-prerogative it is to wear their hair on a short broad muzzle in a
-<i>downward</i> direction as I showed in Chapter XI. Being a more
-<i>bourgeois</i> creature than a cat it has offended against such sumptuary
-laws as may exist in the animal kingdom.</p>
-
-<p>Its hair ought to be worn in the proper backward or upward
-slope such as other bears, dogs and small carnivores display.</p>
-
-<p>In my former note I modestly proposed an alternative sugges­tion
-to the one I now offer, of this aberrant and strange bit of hair-country,
-and this was that it was correlated with the broad short
-snout. As I have remarked before this word “correlated” is used
-so loosely as to mean almost anything the user likes, and it is, in
-my opinion, a fine source of confusion of thought. Undoubtedly
-this shape of the muzzle of the Parti-coloured Bear is linked somehow
-with the arrangement of its hair on that region. But it is<span class="pagenum hide" title="121"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121"></a></span><span class="pagenum" title="122"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122"></a></span>
-hardly to be imagined that a direct reversal of hair from the proper
-bear-type, that is to say from the mouth to the head, would be
-produced by the mere broadening of the
-muzzle on account of some adapta­tion to
-its altering life. The link surely is of a
-different nature, and analogous to that of
-the corresponding surface in the lion and
-other cats, and that the cleaning of its
-fur on the snout is done in feline and not
-in ursine fashion, that
-is to say forwards,
-and that the breadth
-of muzzle is the reason
-for the change of
-method.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Two-Toed Sloth—Cholæpus
-didactylus.</h3>
-
-<p>This weird creature
-is one of a decaying
-family whom naturalists,
-with needless
-and frank brutality,
-called toothless. The
-term is neither exact
-nor polite. It is very
-much as if one were
-to call a person
-“toothless” whose front teeth had been
-knocked out, but whose remaining teeth
-were good and useful. But it represents
-so important a taxonomic character
-that one must allow for what seems bad
-manners on the part of zoological leaders
-who are, as a rule, full of the milk of
-human kindness, and seldom in these days
-quarrel even among themselves, adopting
-the motto <i>nihil animalium alienum a
-me puto</i>.</p>
-
-<div class="figright" style="width: 410px;">
-<a id="Fig_48"></a>
-<img src="images/i_123.jpg" alt="" height="327" width="410" />
-<div class="caption"><p>Fig. 48.—Two-toed sloth, show­ing action of grav­ity upon the
-long thick hairs.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The sloths form an excellent example of the action of gravity
-upon long thick hairs, and the Fig.&nbsp;48 given will explain this. They
-are New World animals, though indeed they have what we call an<span class="pagenum" title="123"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123"></a></span>
-“Old World” look, and are truly ancient. They spend the larger
-part of their time upside down in the manner represented in the
-drawings. They are arboreal and nocturnal animals that come
-down to earth in search of food when things are quieter below, and
-will wander for considerable distances, walking slowly on the outer
-borders of their feet and the feet turned in.</p>
-
-<p>These being the few facts of their lives which concern the
-present subject one comes, as usual, to interpreta­tion. These tree-sloths
-are descended from an older form that inhabited the ground,
-so that the present mode of life, which is so largely arboreal, has
-been acquired by dint of long years of struggle and adapta­tion to
-bitter needs. It seems hardly reasonable to call in the aid of
-selection for the produc­tion of its singular disposi­tion of hair though
-that factor ruled in the produc­tion of its arboreal habit. It is
-almost flying in the face of common sense to attribute this upward, or
-downward (according to one’s point of view) singular arrangement
-to anything but the effects of gravity upon its long hairs. If it be
-not so, it looks a remarkable likely solution of this small problem.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" title="124"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124"></a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XV.<br />
-
-EXPERIMENTAL.</h2>
-
-
-<p>About ten years ago I began an investiga­tion into the results
-of the applica­tion by man to the domestic horse of various forms
-of harness, desiring to find out if these results were capable of being
-transmitted from one genera­tion to another. In 1908 I had not
-got very far, but thought it well to bring before the Zoological
-Society of London the results observed up to that time and read a
-paper entitled, “Some observations on the effects of Pressure
-upon the Direction of Hair in Mammals.” It was kindly received,
-but was not published in their proceedings, as it appeared to the
-Publica­tion Committee a paper more suited to “another place,”
-presumably those of a veterinary society. It was illustrated by
-the two figures I give here of a horse in full harness, and another
-with the chief results as to changes of the direction of hair, or new
-patterns, displayed on its coat.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Progress of Inquiry.</h3>
-
-<p>Being disposed to think that the investiga­tion could be carried
-further, I proceeded to look about for any examples in horses which
-might show the transmission of these artificial results to their
-descendants, and had to wait awhile before I could see which of
-the regions affected by the pressure of harness were likely to afford
-the required phenomena. These were in due time forthcoming,
-and will form the chief subject of the present chapter. I look upon
-them as cases of an <i>undesigned experiment</i> and will describe them
-later.</p>
-
-<p>In the present stage of science all hypotheses must be submitted
-to the test of experiment before they can enter the charmed circle
-of natural laws. For this reason one must endeavour to apply the
-test of experiment to the hypothesis before us.</p>
-
-
-<h3>The Nature of Experiment.</h3>
-
-<p>Hitherto I have gone no further than the region of experience
-and observa­tion, from which, Jevons says, “all knowledge proceeds.”
-There has been abundance of observa­tion of phenomena in this<span class="pagenum" title="125"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125"></a></span>
-quest and I have ventured even on hypothesis. Experiment is
-shortly defined by Jevons as <i>observa­tion plus altera­tion of conditions</i>.
-He points out that when we make an experiment we more
-or less influence the events which we observe, as when we bring
-together certain substances under various conditions of temperature,
-pressure, electric disturbance or chemical action and so on, and then
-record the changes observed; and, that experiment may be of
-two kinds, experiments of simple fact and experiments of quantity.
-It is unnecessary here to describe all the rigorous rules that the
-man of science so rightly imposes upon himself before he claims to
-have proved his hypothesis, merely adding that among others he
-requires, Exclusion of Indifferent Circumstances, Simplifica­tion
-of Experiments, Removal of Usual Conditions, Removal of Interference
-of Unsuspected Conditions, Blind or Test Experiments,
-Negative Results of Experiment, and he lays down the limits of
-experiment. Those who have not for themselves investigated
-some scientific problem may learn from this statement some of the
-difficulties of the work of scientific men and will not fail to respect
-and admire the caution, patience and honesty of the scientific worker,
-and will perhaps feel the more gratitude to a class of men by whose
-self-denying labours they live and move and have their being in a
-modern state, and by whose discoveries, thus established, they are
-frequently preserved from premature death.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Experiments for the Present Purpose.</h3>
-
-<p>Now in the matter of experiment for the proof of the thesis
-that changes in the habits of an animal <i>cause</i> the changes observed
-in their hair, it is at once seen that, <i>ex hypothesi</i>, no one can impose
-and work with such calculated conditions as are ordained by
-experiment, strictly so-called. The action of a habit is a slow
-process and the movement of a hair is slow; moreover the lifetime
-of a man is too short and that of a horse, for example, too long to
-allow of any individual experimenter applying artificial pressure
-through many generations of horses, so as to be able to verify his
-assertion that the effects of artificial pressure do what is claimed,
-and that these effects are transmitted from one genera­tion of horses
-to another. One can conceive a calculated experiment of the kind
-made with numerous individual rats, and successive generations,
-but it is hardly likely that effectual pressure could be applied to
-the hairy coats of such small and elusive mammals as would serve
-to test the hypothesis.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" title="126"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126"></a></span></p>
-
-
-<h3>Undesigned Experiments.</h3>
-
-<p>We are thrown back, then, on such experiments as may be
-provided for us by the uncalculated operations of man through
-many ages. This class I call undesigned experiments and have
-had more to say about numerous examples of these in another
-place<span class="nowrap">.<a id="FNanchor_57" href="#Footnote_57" class="fnanchor">57</a></span> Using the term experiment broadly we see many
-occurrences which consist in an accidental observa­tion of a fact,
-and Jevons mentions five of these which have led to organised
-results in science—the double refrac­tion in Iceland spar by Erasmus
-Bartholinus, the twitching of a frog’s leg under stimuli by Galvani,
-the light reflected from distant windows with a double-refracting
-substance by Malus, the form of a vertebra by Oken, and the
-peculiar appearance of a solution of quinine by Sir John Herschel.
-But he notes something further than this, that is, the way in which
-astronomers make the earth’s orbit the basis of a well-arranged
-<i>natural experiment</i>. He says further that “Nature has made no
-experiment at all for us within historical times” among animals
-living in a state of nature, allowing at the same time that man has
-made an approach to experiment in his domestica­tion of many
-animals. Huxley himself kept an open mind until the last as to the
-validity of Natural Selection in the Origin of Species, because of
-the fact that races which are sterile together have not yet been
-produced by human cultiva­tion, for example, the sterility of mules,
-the human product of the jackass and the mare. I allude to this
-to show that such a result, if effected, would have constituted a
-valuable experiment in biology in favour of Natural Selection.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Harness on Horses.</h3>
-
-<p>Man has, however, been carrying on unconsciously throughout
-a great stretch of time an experiment upon the hair on the coat of a
-horse by the use of harness. This is an old story and its rudiments
-are mentioned by Professor Scott Elliott<span class="nowrap">.<a id="FNanchor_58" href="#Footnote_58" class="fnanchor">58</a></span> He states that the
-men of Cromagnon are believed by a high authority as to their
-rock-paintings to have depicted some marks which represent rude
-harness of some kind, though he himself expresses doubt on the
-matter. He also quotes the same authority for the figures made
-by the Madelenians as having found signs which can be interpreted
-as halters or even bridles. Be this as it may, we need not carry
-our search for the use of harness to this hoary antiquity, but
-know well from history that for many thousands of years man has<span class="pagenum" title="127"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127"></a></span>
-been employing harness on his friend and servant, thus making the
-essential conditions for an experiment of which he and his servant
-were alike unconscious, that is to say, he influenced a growing
-living structure, the horse’s hair, by the artificial force of pressure,
-applied to the coat at various points. These varied from age to
-age as to fashion and material, and the present full development
-of harness of a draught horse was probably slow in coming.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Examples of the Effects of Pressure.</h3>
-
-<p>Looking at the figures of a horse harnessed, and another
-without harness, Figs.&nbsp;<a href="#Fig_49">49</a> and <a href="#Fig_50">50</a>, one sees on the latter eight different
-regions where patterns of hair, not found in the horse normally,
-are displayed. They are as <span class="nowrap">follows:—</span></p>
-
-
-<div class="center">
-<table summary="" border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" width="90%">
-<tr><td class="tal vat">A.</td><td class="tal vat pl21hi">The under surface of the neck.</td><td class="tal vat pl21hi">Pattern due to the collar.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tal vat">B.</td><td class="tal vat pl21hi">The hamstring region.</td><td class="tal vat pl21hi">Pattern due to the kicking strap.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tal vat">C.</td><td class="tal vat pl21hi">The hollow corresponding to what we should call the armpit.</td><td class="tal vat pl21hi">Pattern due to strap of saddle.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tal vat">D.</td><td class="tal vat pl21hi">The coccygeal or tail-region.</td><td class="tal vat pl21hi">Pattern due to the crupper.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tal vat">E.</td><td class="tal vat pl21hi">The side of the neck.</td><td class="tal vat pl21hi">Pattern due to the reins.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tal vat">F.</td><td class="tal vat pl21hi">The shoulder.</td><td class="tal vat pl21hi">Pattern due to the shaft.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tal vat">G.</td><td class="tal vat pl21hi">The side of the face.</td><td class="tal vat pl21hi">Pattern due to strap of head stall.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tal vat">H.</td><td class="tal vat pl21hi">The border of the neck <i>under</i> the collar.</td><td class="tal vat pl21hi">Pattern due to collar.</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<p>All these aberrations from the normal are rare except the first
-(<span class="lowercase smcap">A</span>), and all are based on the observa­tion and drawing of individual
-specimens which I brought before the Zoological Society and
-the details of which are given in a note on page&nbsp;<a href="#Page_129">129</a>. The
-rarer seven examples are described because taken together they
-show what the pressure of harness <i>can</i> do at certain points
-where its pressure is adequate, and they are all situated where they
-might be expected if such a force could effect hair-changes, and there
-are <i>none of them found on areas where neither pressure nor underlying
-muscular traction</i> can act efficiently. Thus in many thousands
-of horses I have never seen a hair-pattern on the middle of the flank
-or the under surface of the abdomen or the middle of the back or
-gluteal region or on the fore or hind legs. This negative evidence
-is of great importance, and must be taken for what it is worth.
-I may venture to remind the reader that every one of these phenomena
-is an artificial product of man’s treatment of the horse. They
-come thus under the category of undesigned experiments.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" title="128"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128"></a></span></p>
-
-<p>The only one of the eight artificial patterns, which as a rule
-are in the form of a whorl feathering and crest, that needs, further
-close attention is the pattern A, produced on the under surface
-of the horse’s neck by the collar, and this will be examined
-separately.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 540px;">
-<a id="Fig_49"></a>
-<img src="images/i_128.jpg" alt="" height="482" width="540" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="tac">Fig. 49.—Domestic horse, fully harnessed.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-
-<h3>The Selected Example—Ventral Surface of Horse’s Neck.</h3>
-
-<p>If I set out to convince a doubting opponent that these things
-are as I assert, three conditions may at once be laid down. First,
-it must be shown that the patterns found here are not part of a<span class="pagenum" title="129"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129"></a></span>
-normal arrangement. Second, that they are produced by pressure
-of the harness. Third, that examples of them be forthcoming in
-young horses never exposed to the action of harness.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 540px;">
-<a id="Fig_50"></a>
-<img src="images/i_129.jpg" alt="" height="484" width="540" />
-<div class="caption htmlonly"><p class="taj">Fig. 50.—Side view of domestic horse, showing eight areas of reversed hair,
-A, B, C, D, E, F, G, H, all of which were situated under portions of the harness.</p>
-
-<p>B. Pattern on hamstring region, under the breeching.</p>
-
-<p class="ml322hi">Examined 24th December, 1907. Roan hackney, recently clipped,
-showed on the offside on the hamstring region, a reversed area of
-hair proceeding vertically upwards and ending in a crest, in the
-position where the breeching rubs during locomo­tion. Thirteen
-cases examined, other twelve similar.</p>
-
-<p>C. Pattern on lower axillary region, under belly-band.</p>
-
-<p class="ml322hi">Examined 4th March, 1907. Small grey hackney with reversed area of
-hair in lower axillary region, with also a crest nearly horizontal
-lying along upper part of this area under the belly-band. Eight
-cases examined, the other seven similar.</p>
-
-<p>D. Pattern on tail region.</p>
-
-<p class="ml322hi">Examined 29th November, 1907. Bay hackney, on each side of base of
-tail where the crupper rubs during locomo­tion, is a wide reversed
-area of hair five to six inches long, in which the hairs were arranged
-at a right angle with the axis of the spine on the upper border and
-feathering out on the lower border into the general stream of hair.
-Three cases examined, two others similar.</p>
-
-<p>E. Pattern on side of neck under the position of the reins.</p>
-
-<p class="ml322hi">Examined 21st December, 1907. Small mouse-coloured hackney recently
-clipped. On the offside of the neck where the reins rubbed against
-the neck there was a wide reversed area of hair with a well-marked
-crest in front. Five cases in all examined, the four others similar.</p>
-
-<p>F. Pattern on shoulder.</p>
-
-<p class="ml322hi">Examined 15th September, 1905. Bay cart-horse, reversed area lying
-nearly horizontal under the shaft of the cart; hairs formed into a
-whorl, feathering and crest lying posteriorly—pattern four inches in
-length, on near side only. One case only examined.</p>
-
-<p>G. Pattern on side of face.</p>
-
-<p class="ml322hi">Examined 25th May, 1905. Grey hackney with wide reversed area of
-hair along side of face ending above in oblique crest, under a strap
-of the headstall, on the offside only. Two cases examined, the
-other similar.</p>
-
-<p>H. Pattern on border of the neck under the collar.</p>
-
-<p class="ml322hi">Examined 28th September, 1906. Bay cart-horse. On near side under
-the collar which was lifted up while the horse was resting, the hairs
-at the border of the neck were formed into a large whorl. One case
-only examined.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="container epubonly">
-<div class="content">
-<p>Fig. 50.—Side view of domestic horse, showing eight areas of reversed hair,
-A, B, C, D, E, F, G, H, all of which were situated under portions of the harness.</p>
-
-<div>B. Pattern on hamstring region, under the breeching.</div>
-
-<div class="pl322hi">Examined 24th December, 1907. Roan hackney, recently clipped,
-showed on the offside on the hamstring region, a reversed area of
-hair proceeding vertically upwards and ending in a crest, in the
-position where the breeching rubs during locomo­tion. Thirteen
-cases examined, other twelve similar.</div>
-
-<div>C. Pattern on lower axillary region, under belly-band.</div>
-
-<div class="pl322hi">Examined 4th March, 1907. Small grey hackney with reversed area of
-hair in lower axillary region, with also a crest nearly horizontal
-lying along upper part of this area under the belly-band. Eight
-cases examined, the other seven similar.</div>
-
-<div>D. Pattern on tail region.</div>
-
-<div class="pl322hi">Examined 29th November, 1907. Bay hackney, on each side of base of
-tail where the crupper rubs during locomo­tion, is a wide reversed
-area of hair five to six inches long, in which the hairs were arranged
-at a right angle with the axis of the spine on the upper border and
-feathering out on the lower border into the general stream of hair.
-Three cases examined, two others similar.</div>
-
-<div>E. Pattern on side of neck under the position of the reins.</div>
-
-<div class="pl322hi">Examined 21st December, 1907. Small mouse-coloured hackney recently
-clipped. On the offside of the neck where the reins rubbed against
-the neck there was a wide reversed area of hair with a well-marked
-crest in front. Five cases in all examined, the four others similar.</div>
-
-<div>F. Pattern on shoulder.</div>
-
-<div class="pl322hi">Examined 15th September, 1905. Bay cart-horse, reversed area lying
-nearly horizontal under the shaft of the cart; hairs formed into a
-whorl, feathering and crest lying posteriorly—pattern four inches in
-length, on near side only. One case only examined.</div>
-
-<div>G. Pattern on side of face.</div>
-
-<div class="pl322hi">Examined 25th May, 1905. Grey hackney with wide reversed area of
-hair along side of face ending above in oblique crest, under a strap
-of the headstall, on the offside only. Two cases examined, the
-other similar.</div>
-
-<div>H. Pattern on border of the neck under the collar.</div>
-
-<div class="pl322hi">Examined 28th September, 1906. Bay cart-horse. On near side under
-the collar which was lifted up while the horse was resting, the hairs
-at the border of the neck were formed into a large whorl. One case
-only examined.</div>
-</div></div>
-
-
-<p><i>First.</i> The normal arrangement of hair on the under surface
-of the horse’s neck shows an even stream passing from the head to
-the chest, where it is interrupted by the pectoral patterns, and during
-that course resembles precisely the other normal streams in this
-and other mammals.</p>
-
-<p>The opponent asks, “How do you know this is the normal
-slope, and that the patterns you describe are not normal, and what
-you describe as normal is not a variation?” This is a perfectly<span class="pagenum" title="130"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130"></a></span>
-proper and timely question and can only be answered fully by
-examina­tion of and noting a large number of draught horses.</p>
-
-
-<h3>The Normal Arrangement on the Ventral Surface of the
-Horse’s Neck.</h3>
-
-<p>This examination has been made in a number of specimens
-large enough to satisfy the most exacting opponent. In all, 748
-were examined as to the hair on the under surface of the neck and
-338 of these presented the normal arrangement and 411 showed
-patterns of various kinds ranging from a trifling reversed area two
-to three inches long on one side of the middle line, to a finely-formed
-whorl, feathering and crest occupying the whole of the surface where<span class="pagenum" title="131"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131"></a></span>
-the collar is able to reach. These two limits are shown side by
-side in the figures. I should add that among the 411 which I term
-abnormal, for the sake of clear contrast, the number of varieties
-of pattern were numerous and bewildering.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Cart Horses.</h3>
-
-<p>A very significant result followed from a special examina­tion
-of 300 cart horses, as distinguished from hackneys. These showed
-the astonishing number of 277 specimens of what I call the abnormal
-and only 23 of the normal type. This special group in no way
-weakens the force of the larger study of 748, for the 300 cart horses
-are included in it, and, if removed, would have left the normal
-specimens in the hackney or general group very much more numerous.
-Looking at the cart horses, which are specimens of a highly-specialised
-breed for heavy draught purposes, one may assert with some
-confidence that, <i>for them</i>, the normal pattern of the hackney is
-becoming their abnormal. It must be remembered that these great
-creatures with large muscular necks are during most of their time
-of work pulling hard against the collar, and the very conditions
-required for making patterns of hair through pressure of harness
-are present in a remarkable degree. It is indeed an <i>undesigned
-experiment within an experiment</i>.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Analogy.</h3>
-
-<p>In addition to these statistics which may be taken as conclusive
-on this question of the normal arrangement, I must point out that
-it is against all reason, and analogy from <i>all other</i> mammals, to
-doubt that the normal arrangement is as I describe it. No hair-clad
-mammal either within the family of the Equidæ, or without, has
-any other arrangement on the under surface of its neck than what
-is here shown to be the normal one—a uniform uninterrupted slope
-from the head to the chest. There is also a feature of this greatly
-variegated piece of the horse’s coat under its neck, and that is
-that it is so highly variegated with diversity of pattern as to make
-it unlike any normal or natural structure or character in any animal.
-<i>That</i> is not the way Nature does her normal work. It would be
-impossible to give illustrations of many of the patterns here found,
-though I have notes and sketches of a large number taken from the
-examina­tion of thousands of specimens; so I have selected eight
-(Figs.&nbsp;51, 52, 53, 54, 55, 56, 57 and 58) of the best representatives
-of these and the details of each are given under each figure.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" title="132"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132"></a></span></p>
-
-
-<h3>Effects of Pressure by Harness.</h3>
-
-<p><i>Second.</i>—The next stage of the inquiry demands that one
-should show the patterns to be due to pressure.</p>
-
-<div class="figcontainer">
-<div class="figsub" style="width: 250px;">
-<a id="Fig_51"></a>
-<img src="images/i_132-a.jpg" alt="" height="427" width="250" />
-<div class="caption"><p>Fig. 51.—Roan cart horse, exam­ined
-25th Sep­tem­ber, 1914. On left side
-of middle line of the under surface
-of the neck a short reversed area
-three inches long, lying ver­tic­al­ly—none
-on the right side.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figsub" style="width: 235px;">
-<a id="Fig_52"></a>
-<img src="images/i_132-b.jpg" alt="" height="427" width="235" />
-<div class="caption"><p>Fig. 52.—Grey cart horse examined
-25th Sep­tem­ber, 1914. Long central
-feather­ing (F) proceed­ing ver­tic­al­ly
-upwards in middle line of neck
-from whorl (W) and ending in a
-crest (C) at the upper limit of
-region, through which the collar can
-move in active loco­motion.</p></div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>In the accompanying drawings the under surface of the neck
-and the chest of each horse is shown with the collar in place, the
-centre portion of which is cut out so as to show the arrangement of
-hair beneath, and some of the varieties are seen to extend for
-several inches above it. In considering this process one ought to
-watch the way in which the collar of a horse, as a rule, is seen to
-move up and down as he trots, for in most cases, except in cart-horses,
-the collar fits very loosely and is easily jolted upwards.<span class="pagenum" title="133"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133"></a></span>
-This will explain why the patterns often extend upwards above
-the proper position of the collar, but it must also be remembered
-that <i>never</i> have I found a pattern higher up in the middle of the
-neck than a loose collar can reach when jolted. (Close to the
-lower jaw there is a whorl or pattern often found which belongs
-to a different category, and is not to be confused with the patterns
-in question.)</p>
-
-<div class="figcontainer">
-<div class="figsub" style="width: 230px;">
-<a id="Fig_53"></a>
-<img src="images/i_133-a.jpg" alt="" height="439" width="230" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="taj">Fig. 53.—Brown hackney, examined
-9th October, 1914. Small reversed
-area of hair lying under collar in
-middle line of under surface of neck,
-passing ver­tic­al­ly upwards three
-inches long, in cen­tral posi­tion.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figsub" style="width: 236px;">
-<a id="Fig_54"></a>
-<img src="images/i_133-b.jpg" alt="" height="439" width="236" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="taj">Fig. 54.—Brown cart horse, examined
-25th October, 1914. Whorl, feather­ing
-and crest (W F C) in middle line
-of under surface of neck, begin­ning
-below where the collar should lie in
-usual posi­tion.</p></div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>In the conditions described there is present exactly that
-frequent pressure of a moving body against the growing hair, which
-is requisite to produce changes in its direction, as well as the more
-fixed pressure of the collar when it is fitting firmly against the
-lower part of the neck.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" title="134"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134"></a></span></p>
-
-<p>By way of confirma­tion of the view that this is the <i>modus
-operandi</i> one has only to point to the other seven regions shown in
-Figs.&nbsp;<a href="#Fig_49">49</a> and <a href="#Fig_50">50</a>, in which the connec­tion between the pressure of
-harness and the produc­tion of a new pattern is beyond all doubt
-one of cause and effect.</p>
-
-<div class="figcontainer">
-<div class="figsub" style="width: 240px;">
-<a id="Fig_55"></a>
-<img src="images/i_134-a.jpg" alt="" height="495" width="240" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="taj">Fig. 55.—Brown cart horse, examined
-25th October, 1914. Whorl, feather­ing
-and crest (W F C) in middle line
-of under surface of neck begin­ning
-under­neath collar and proceed­ing
-ver­tic­al­ly up­wards for six inches.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figsub" style="width: 237px;">
-<a id="Fig_56"></a>
-<img src="images/i_134-b.jpg" alt="" height="495" width="237" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="taj">Fig. 56.—Bright bay pony, examined
-29th October, 1914. Very mus­cu­lar
-neck. On under surface on each
-side a wide curv­ing stream of hair
-pass­ing towards middle line and
-join­ing in a cen­tral upward stream
-end­ing above in a tuft (T).</p></div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<h3>The Proof of Transmission of Pattern.</h3>
-
-<p><i>Third.</i>—To show that the effects produced by pressure in
-one genera­tion are sometimes inherited by its descendants it is
-necessary to examine a few examples of young horses who have
-never borne the yoke as yet.</p>
-
-<div class="figcontainer">
-<div class="figsub" style="width: 230px;">
-<a id="Fig_57"></a>
-<img src="images/i_135-a.jpg" alt="" height="457" width="230" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="taj">Fig. 57.—Brown hackney, examined
-29th October, 1914. On under surface
-of neck beneath the low­est por­tion of
-an ill-fitting collar, a wide area of
-reversed hair on each side coalesc­ing
-in a cen­tral upward stream.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figsub" style="width: 242px;">
-<a id="Fig_58"></a>
-<img src="images/i_135-b.jpg" alt="" height="457" width="242" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="taj">Fig. 58.—Brown hackney engaged
-in drawing a low Swiss cart, with
-loose collar low on neck. Examined
-at the Croix in Jura moun­tains,
-24th Sep­tem­ber, 1912. On lower
-surface of neck under the collar
-three reversed areas ob­served; one
-cen­tral (F), two (W, C) cen­tral and
-simi­lar; all three showing a whorl,
-feather­ing and crest: central area
-placed ver­tic­al­ly, later­al ones slight­ly
-oblique. <i>A very rare condi­tion.</i></p></div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" title="135"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135"></a></span></p>
-
-<p>I examined some mares of the farm-horse type with their foals
-in a field at Radley in 1915 with the following results. All the
-mothers showed the common reversed area or pattern on the under
-surfaces of their necks. Of the five foals all but one showed clear
-evidence, even in their thick young coats, of a similar pattern,
-the fifth had none. I also noted two similar examples in a field
-at Harrogate in the same year and both the mothers and the foals
-showed the usual pattern; and again at Radley in 1918 four more<span class="pagenum" title="136"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136"></a></span>
-foals, one of them 24 hours old, who all showed this reversed area.
-Here then are ten examples of undoubted transmission of the
-effects of pressure by harness in subjects so young as to be still
-suckled by their dams, and, of course, never themselves touched
-by such pressure. I submit that even one such unmistakable
-example would be enough to prove the case, and that the necessary
-conditions of a rigorous undesigned experiment by man have been
-fulfilled.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Objections.</h3>
-
-<p>At the end of this chapter which concludes the facts of the
-case I think it may serve to make the position a little clearer if
-I state objections which have been or might be raised.</p>
-
-<p>It will not escape the mind of any person who has followed
-critically this process of inquiry, that in Chapter VII, where the
-immense variety of the patterns found on the side of the horse’s
-neck are described, there is an apparent resemblance between them
-and those on the ventral or under surface of the neck. The former
-were shown to be due to natural forces, those of sustained and
-repeated underlying muscular traction of muscles and jolting of the
-neck in locomo­tion; whereas in this chapter a considerable number
-of patterns have been brought forward and pictured on the under
-surface, and these are attributed to artificial pressure from harness.
-The reasonable objection is raised, “Why should the former be
-considered natural and the latter artificial in their origin?”</p>
-
-<p>The answer to this is supplied by a considera­tion of the muscles
-shown in the two contrasted regions. In Figs.&nbsp;<a href="#Fig_3">3</a>, <a href="#Fig_4">4</a> and <a href="#Fig_5">5</a>, the
-muscles of the side of the neck are shown to be remarkably <i>strong
-and numerous</i> (in three layers), and <i>diverging in their directions</i>. In
-the muscles of the under surface of the neck of the horse, see Fig.&nbsp;<a href="#Fig_12">12</a>,
-the muscles of the two sides shown are nearly parallel and no
-conflict of opposing or diverging muscles can well take place in this
-“debateable land.” If there were much divergent or opposing
-action going on it would, of course, produce the effects on the hair
-towards the <i>upper</i> part of the neck, where the muscles tend to
-diverge more and more as they pass to the head, and I have stated
-above that not a single instance in many thousands of horses has
-been found above the level where a loose collar ceases to rub when
-jolted upwards. This is very conclusive on the matter of diverging
-or opposing muscular action.</p>
-
-<p>Then again the jolting in locomo­tion, which, in the case of
-the side of the neck is probably more effectual in producing changes
-of hair than even muscular traction, is almost absent from the under<span class="pagenum" title="137"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137"></a></span>
-surfaces, as can be learned from careful watching of the motion of a
-horse.</p>
-
-<p>Another reason which meets this objection very fully is that
-I have shown that 300 cart horses presented 277 of their number
-with reversed areas of patterns in the middle line of the under
-surface of the neck and these thick-necked animals are just those
-in which the collar is closely applied to the front of the neck in
-their heavy draught work, thus rubbing almost incessantly against
-the lie of the hair. In the thinner necks of the hackneys there
-are comparatively few indeed of the patterns found here and their
-collars as a rule fit very loosely and badly, and these frequently
-show a jolting up and down <i>clear of the neck</i>, which is seldom if
-ever present in a well-formed cart horse.</p>
-
-<p>Further proof of this is shown by the simple fact that it is
-<i>under the collar and within its range of movement</i> that the changes of
-hair are produced.</p>
-
-<p>No artificial pressure such as that of a collar is exerted on
-the parts of the side of the neck where the patterns are found; so
-I would submit that these two selected and much-disturbed areas
-owe their hair-patterns to two wholly different forms of mechanical
-cause.</p>
-
-<p>I referred in the Preface to an important criticism of my
-earlier book on <i>The Direction of Hair in Animals and Man</i>, and will
-now treat this in some degree of detail. It is from the pen of an
-eminent American biologist, then Miss Inez L. Whipple<span class="nowrap">,<a id="FNanchor_59" href="#Footnote_59" class="fnanchor">59</a></span> now Mrs.
-Wilder Harris, and it is a careful, independent and thoughtful
-contribu­tion from one who by her studies in this field and in the
-study of the mammalian palm and sole is widely known, and as
-widely respected.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Whipple refers on page&nbsp;403 to certain whorls and featherings
-on the backs of the lion, ox, giraffe and larger antelopes,
-which I then attributed to the action of the <i>panniculus carnosus</i>
-in shaking off flies. I am free to confess that the action then
-invoked by me was inadequate and incorrect and the explanations
-now given of them in Chapters X. and XI. on the ox and the lion,
-I think, are less open to criticism.</p>
-
-<p>Again on page&nbsp;404 she mentions the view formerly expressed
-as to the cause of the reversal of hair on the chest of man. This,
-also, I have reconsidered fully in Chapter XIII. where the action of
-the platysma muscle is held to be the cause of that remarkable
-reversal.</p>
-
-<p>On page&nbsp;403 the mistake I made in calling the reversed area<span class="pagenum" title="138"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138"></a></span>
-over the ischial tuberosity of the ischium in a dog a whorl is
-pointed out. This is corrected in Chapter VI. on the Dogs.</p>
-
-<p>These three are the only errors of any importance that I
-acknowledge at once. A certain number of minor points are
-questioned in the Review, and the theoretical portion is strongly
-criticised. It would be irrelevant to the main purpose of a book
-which is limited to the subject of Habit and Hair Direction in Animals
-to introduce some of the more debateable branches of the subject
-of the former book, such as tufts, the direction of the hair on the
-mole, the classifica­tion of the hair-streams of the mammalian body
-into primitive, those modified by morphological change, and those
-due to use and habit. This last is a very wide subject and is far
-beyond the present limits.</p>
-
-<p>I freely make another acknowledgment. The whole of the
-subject of the Direction of Hair in Animals and Man was taken up
-<i>ad hoc</i>, that is to say, for the purpose of testing the unpopular
-doctrine of Lamarckism. If this be an offence against the highest
-spirit of science, I can but accept the charge with a sigh, and go on,
-“faint yet pursuing.” There is consola­tion in finding that increased
-study of a subject is bringing order out of chaos, even if the field
-be small and the immediate crop poor.</p>
-
-<p>The following are some of the objections raised to the theoretical
-part of the <span class="nowrap">book:—</span></p>
-
-<p>The most serious charge against my interpreta­tion of the mode
-of formation of patterns (whorls and tufts) is that there is a lack
-of harmony between my preliminary statement that whorls are
-due to motor or muscular causes and a subsequent explana­tion of
-some of them as due to external pressure. I did not state then as
-clearly as I do now in many passages in the present chapters that
-for pattern produc­tion there may be at least four causes: <i>friction</i>,
-<i>pressure</i>, <i>gravity</i>, <i>underlying muscular traction</i>, and that whorls
-and featherings may, of course, arise from some other external
-force acting on the hair at the decisive point of struggle, just as
-well as from the more common cause—muscular traction on the
-skin. I think in this region of the Review and where she deals
-with Selection, she shows signs of that scientific monism which is
-still affecting many of our great biologists, that is to say, they desire
-a world-empire in evolution for the great factor of Selection, and
-will stretch their arguments considerably to save its face. This
-is shown in the Review on page&nbsp;406 where a very thin plea is put
-in on behalf of adapta­tion and Selection in regard to hair-directions,
-as in man’s minute hairs, which cannot be seriously maintained.
-That earth is stopped!</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" title="139"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139"></a></span></p>
-
-<p>Darwin’s open-minded dualism in this matter of the factors of
-evolution appeals to me at any rate more than the jealous attitude
-of Weismann and his eminent adherents.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Whipple is less determined than I am in claiming for
-Selection the cause of the primitive slope of hair in mammals.
-It is the only conceivable arrangement that could exist for the
-advantage of the primitive forms in their simple life, and is, I submit,
-as much a matter of adapta­tion to needs governed by Selection as
-the possession of a dermal covering itself.</p>
-
-<p>One more point, which, I think, is a small one and a fair one
-to raise, is worthy of a few remarks. Miss Whipple states that
-before variations in hair-direction can be logically attributed to
-external forces (giving the instance of the human scalp) “it should
-be shown that a change in the direction of the external, more or
-less wiry portion of the hair produces a change in the direction
-of the follicle.” As it happens, this change is easily seen in the
-case of the reversed hairs of the human forearm, if the hair be
-dark and the skin thin. The essence of the theory that dragging
-on the skin by muscular traction causes the hair to change its
-direction is that the relatively important portion within the hair-pit
-is pulled here or there according to the incidence of the prevailing
-force. But it is, to my mind, very clear that much repeated friction
-or pressure or gravity acting on the external and longer portion
-of the hair must, in course of time, drag the portion buried in the
-skin with it and so change its direction. These two portions of a
-hair cannot be arbitrarily separated. Shortly, one may say that
-the push of a force is as evident as the pull. A similar change
-in the direction of the buried part of a tree-trunk from a prevailing
-wind can be traced.</p>
-
-<p>The last point is that I “omit to explain the mechanical
-process by which divergent muscular action could affect hair-direction.”
-This is well answered in the chapter on “Can muscular
-action in the individual change the direction of the hair?” for
-there it is shown by numerous examples in the human eyebrow
-that the muscles underneath the hairs which are embedded in the
-true skin for a tangible depth, <i>do</i> play havoc with the normal
-arrangement of hair, as the conflict proceeds, the resultant “pull”
-being actually engraved, signed and sealed by physiological
-wrinkles of the forehead and face.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" title="140"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140"></a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XVI.<br />
-
-FIRST SUMMARY.</h2>
-
-
-<p>A large body of facts and an adequate propor­tion of reasoning
-have been brought together in the preceding chapters. As far as
-I understand the proceedings in a court of law, the business of
-arriving at results or, as they are there called, verdicts, consists
-in collecting as many as possible of the facts which bear on the case,
-these are sifted and verified, or the reverse, a certain reasoning on
-them is carried on; on this the verdict rests. This case before
-the court is of a civil, not a criminal nature, and it is a claim made
-to a certain <i>derelict property</i>, that is to say, the honour of forming
-patterns on the hair of animals, claimed by Use and Habit. The
-facts concerned have never been disputed, possibly because they
-were not thought worth the trouble, but they have the singular
-merit of being open to almost any educated person for confirma­tion
-or correc­tion, and the reasoning is certainly not profound, though
-I think it is cogent. In seeking a result in such a cause, or verdict,
-one claimant might content himself with an arrest of judgment,
-another that judgment should go by default, and a third would
-claim proof. It is with the last I desire to stand.</p>
-
-<p><i>In one word the claim is that of causation.</i></p>
-
-<p>Now no one can deny that between the groups of phenomena,
-habits and hair-patterns there is an evident relation; but the question
-may still arise, “What is the link between them?” I have just
-said that the facts are unquestioned; substantially they are unquestionable,
-and they are open to the charge that they belong
-to the dust-heaps of science, that they are, biologically speaking,
-such as used to engage the attention of Nicodemus Boffin. Perhaps
-they are. Of course if they were just collected haphazard and
-treated like a big collec­tion of little shells in a cabinet, without
-reference to their natural order, they would possess no evidential
-value even if they were pretty, for so long as a natural fact remains
-without its suited interpreta­tion, so long it belongs not to science.
-Hear Jevons: “Whatever is, is, and no natural fact is unworthy
-of study for the purpose of its interpreta­tion.<span class="nowrap">”<a id="FNanchor_60" href="#Footnote_60" class="fnanchor">60</a></span> Hear also Sir E.<span class="pagenum" title="141"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141"></a></span>
-Ray Lankester: “That only is entitled to the name of science which
-can be described as knowledge of causes or knowledge of the order
-of Nature.<span class="nowrap">”<a id="FNanchor_61" href="#Footnote_61" class="fnanchor">61</a></span> Fortified by the authority of a great logician and a
-great biologist I proceed to claim proof of causation. The stages
-of the case may be summed up as follows:</p>
-
-<p class="ml2em">1. It has been shown that during the lifetime of an individual,
-muscular action can change the direction of the hair.
-Chapter VIII.</p>
-
-<p class="ml2em">2. Undesigned experiment has shown that changes in the
-direction of the hair, mechanically produced in the
-individual, are sometimes transmitted to the descendants.
-Chapter XV.</p>
-
-<p class="ml2em">3. In all the selected examples adequate and ascertainable
-causes have been demonstrated.</p>
-
-<p class="ml2em">4. The changes of hair described, with hardly an exception,
-cannot be conceived as resulting from the factors of
-organic evolution—heredity, variation, adapta­tion and
-selection—indeed no serious attempt has been made to
-connect them in any way with utility.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Causation.</h3>
-
-<p>For my sins, the most obvious of which is that I made an
-unfortunate choice of my first birthday, I had to learn up the
-dreary pages of Mill’s <i>Logic</i> and those of other philosophers, for
-the pleasure of taking a medical degree, and was reduced to that
-orthodox state of mind in which one was forbidden to suppose that,
-in the world around where common men and women, every day and
-all day, are tracing causes for the occurrences they see on every
-hand, there was anything at work which could be truly called a
-cause. It was but natural to fall into the nihilism of the Mill and
-Karl Pearson school. Having neither the knowledge nor the
-hardihood to discern that their bewildering notions of causation
-could be gainsaid, I had to remain submissive and as much contented
-as possible with their views of an elusive subject. This state of
-passive resistance was not relieved until I had the great advantage
-of reading a valuable book by the late Dr. Mercier on Causation,
-which seems to have let some fresh air into the musty doctrines
-of the orthodox and autocratic philosophers. No one who has read
-this work can doubt that after all there is such a process as causation,<span class="pagenum" title="142"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142"></a></span>
-and that to find a cause for events is not merely a pursuit of the
-vulgar, but a duty of scientific persons.</p>
-
-<p>Mill appears to have given eighteen different accounts of
-causation and to have contradicted himself over and over again in
-his works dealing with this puzzle, devised mainly by Hume and
-himself; and his successors, such as Dr. Mc’Taggart, the Hon.
-Bertrand Russell of “Dog Fight” fame, Mr. Welton and Prof. Karl
-Pearson, have only got as far as to reduce the number of his definitions
-and put his views into more modern, but equally misleading
-terms. Without any disparagement of their other claims to respect
-and admira­tion, one may venture to throw overboard this school
-of philosophers when considering causation, and one may walk
-and talk in a clearer atmosphere.</p>
-
-<p>The subjects here considered are cause, effect, result, reason,
-evidence and proof, and all can be seen to enter into my small
-thesis. They may then be defined, according to Dr. Mercier, as
-<span class="nowrap">follows:—</span></p>
-
-<p class="ml2em">1. A cause is an action, or cessation of action, connected
-with a sequent change or accompanying unchange, in the
-thing acted on, or more shortly for my purpose <i>a cause
-is an action upon a thing</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="ml2em">2. An effect is a change connected with a preceding action.</p>
-
-<p class="ml2em">3. In reference to causation a reason means the cause of an
-unchange.</p>
-
-<p class="ml2em">4. A result is the changed state that is left when an effect
-has been produced.</p>
-
-<p class="ml2em">5. Evidence is of three kinds: evidence of sense, evidence
-of reason and evidence of hearsay.</p>
-
-<p class="ml2em">6. Proof is evidence inconsistent with an alternative to the
-assertion.</p>
-
-<p>I turn now to the aid given to the case before the jury, and
-must show how Dr. Mercier’s definitions establish it.</p>
-
-<p>The cause of the changes described is the action of certain
-new habits on a living growing structure of the mammalian body.</p>
-
-<p>The effect is the change connected with the preceding change
-of habit.</p>
-
-<p>The result is the changed direction of hair, in other words,
-new patterns, left when the new habits have been produced, and
-have been long enough in operation.</p>
-
-<p>The reason for the unchanges observed in many instances is
-the primitive force of the normal direction of growth of the hair.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" title="143"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143"></a></span></p>
-
-<p>The proof of the thesis is that the changes described in the hair—the
-evidence—is inconsistent with an alternative assertion.</p>
-
-
-<h3>To Some Critics.</h3>
-
-<p>It may save time and trouble if replies are given in anticipa­tion
-to certain classes of critics. I refer of course to those who are
-well-informed in their branch of knowledge.</p>
-
-<p>To those of high authority and learning, those who ride on
-white asses and that sit in judgment, who may seek to throw the
-case into chancery, saying, “This will never do, it contradicts
-current biological opinion.” I can only meekly reply that current
-or orthodox opinion is frequently wrong, or (shall I say) seldom
-right, and that the history of human thought is strewn with
-examples which may justify my impertinent reply.</p>
-
-<p>To another who says, “I daresay you are right in your claim,
-but there are too many metaphors,” I would suggest that, so long
-as metaphors are not used as arguments, the more metaphors—within
-limits—the clearer the meaning of the statement.</p>
-
-<p>To him who grudgingly allows, “I think you have proved your
-case—but what does it prove?” I reply that it proves what it
-set out to prove, no more and no less, and it is an integral part of
-proof of a larger claim. And if he further grumble that these
-matters have no interest for him, one may ask him to live and let
-live. “What have I now done in comparison of you, is not the
-gleaning of your grapes of great Ephraim better than the vintage
-of this little Abiezer?”</p>
-
-<p>To the man who reads the preface and the headings of the
-chapters, glances at the illustrations, detects one split infinitive,
-two misspellings and three errors of punctua­tion, goes home to tea
-and writes his opinion—it may suffice to remind him of “that
-curious mental state which looks past problems without seeing
-them.”</p>
-
-<p>I will conclude this section with a parable.</p>
-
-<p>In the year 1788 Arthur Young in his travels through France
-visited the desolate region of the Landes. “Wastes, wastes,
-wastes!” was his lament over neglected Brittany, and no less could
-he say of the Landes, at that time a miserable tract of low ground,
-bordering the Bay of Biscay. Plantations, the sinking of wells,
-drainage and irriga­tion began to fix the unstable sands, making
-fruitful the marsh, creating a healthful climate and a fertile soil.
-Early in the 19th century the land here was sold <i>au son de la
-voix</i>, that is to say, the accepted standard of measurement was
-<i>the compass of the human lungs</i>. The stretch of ground reached<span class="pagenum" title="144"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144"></a></span>
-by a man’s voice sold for a few francs. Crops replaced the scanty
-herbage of the salt marsh, and a familiar characteristic of the
-landscape, the shepherd on stilts, was seen no more. Six hundred
-thousand hectares of Landes planted with sea pines produced resin
-to the annual value of fifteen million francs, and through these
-trees also was achieved a climatic revolu­tion, and it is this district
-which is now a department of a great and well-ordered State<span class="nowrap">.<a id="FNanchor_62" href="#Footnote_62" class="fnanchor">62</a></span></p>
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" title="145"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145"></a></span></p>
-
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XVII.<br />
-
-VARIETIES OF EPIDERMIS.</h2>
-
-
-<p>Passing now to the smaller trenches of the front line I have chosen
-as the first of them a small study of the varieties of epidermis
-found in mammals. With the exception of aquatic mammals
-so few of this, the greatest vertebrate class, are not clothed with
-hair that it is only on the comparatively hairless body of man,
-with its third of a million fine hairs, that the varieties of epidermis
-can be broadly studied. Much of this chapter will resolve itself
-into a considera­tion of the palmar and plantar surfaces of certain
-mammals, where no hairy covering obscures the operation of
-stimulus and response.</p>
-
-<p>I assume that the foregoing phenomena of hair-direction have
-chosen and raised on his shield their own king. But here I must
-ask of the succeeding groups when they say, “I am, Sir, under the
-King, in some authority,” the question, “Under which King,
-Bezonian, speak or <span class="nowrap">die”—</span></p>
-
-<p class="ml2em">Shall it be Darwin’s Personal Selection?<br />
-Roux’s Cellular or Histonal Selection?<br />
-Wallace’s and Romanes’ Sexual Selection?<br />
-Weismann’s Germinal Selection?<br />
-The rule of Mendel?<br />
-Selection of mutations according to de Vries?<br />
-Or shall it be the barbarian king <i>Plasto-diēthēsis</i>?</p>
-
-<p>Which indeed of the seven kings will they choose, if I may
-thus personify them? I may, perhaps, urge on them the mild
-and tolerant rule of Lamarck and Darwin rather than that of the
-other anointed sovereigns, hoping this cannot be taken as an
-attempt to influence the jury through the Press in a case which
-is still <i>sub judice</i>.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Stimuli and Response.</h3>
-
-<p>The skin over the trunk and limbs of man is exposed to stimuli
-of pressure, friction, heat, cold and wind in very different degrees,
-according to the part which it covers. I do not here refer to nocuous,
-or so-called noci-cipient stimuli, as being too casual in their incidence
-for the question in hand. Broadly the ventral surface of the neck<span class="pagenum" title="146"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146"></a></span>
-and trunk differ much, in respect of the qualities of their epidermis,
-from the dorsal. The skin over the former is softer, thinner and
-more flexible than the latter, which is in adult life thick, hard and
-with larger openings of the sebaceous glands. As the two main
-layers of the skin are so closely united it is impossible to state any
-general rule as to the parts played in this manufacture by the
-epidermis and dermis respectively. Altogether the skin from
-the dorsal surfaces of mammals provides a much denser fabric than
-the latter, and different qualities of leather are obtained from different
-regions. Corresponding differences of texture are found on the
-extensor and flexor surfaces of the limbs, especially on the hands
-and feet. In the course of his long evolution from a hairy stock,
-whether simian as we thought yesterday, or a lower one as Professor
-Woods Jones suggests to-day, these dorsal surfaces of neck, trunk
-and extensor surfaces of limbs have been exposed through countless
-generations of men to vastly more stimuli of friction, pressure,
-and response, than those of the ventral and flexor regions. As
-man’s hairy covering diminished, through some mysterious and
-at present unrecognised cause, these stimuli became increasingly
-potent in producing a tissue denser than that of the more protected
-ventral parts where all forms of these stimuli are slight. I do not
-claim that this was a phenomenon that began with man, for in a
-measure it was present in those forms which preceded him, and
-in many related mammals under the cover of their hairy covering.</p>
-
-<p>When we remember, or conceive what a large portion of
-each of his 24-hours even in his earliest form throughout life man
-must have spent, as he still does, in lying on his back or sides,
-and in sitting with his back against a supporting object, and with
-his gluteal and ischial regions pressed hard against whatever
-seat he has selected in cave or drawing-room, we need not travel
-far in thought to understand how great has been the preponderance
-of stimuli from friction and pressure on the dorsal and extensor
-surfaces over those on the ventral and flexor—and here comes in our
-familiar “total experience” with stimulus and response spread
-over a vast stretch of time. It must be borne in mind that from
-the facts of the case a very large number of individual men and
-women were exposed to similar, but not the same stimuli at each
-stage of the process involved. It is matter of common knowledge
-that not only on the palm and sole of man, but on regions where
-the skin is not specialised in that remarkable manner that is found
-in those regions, but also in others, that increased pressure and
-friction will very soon cause a harder and thicker growth of epidermis,
-as on the skin over a projecting bone in club-foot, over the<span class="pagenum" title="147"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147"></a></span>
-shoulder where a weight is constantly carried, on the knuckles of
-many manual workers, and over the patellæ of a devout Roman
-Catholic, as I have often seen.</p>
-
-<p>On the other hand what conditions more calculated to thin
-and soften the skin could exist than those operating on the ventral
-and flexor surfaces, axillæ, groins, external genitals and the bends
-of the elbow and knee-joints, where pressure, with little friction
-and greater warmth and moisture prevails? I need do no more
-than ask which is the more reasonable of the two forthcoming
-explanations of such phenomena, on the one hand that they are
-adapted <i>for</i>, and on the other adapted <i>by</i> this experience? I
-doubt if at any stage of the long process this slow manufacture of
-differing fabrics ever conferred on man any survival value or better
-matrimonial prospects. At any period or stage which I have
-supposed it can only be claimed for the results on the skin that they
-did <i>not</i> cause the animal to pass through the meshes of the sieve,
-and theoretically might be classed among the <i>indifferent</i> modifications,
-even if they added a little to the comfort of their possessor.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Skin of Palm and Sole.</h3>
-
-<p>One can examine in more detail the remarkable form of skin
-which is found to cover the palmar and plantar surfaces in many
-mammals. It is highly specialised and appears in many degrees
-of efficiency for the purposes, or uses, of walking and climbing,
-grasping and discrimina­tion of objects. With two or three insignificant
-exceptions these are the only regions even of man’s body
-where hairs do not grow in the normal state, and in most other
-mammals hair is absent from the component parts or pads, which
-correspond to our palms and soles. In the absence of hairs and
-sebaceous glands and the presence of as many as 320 sweat-glands
-to the square centimetre, and especially the papillary ridges, the
-mammalian hand and foot present a fruitful field for study. They
-have been studied by none more earnestly and thoroughly than
-Dr. H. Wilder Harris and Mrs. Wilder Harris (<i>née</i> Inez Whipple).
-This small area of skin as an organ for grasping and discrimina­tion
-has been studied by persons from different, but not conflicting
-points of view. Time would fail me even to mention these, but I
-would recall here one aspect of the matter, that is the name given
-to it by these eminent authorities, Friction Skin. I think I do
-them no injustice, nay even honour, when I claim them as allies
-for us “Old Contemptibles” in the struggle, Lamarck <i>v.</i> Darwin in
-respect of these characters of the “mammalian chiridium.” This
-is a term employed by them for the hand and foot of all mammals,<span class="pagenum" title="148"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148"></a></span>
-and is very convenient for descriptive purposes. From this point
-of view this organ has been produced from more generalised ancestral
-structures by reason of friction and pressure, and not for the
-purpose of resisting them, at least in their initial stages—again,
-adapted <i>by</i> and not adapted <i>for</i> meeting those forces. There are
-other views of the matter held by Pan-Selectionists, notably that
-of Dr. Hepburn, in regard to the papillary ridges. He would, as I
-gather, treat them as primarily induced, by selection, for the better
-grasping of objects cylindrical or more or less globular. I have
-referred <span class="nowrap">elsewhere<a id="FNanchor_63" href="#Footnote_63" class="fnanchor">63</a></span> at some length to this in a book describing the
-examina­tion of the hands and feet of eighty-six species of mammals.
-The varieties of epidermis were divided into the smooth, corrugated,
-scaly, nodular, hairy, rod-like and ridge-covered forms, also four
-mixed varieties, such as corrugated with coarse transverse ridges on
-the digits, corrugated with papillary ridges, nodular with papillary
-ridges, and hairy with coarse transverse ridges and smooth pads.
-Of these the species with smooth epidermis and hair are few and
-unimportant, and the largest group examined was that of the
-Primates, thirty in all, in which papillary ridges were always present.
-It is highly probable that the causes of these modifications of the
-epidermis in diverse groups of animals could be traced to the habits
-and modes of life of each, but I make no attempt here to do this.
-It is also matter for inquiry, upon which no agreement has apparently
-been reached, how it came to pass that man has virtually lost his
-hairy coat, and in regard to the palms and soles of animals, what
-may be the reason that so few have any hair on them, and why
-man has no sebaceous glands, but has very numerous sweat-glands
-in these regions.</p>
-
-<p>This is all of great interest, and possibly some day the
-Mendelians will solve for us the mysteries thereof. But here I
-need only ask how it would have been possible for hairs to grow,
-or, if growing, not to be promptly worn away on a surface used by
-animals from monotreme to man for walking-pads, and by most
-of them also for grasping and discrimina­tion between objects as
-well. We are so familiar with the thickening of the skin on the
-hands of manual workers and on the feet of those who walk much,
-to say nothing of what we call a “corn,” from pressure of tight
-boots, that we are in danger of forgetting that the protecting skin
-over the hands and feet of animals was of necessity adjusted in a
-crude way to the measure and kind of walking in past ages and in
-all levels of life, and that it is maintained in that adjusted condition
-by the use, or disuse, of each life. Another familiar example is<span class="pagenum" title="149"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149"></a></span>
-that of knee-pads, as in the gnu and other ungulates. Some such
-process it is legitimate to assume whether it be reckoned backwards
-to monotremes or later levels of life-forms. We see then before
-our eyes how this living tissue becomes adapted in varied ways by
-response to the stimuli of friction and pressure, and the modifications
-thus slowly effected must, one would suppose, be transmitted to
-offspring ultimately from the original groups with which the process
-began, when by frequent repeti­tion small changes of structure
-have arisen at last. I acknowledge the limited force of the answer,
-that this picture involves the continuance in each succeeding
-genera­tion of the stimuli which initiated the changes, but the fact
-remains that <i>ex hypothesi</i> the changes are there, written in tablets
-of animal tissue, and that the making-up of an organism in course
-of many ages is not and cannot be conceived as being governed
-alone by the “tyranny,” even in the <i>good</i> Greek sense of that word,
-of rigid unit-characters.</p>
-
-<p>In the assumed process the correcting force of the Lamarckian
-drill-sergeant is always at hand, as it superintends the construc­tion
-of tissues and parts, and I doubt if even Professor Thomson will
-here interpose the difficulty of “correla­tion with useful characters,”
-for the only important functions which are invoked as the invariable
-antecedent of these structures are the elementary habits of walking,
-climbing or grasping objects in certain different ways, and without
-these habits or functions there would be neither lemur, monkey nor
-man to interest the mind of a biologist from Mars. As I am desirous
-of condensing such replies as I can make to certain opinions of
-opponents and objections, I will remind the reader that Professor
-Bateson in the <i>Jubilee Volume</i> of 1909, pp.&nbsp;100, 101, uses a metaphor
-to illustrate his view that among the facts of nature we meet certain
-definite structures and patterns in which we ought not, if desiring
-rightly to interpret them, to expect to find <i>purposefulness</i>. He
-says: “Such things are, as often as not, I suspect rather of the
-nature of tool-marks, mere incidents of manufacture, benefiting
-their possessor not more than the wire-marks in a sheet of paper,
-or the ribbing on the bottom of an oriental plate renders these
-objects more attractive in our eyes.” Metaphors are both indispensable
-and delightful, they are the very salt of scientific and other
-sober writings, but they have a rather “slim” way of betraying
-their employers. They express at times the truth too well, and at
-others when vague and inaccurate lead the reader right astray.
-Thinking of this metaphor of tool marks I was in a modern church
-the other day and saw just before me a stone pillar the pediment
-of which was marked with oblique parallel marks of a mason’s tool.<span class="pagenum" title="150"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150"></a></span>
-Here then there were marks left by a human hand at some date
-or other and by means of some tool or other. I know one may not
-reason by an analogy from inorganic to organic phenomena in which
-the push and force of life is in full blast, and that inheritance in the
-former is ruled out; but, taking the metaphor seriously, you have
-to account for the appearance of the ribbing of paper and the
-mason’s marks on the stone. To call them “by-products” or
-“tool marks” or <i>obiter facta</i>, or by any suggestive name, does
-not advance the reply to the question, “Whence came this great
-multitude?” If I were unwary enough to be here trying to attack
-Selection and to respond to the invita­tion of the more learned
-arachnida to walk into his parlour with a scheme of organic evolution
-for him to demolish at his leisure, I should have to enter upon the
-question of adapta­tion, specific difference and perhaps other great
-disputed doctrines. But, knowing my own limits, and desiring
-to keep to the self-imposed limits of the title of this book, I again
-plead that I am here contending, as all through it, for the origin
-of initial modifications by use and habit, and for nothing else.
-No one who reads of the immense amount of research and learning
-that are being carried on by the students of Mendelism and Mutationism
-can fail to admire them. But, as I have remarked before,
-these are systems of thought which in the main deal with characters
-by distribu­tion or “unpacking,” as it is called. Such a process
-of course leads to new characters by amphimixis, and no one of
-whom I know denies it. Such work is concerned with fresh views
-of the origin of species, but with lamentable cowardice, or humility,
-I leave all that great sphere to those who are incomparably more
-fit for it, and just seek to mind my own business.</p>
-
-<p>In subsequent chapters on modifications and their origin I
-shall not need to repeat these observations.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Some Chosen Examples of Palms and Soles.</h3>
-
-<p>The facts then of a few selected examples of the palms and soles
-of mammals are shortly these.</p>
-
-<p>A heavy, burrowing animal, the <i>earth wolf</i> of the Cape, has a
-very smooth, hard epidermis covering its foot-pads and is thus a
-generalised structure which I have found in no other animal.</p>
-
-<p>The common <i>mole</i> which uses its broad strong fore-feet like
-a pair of spades, and depends chiefly for discrimina­tion of its habitat
-on the delicate sensory nerve-endings of its snout, has a hard nodular
-skin which is much less developed on the hind feet than the fore
-feet, the latter being less active tools. It has no papillary ridges,
-in accordance with this fact, and is a very efficient miner that never<span class="pagenum" title="151"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151"></a></span>
-practises ca’ canny, as we know to our cost when we go out in the
-morning and find great heaps of soft earth thrown up in the line
-of its advance from its base or fortress. Such a mode of life lends
-itself remarkably to the kind of skin on its feet, and this is <i>now</i> at
-any rate adapted <i>to</i> its environment.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>capybara</i> is a large, heavily-built rodent, and has rather
-a smooth epidermis not specially thick, with long and efficient
-papillæ of the corium shown in microscopical sections. Being
-largely aquatic in its habitat, and given to frequenting marshy
-ground and to enjoying as much sleep as it can manage, it depends
-a good deal for discrimina­tion of objects on its sensitive corium,
-and its epidermis is not much specialised for, or by friction and
-pressure in walking. It does not acquire by reason of stimuli and
-response any unnecessary tools.</p>
-
-<p>With this may be classed the <i>echidna</i> or Australian ant-eater
-which has sparse hairs set on a hard and slightly corrugated epidermis,
-and, being mainly a nocturnal animal and living a secluded
-life, it does not walk much or far in its stealthy pursuit of worms
-and insects, and the stimuli of friction or pressure encountered
-by it are few.</p>
-
-<p>A similar condition is found on the feet of many small carnivores.</p>
-
-<p>Animals with scales on their feet, which are held to constitute
-the earliest stage of the Primate modifica­tion of papillary ridges
-are such as the <i>potoroo</i>, <i>wallaby</i>, <i>kangaroo</i> and <i>giant ant-eater</i>. Such
-scales register a long, long series of stimuli of friction and pressure
-in these and their ancestors, in a level of life before any delicate
-discrimina­tion of surfaces came into operation.</p>
-
-<p>The nodular form of skin is present in the Canadian <i>tree porcupine</i>,
-where rough nodules cluster closely on the surface of both
-feet, and it is a significant fact that it shares with the American
-<i>opossum</i> the peculiarity of nodules on the ventral surface of the
-powerful prehensile tail. This adapta­tion tends to efficiency in its
-arboreal life, and may well have been produced by infinitely small
-degrees of response in structure in the course of a long evolution.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>rabbit</i> alone have I found with rod-like projections of the
-epidermic cells, among which are set in dense order the soft, long,
-delicate hairs and which thus conduce to its wonderful power of
-treading on sharp objects without injury. We thus see the inner
-meaning of dear old Brer Rabbit’s jeer of triumph to Brer Fox,
-“Born and bred in a brier bush.” This adapta­tion might be an
-unit-character segregated from the ancestral stock of the Leporidæ,
-or it might not, but at any rate the rabbit leads a life in which its<span class="pagenum" title="152"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152"></a></span>
-walking or running is no more prominent or frequent than is a good
-“run” on the part of a hunter which pursues the hare with his
-beagles, and one may say at least this—that its mode of life has
-<i>not</i> produced a hard rough nodular surface on its feet by stimuli
-of pressure and friction and response.</p>
-
-<p>One may observe that there’s a divinity doth shape our ends,
-rough hew them as we may, even if some objection be taken to the
-present view of rough-hewing of parts of our organism on the
-ground of its piecemeal character, rather than dealing with the
-organism as a whole. To which it may be replied that the Mendelians
-give high support to the piecemeal study of the profound
-subject of genetics, and further that the business here is to look
-separately and simply at a few selected attributes of parts of
-an organism, and see how they <i>began</i> to grow big enough to avoid
-passing through the meshes of the sieve.</p>
-
-<p>The foregoing examples of animals in which papillary ridges
-are absent have been given not in their zoological order, nor as
-representative of a great many groups, but as taken from the
-eighty-six species I examined myself. The following belong to the
-same series, but all present papillary ridges in an ascending scale
-towards perfec­tion in man.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Examples of Ridge-covered Palms and Soles.</h3>
-
-<p>The common <i>hedgehog</i> though a burrowing animal like the
-<i>mole</i> is not always underground as his distant relative is. He is
-not always mining and though of ancient lineage he is a “slacker”
-compared with the mole, hibernating for months, and spending
-also much time in his nest and prowling slowly about above ground
-for insects. He has thus acquired his somewhat indifferent epidermis
-that one finds, but with the addition of sparse papillary ridges.
-It is the species among this list with the fewest of these tactile
-structures, for there are but three or four separate ridges on six
-of the ten digits, and radiating groups on only three of all the palmar
-and plantar pads. So <i>quâ</i> touch it is ill-equipped, though it has
-adapted a higher form of tool than the rabbit.</p>
-
-<p>The common <i>squirrel</i>, that sits much and walks mainly on
-branches of trees just as much as it needs to do, has an epidermis
-little differentiated, and one which is corrugated with scanty
-papillary ridges on the palmar and plantar pads, and none on the
-digits.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>squirrel-like phalanger</i> which flies always more or less
-downwards by a kind of parachute-arrangement has most of its
-palmar and plantar skin covered with papillary ridges encroaching<span class="pagenum" title="153"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153"></a></span>
-upon its corrugated areas, and a response to more delicate tactile
-experience has been thus produced by its intermittent performance
-of ordinary progression.</p>
-
-<p><i>Azara’s opossum</i> presents about as large a part of the surface
-covered with nodules as with papillary ridges, the latter highly-developed
-for an animal so low, zoologically-speaking, but one in
-which delicate discrimina­tion is much practised.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>kinkajou</i>, another arboreal animal which walks about on
-trees more than it uses its feet for prehension, trusting much to
-its prehensile tail, shows its corrugated epidermis and papillary
-ridges developed in about equal proportions.</p>
-
-<p>These five mammals thus show that the stimuli of pressure
-and friction and the response to them are being complicated by
-the addition of the more delicate tactile organs known as papillary
-ridges, and these, perhaps, in a secondary way are becoming useful
-in preventing friction. But I must not omit to point out that,
-<i>quâ</i> preven­tion of slipping, the few sparse papillary ridges of the
-<i>hedgehog</i>, <i>squirrel</i>, <i>kinkajou</i> and <i>flying-phalanger</i>, especially those
-on the extreme tips of the digits, could have no effect in this
-preven­tion and no survival value. It is otherwise when they are
-developed in large areas as in the succeeding groups.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Primates.</h3>
-
-<p>All the thirty species of Primates possessed papillary ridges
-to such an extent that only small areas of the palmar and plantar
-skin of the lemurs showed any other than these remarkable
-characters. It is so much a property of the Primate hand and foot
-to possess these that it might be almost made a matter of ordinal
-rank belonging to the Primates, were it not that a few stray lower
-mammals also possess it.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>black-headed lemur</i> is the lowest Primate examined and
-it is characterised by highly developed patterns of ridges on the
-palm and sole, and these are interspersed with nodules on the
-regions less exposed to pressure. The complexity of the patterns
-of another, the <i>ring-tailed lemur</i>, is greater still. Now these nodules
-are distinguished from the rough undifferentiated nodules of lower
-forms, such as the Canadian <i>tree-porcupine</i>, and from the scales
-in others. When examined with a lens the separate nodules show
-small groups of papillary ridges two, three or four on each nodule,
-arranged in a direction parallel to those of neighbouring nodules.
-They are in fact papillary ridges in embryo, and shortly above this
-lemur-stage in the ascent of animal life they are merged into papillary
-ridges in patterns. All this is well told at length by Dr. and Mrs.<span class="pagenum" title="154"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154"></a></span>
-H. Wilder Harris. I refer to it here because the disappearance
-of the rough, plain, nodular or corrugated epidermis in mammals
-is coincident with increasing activity and intelligence in forms who
-employ or acquire a more delicate sense of touch in their hands
-and feet. The cruder response of structure to stimuli of friction
-and pressure, evident in the lower forms, is abandoned in the higher,
-as tactile delicacy in prehension comes more into play. Here,
-for example, may be a subtle case of the co-operation of the mould
-and sieve in action.</p>
-
-<p>From this lemur-level the degree of development in the Primate
-palm and sole rises and falls, but always advances through the
-<i>lemuroidea</i>, <i>monkeys</i> and <i>anthropoid apes</i> to man. No attempt
-at the tracing of the lineage is made here, and from the present
-limited point of view little remains to be said about different
-Primates. Only two of those examined will be briefly referred to,
-the <i>slow loris</i> and man.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>slow loris</i> shares with many monkeys and apes a very soft
-moist skin of the palm and sole, and in this and other refinements
-of this region it is much beyond many more intelligent, active
-and higher Primates. I have never had social intercourse with a
-<i>loris</i>, but I have shaken the friendly little hand of a <i>chimpanzee</i>
-with a combina­tion of pleasure, mild shock and perhaps memories
-of my own palms in the more nervous moments of early life. It is
-a strange, cool, soft and damp surface, but the sensation conveyed
-by the skin of a <i>loris</i> lately dead show that in life it is a wonderfully
-sensitive and tender structure. The whole of the palm and sole
-is covered with well-developed patterns of papillary ridges especially
-on the palmar and plantar pads. No trace of old-fashioned nodules,
-scales or corruga­tion is to be found. The structures due to stimuli
-of friction and pressure in its ancestors have disappeared for ever
-from this specialised and small group, and we may fairly hold, in
-accordance with the law of conserva­tion of energy, that the past is
-somehow enwrapped in the present in the strange hands and feet
-of the <i>loris</i>. The adaptations of the hand and foot of the <i>loris</i>
-are most obviously now of value to it in its wary and dangerous
-life in the branches of trees, but are equally unfitted for that higher
-life which, in his case, consists in going lower down, on the ground.
-The extraordinary deliberate life of the <i>loris</i> has been often described.
-As he moves from place to place on a branch, fixing one limb before
-he moves another, much as we do in going up a ladder, he is subjected
-much to the stimuli of pressure, but hardly at all to those of friction.
-He sets us a good example of leaving nothing to chance. Thus
-his soft sensitive skin suits well his mode of progression, but he<span class="pagenum" title="155"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155"></a></span>
-would find the harder, rougher skin of an African baboon very
-inferior for the purpose. Here, indeed, I have ventured on the
-edge of Tom Tiddler’s ground, and the Pan-Selectionist or Mendelian
-will make a grab at me so that I escape with just the loss of a portion
-of clothing. After escaping I have only to observe to him as to the
-adaptations of a <i>loris’s</i> hand and foot that in human life, of which
-we know a little, one can in a measure forecast what a man will be
-like if we are told on reliable authority what he and his ancestors
-have <i>not</i> done in the way of muscular or cerebral output, without
-informa­tion as to what he has done. This is too obvious, but also
-too complex to prove here by numerous illustrations and it may
-be left as a mere sugges­tion as to the past life of the <i>loris</i> and his
-ancestors for many generations. He has <i>not</i> walked in the ordinary
-method of terrestrial mammals, he has always moved very slowly
-about the branches of trees, he sleeps most of the day in a hollow
-of a tree, curled up like a ball, and his home is in moist, tropical
-regions. No habits and conditions of life could be better calculated
-to soften and moisten the skin over his palms and soles or expose
-it less to stimuli of friction, while even those of pressure in his
-tenacious grasp of boughs are decidedly intermittent. Unless
-one may assume the appearance in the distant past of some unit-character
-of soft, moist skin in this and other Primates, it seems
-difficult to refuse the Lamarckian claim of long, long absence of
-effectual stimuli of friction and equally long presence of enervating
-“negative” conditions. Proof of such a view is, of course, wanting.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Palm and Sole of Man.</h3>
-
-<p>The palm of man’s hand is a miracle of adaptations for touch
-and grasping, but has lost most of the coarse structure formed in
-response to stimuli of pressure and friction which we saw were
-common in lower mammals. This indeed he shares with most
-simian forms. The skin of our hands is now very much what we
-make it and responds very soon to fresh positive or passive conditions.
-The horny, cracked epidermis on palm and digit of the
-old sailor may be contrasted with the soft and flexible and pale
-surface of his twin-brother, the bank clerk, who is of studious habits
-and has neither the vice of gardening nor golf. If one compares
-the hand of the ordinary maid with that of her mistress the difference
-is striking. But if one compares the hand of that mistress with that
-of her spinster sister who has lain for twenty years in bed or on a
-couch, the difference is equally significant. Indeed the sofa-and-bed-ridden
-invalid, of whom I knew a few once, but who have gone
-out of fashion, gives the observer some useful thoughts as to the<span class="pagenum" title="156"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156"></a></span>
-why and wherefore of the strange skin of the hands of the <i>slow
-loris</i> previously referred to. And if he be disposed also to the
-pleasant pursuit of moralizing at the expense of others he will feel
-led to reflect over harshly on the invalid and compare her outlook
-on life with that of the <i>loris</i>. Even in this concrete case of the
-hand of an invalid there may be evidence of positive as well as
-negative response, if one examines the right forefinger so much
-used in sewing, where the skin becomes hard and thick.</p>
-
-<p>The foot of man has a good deal of negative evidence in favour
-of my conten­tion as well as positive. As to the latter, in the
-thickening of the skin over the heel and ball of the great toe in those
-who walk much we find changes precisely similar to those on the
-hand. The negative or degenerative changes visible on man’s
-foot consist chiefly in the remarkable simplicity of pattern of the
-papillary ridges as well as their flattening and blurring, through
-wasting of those which occupy mainly the arch of the foot. These
-will be shown in the next chapter in a drawing. When this portion
-of skin is compared with that of the foot of any monkey or anthropoid
-ape it is clear that in this respect the skin of man’s foot has
-undergone even more degenera­tion than his hand has shown of
-higher development. This degenera­tion has coincided with two
-facts, first that man’s terrestrial locomo­tion has advanced far beyond
-that of any other Primate, and second, that he alone has a plantar
-arch. This subject belongs to a later chapter and is referred to
-here because the possession of an arch to his foot has caused man
-to escape, on the under surface of it, a vast propor­tion of the stimuli
-of pressure and friction involved in his mode of walking, and the
-extreme simplicity of his plantar papillary ridges, and relatively
-thin, soft skin under the plantar arches affords a fairly conclusive
-example of change of structure from disuse <i>per se</i>.</p>
-
-<p>I have thus only selected and used two striking types of the
-Primates, the <i>loris</i> and man, not wishing to burden this part of the
-subject unduly with intervening and less characteristic forms of
-life. It may be legitimate here to say in defence of this long chapter
-that it illustrates what I desire to keep before me all through, the
-fact that use, habit, environment and selection go ever hand in
-hand. In all matters of science one has to descend to particulars,
-so it seemed necessary to select a few scattered phenomena in the
-best known groups of higher animals and endeavour to understand
-how certain “characters” or better “modifications” <i>began</i> to
-grow big enough to avoid passing through the meshes of the sieve.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" title="157"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157"></a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XVIII.<br />
-
-ARRANGEMENT OF THE PAPILLARY RIDGES.</h2>
-
-
-<p>The subjects of the preceding, present, and the succeeding
-chapter are closely allied, from the fact that they all deal with
-structural changes in the mammalian skin, and that most of these
-are exhibited for us on our own palms and soles. They certainly
-comply with the canons of Henri Poincaré as to simplicity, regularity
-and chance of recurring.</p>
-
-<p>In the last chapter, papillary ridges as organs of touch were
-briefly referred to, but their mode of development into complicated
-patterns do not concern the questions here at issue. The general
-manner in which they are arranged on the hands and feet of man
-and the Primates below him is very much a matter for such Lamarckian
-methods of inquiry as I have chosen. In this examina­tion
-of the ridges I will proceed from man backwards among the Primates
-and lower still. I described these ridges, in a book previously
-referred to in the following words, and find no need to alter them
-here. “The ridges and adjoining furrows which cover the palmar
-and plantar surfaces of all Primates and a few lower forms in smaller
-degree, may be compared to the ridges of a ploughed field over
-which some object, as a light roller, has been passed, the effect of
-this being to produce a series of ridges with flattened tops. This
-can be well seen with a lens when the ridges are examined in profile,
-and is their normal condition in man and many lower animals,
-in nearly all the palmar, plantar and digital regions.<span class="nowrap">”<a id="FNanchor_64" href="#Footnote_64" class="fnanchor">64</a></span> The reserva­tion
-in the last sentence is not material here.</p>
-
-
-<h3>The Hand of Man.</h3>
-
-<div class="figright" style="width: 280px;">
-<a id="Fig_59"></a>
-<img src="images/i_158.jpg" alt="" height="459" width="280" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="taj">Fig. 59.—W.&nbsp;K. Right hand draw­ing of pap­il­lary ridges,
-made from im­pres­sions.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Beginning with the tips of man’s fingers and excluding the
-wonderful patterns which Galton did so much to elucidate and
-bring into order, we find the ridges are placed, to a remarkable
-extent, parallel with the skin-flexures which will be treated in the
-next chapter. I term the thumb and fingers D 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 for the
-sake of accuracy (Fig.&nbsp;59). Over the last joints (distal) of all the
-digits the ridges suddenly diverge from their directions in the
-patterns of the pulps, and become arranged transversely to the<span class="pagenum" title="158"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158"></a></span>
-axis of the digits. This arrangement is observed on the remaining
-segments of the digits except, very significantly, on the outer or
-radial side of D 2 and the inner or ulnar side of D 5 where they slope
-more or less towards the palm. Their lines thus cross slightly
-those of the skin-flexures in these small areas. On the radial side
-of D 1 this slope appears in a minor degree, but here it coincides
-with those of the flexures. On the palm are similar arrangements
-of the ridges near the radial and ulnar borders, and especially on the
-two great eminences, thenar and hypothenar, also at the bases of
-digits 2, 3, 4 and 5. Over the rest of the palm they are arranged
-in a longitudinal or oblique direction. These brief descriptions are
-enough to show the close correspondence of the arrangement of
-the ridges with the flexion of the numerous joints of the hand.
-An observer can demonstrate this by holding up the open hand in<span class="pagenum" title="159"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159"></a></span>
-a good light and flexing the fingers slightly, which brings nearly
-all the ridges adjacent to the joints into directions parallel with
-one another, the greater lengths of D 3 and 4, and their closer
-functional connec­tion with one another, producing thus a transverse
-arrangement, and in D 1, 2 and 5 a more oblique one. In the palm
-this correspondence of ridges with flexion lines of joints is not found
-so much except in the central part of this surface. But the oblique
-and longitudinal ridges of the palm where it becomes concave in
-the action of folding the hand over a globular object are well shown
-there also to correspond with such action.</p>
-
-<p>This general grouping of ridges is seen, <i>mutatis mutandis</i>, to
-belong to all the palms and soles of lower Primates, and the illustrations
-given will speak for themselves, so that little need be said
-on each.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Reasons for Arrangement Observed.</h3>
-
-<p>When one discusses the forces in action on man’s hand which
-are claimed to have thus arranged the ridges, in regard to the
-question of use and habit, little more need be added as to those
-of other Primates, and it is because we know more about ourselves
-than them, and our own palms and soles are available for inspec­tion,
-that I have taken man as the example.</p>
-
-<p>The main question is the old and now familiar one: “Are
-these ridges arranged as we see them <i>by</i> use and habit, or adapted
-<i>for</i> use?” Dr. Hepburn and the orthodox Selectionist would say
-that, of course, their mode of arrangement is an adapta­tion governed
-by selection for preventing slipping in the action of grasping an
-object by the hand, and in the foot for preventing slipping in walking.
-This does not take into account the question as to how the original
-slight shifting of the ridges in the earliest man and in lower forms
-could have had selective or survival value, for example, the insignificant
-sparse groups of ridges on the palm, sole and <i>tips</i> of
-the digits in a hedgehog or squirrel. As things are now they <i>do</i>
-subserve these purposes. But I think this matter of preven­tion
-of slipping has been much exaggerated, though I may be told that
-this is a matter of opinion and not a valid argument against the
-hypothesis.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Foot of Man.</h3>
-
-<div class="figright" style="width: 210px;">
-<a id="Fig_60"></a>
-<img src="images/i_160.jpg" alt="" height="545" width="210" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="taj">Fig. 60 S.&nbsp;K. Right foot draw­ing
-of pap­il­lary ridges made from
-im­pres­sion.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The point may be best understood by considering the foot of
-man, of which Fig.&nbsp;60 shows a good example. The value of the
-roughened surface of the foot with its papillary ridges can hardly
-have been great, even in the days when man’s foot was naked,
-at any rate so little that for him to acquire by a selectional process<span class="pagenum" title="160"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160"></a></span>
-such a remarkable <i>change</i> of arrangement as we see when we look
-at the foot of man and of any other Primate involves on our part
-a tremendous stretch of imagina­tion as to its <i>modus operandi</i>.
-These low, soft ridges of man’s foot could do little to prevent him
-from slipping on such surfaces as
-grass, sand, rock, wet or dry, and
-from the time when he began to
-protect his feet with coverings this
-small value would be further
-reduced. <i>Underneath his developing
-plantar arch it would not exist at
-all, and yet here especially he has
-changed their direction.</i> As to the
-papillary ridges, man’s foot has
-sadly embarked on the pathway of
-degenera­tion much as his little toe
-has done. Not only has he here a
-much simpler arrangement than
-any ape or monkey, but the
-individual ridges are blurred and
-flattened on much of the plantar
-surface. This comes of his pride in
-acquiring his human distinc­tion, or
-title of nobility, of a plantar arch
-and his coincident increase of
-pedestrian locomo­tion. On the
-triple bases of support, heel, ball
-of great and little toe, the ridges
-are still strongly marked and
-coarse; transverse on the heel,
-whorl-like on the ball of the
-great toe, and oblique or nearly
-transverse on that of the little
-toe. On the rest of the surface
-they are vulgarly transverse.
-And I may add that the toe-prints
-of man are simplicity itself
-compared with his finger-prints.
-It would seem that this example
-of arrangement of ridges on man’s foot is strongly in favour of
-the hypothesis that they are so disposed by flexion of the foot
-in walking, and not by some need for preven­tion of slipping
-under the guidance of selection.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" title="161"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161"></a></span></p>
-
-
-<h3>Lower Animals.</h3>
-
-<div class="figleft" style="width: 340px;">
-<a id="Fig_61"></a>
-<img src="images/i_161.jpg" alt="" height="399" width="340" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="tac">Fig. 61.—Slow loris—right foot.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>At the other end of the scale the scanty ridges of a hedgehog’s
-or squirrel’s foot would be negligible in preventing slipping, however
-useful they would be, as I hold, as early organs of touch. Between
-these extremes the <i>slow loris</i> affords a valuable example to study,
-with the help of Fig.&nbsp;61. The foot, as more concerned with preven­tion
-of slipping than the hand, is chosen for observa­tion, but with
-little exception the hand agrees closely with it. On the tips of
-four digits, D 1, 3, 4 and 5, omitting D 2 for the moment, the ridges
-are arranged nearly in a longitudinal direction, and would on that
-account have little or no effect in preventing slipping of the foot.
-If this be disputed one can but reply that if the need of preventing
-slipping in this tiny area were to call forth selective value this is not
-the arrangement of the ridges that best serves the purpose. It
-may be remarked here that the pulps of <i>lemurs</i>, the <i>marmoset</i> and
-<i>squirrel monkey</i> all show this indifferent mode of grouping of ridges.
-The aborted D 2 of the <i>loris</i>, with its hooked nail overhanging the<span class="pagenum" title="162"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162"></a></span>
-circular pattern of ridges, is obviously quite unadapted for any
-non-slipping effect of its skin, as a glance at the figure shows.
-On the remaining segments of the digits the ridges in the main
-slope from each side of each digit in the distal direction and fail
-here also to obtain the best, or transverse direction for preventing
-slipping in locomo­tion. The corresponding surface of D 1 is not
-different from its pulp as to direction of ridges, and it is here to be
-noted and admitted that when this muscular great toe is tightly
-applied to a branch, which from its shape it must cross at a right
-angle, the non-slipping effect of the longitudinal ridges would be
-very effective. One must then notice that over the middle of the
-sole of this foot the ridges have again changed their direction and
-lie in a transverse direction. Between this and the basis of the
-digits are three fleshy pads and an intervening area of longitudinal
-ridges.</p>
-
-<p>The first question that arises in the attempt to analyse so
-complex a grouping on a strange member like the foot of a <i>loris</i>
-is this—what is the primary function subserved by the ridges
-and their mode of arrangement, and what may be their secondary
-uses? In the book referred to I have maintained throughout, in
-opposi­tion to Mrs. Wilder Harris and others such as Dr. Hepburn,
-that the sense of touch is the primary, and preven­tion of slipping
-the secondary adapta­tion secured by the ridges. If this be true
-(and I know it is <i>sub judice</i>) there is a very clear reason why the
-ridges should be longitudinal on the tips of the digits on account
-of the better discrimina­tion of small objects secured by this arrangement,
-though it does not well assist the <i>loris</i> to avoid slipping.
-On D 1, as mentioned, the non-slipping effect is secured by its
-ridges, and this digit is necessarily less employed for discrimina­tion
-than support. On the other hand the sloping arrangement on the
-rest of the segments of D 3, 4, 5 is decidedly less effective in preventing
-slipping than a transverse arrangement would have been.
-I think I am justified in saying that too much has been made of
-this secondary effect of the ridges in the preven­tion of slipping.
-I know that the string wound round the handle of a cricket bat is
-very effective for its purpose, but one can also understand that a
-casual strand wound here and there on the handle as the ridges
-are on a <i>hedgehog’s</i> and <i>squirrel’s</i> hand and foot would be of little
-use for the purpose.</p>
-
-<p>On the other hand if the view may be entertained that on the
-palm and sole of <i>hedgehog</i>, <i>squirrel</i>, <i>loris</i> and man, we have written
-in rows of papillary ridges and their modes of arrangement a register
-of long-continued flexion of hand and foot in flexion and correlated<span class="pagenum" title="163"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163"></a></span>
-actions, we find the facts of these and numerous other Primates
-agree in a remarkable manner with the hypothesis; whereas the
-exclusive non-slipping rival has many awkward facts to explain,
-or disregard.</p>
-
-<p>Further as one has always to bear in mind the Mendelian
-analysis it should be observed that the extreme variability, within
-certain limits, of the arrangements of papillary ridges throughout
-the Primates renders the hypothesis of unit-characters segregated,
-according to Mendelian laws, wholly inapplicable to the <i>manner
-of their arrangement</i> even though perhaps not so to the <i>existence</i>
-of papillary ridges.</p>
-
-<div class="figcontainer">
-<div class="figsub" style="width: 162px;">
-<a id="Fig_62"></a>
-<img src="images/i_163-a.jpg" alt="" height="380" width="162" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="tac">Fig. 62.<br />
-Hedgehog—right foot.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figsub" style="width: 182px;">
-<a id="Fig_62a"></a>
-<img src="images/i_163-b.jpg" alt="" height="380" width="182" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="tac">Fig. 62<span class="lowercase smcap">A</span>.<br />
-Hedgehog—right hand.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figsub" style="width: 176px;">
-<a id="Fig_63"></a>
-<img src="images/i_163-c.jpg" alt="" height="380" width="176" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="tac">Fig. 63.<br />
-Common squirrel—left foot.</p></div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>It may be bluntly asserted that the ridges are arranged as we
-find them because, hands and feet being used as they are, the ridges
-“can do no other,” and that there’s an end of it, and that we
-cannot derive any help as to the origin of specific difference from
-such a trifle, the next item on the agenda should be called for. As
-a piece of dialectics that would be effective, but if taken literally
-it only goes to prove my simple conten­tion.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" title="164"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164"></a></span></p>
-
-<p>It will be enough to mention the hand alone of the remaining
-series with a note as to each animal.</p>
-
-<p>Fig. 64 gives the hand of a <i>chimpanzee</i> with ridges on the pulps
-resembling those of all the <i>apes</i>, <i>monkeys</i> and <i>lemurs</i>, arched groups
-on the digits and longitudinal ones on the centre of the palm, both
-of these last two being exactly what would be found arising from
-the actions of climbing branches and discriminating globular objects
-in the palm.</p>
-
-<div class="figcontainer">
-<div class="figsub" style="width: 294px;">
-<a id="Fig_64"></a>
-<img src="images/i_164-a.jpg" alt="" height="480" width="294" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="tac">Fig. 64.—Chimpanzee—right hand.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figsub" style="width: 267px;">
-<a id="Fig_66"></a>
-<img src="images/i_164-b.jpg" alt="" height="480" width="267" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="tac">Fig. 66.—Orang—right hand.</p></div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Fig. 65 is that of a <i>gorilla</i> and its general features resemble
-closely those of the <i>chimpanzee</i> and of Fig.&nbsp;66 which is that of an
-<i>orang</i>.</p>
-
-<div class="figcontainer">
-<div class="figsub" style="width: 295px;">
-<a id="Fig_65"></a>
-<img src="images/i_165-a.jpg" alt="" height="455" width="295" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="tac">Fig. 65.—Gorilla—left hand.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figsub" style="width: 195px;">
-<a id="Fig_67"></a>
-<img src="images/i_165-b.jpg" alt="" height="455" width="195" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="tac">Fig. 67.—Gibbon—left hand.</p></div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Fig. 67 of a <i>Hainan gibbon</i> is very different on the palm from
-the other three apes for its ridges are nearly all longitudinal or<span class="pagenum" title="165"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165"></a></span>
-slightly oblique, precisely as one would find this part if the <i>palm</i>
-were used very little for grasping boughs and much for discriminating
-globular objects procured for its repasts. The wonderful long
-digits of the gibbon form its main organ for supporting itself on
-branches and swinging its body rapidly from branch to branch, and
-the arched or nearly transverse ridges on the digits are
-placed just as the endless use of them for this purpose would
-be likely to follow from it. This example is a very clear one
-for showing, if it exist, the effect of use and habit on the disposi­tion
-of the ridges.</p>
-
-<div class="figcontainer">
-<div class="figsub" style="width: 212px;">
-<a id="Fig_68"></a>
-<img src="images/i_166-a.jpg" alt="" height="460" width="212" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="tac">Fig. 68.—Left foot of ring-tailed
-lemur.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figsub" style="width: 212px;">
-<a id="Fig_69"></a>
-<img src="images/i_166-b.jpg" alt="" height="460" width="212" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="tac">Fig. 69.—Brown sapajou,
-right hand.</p></div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Fig. 68 shows the arrangement of papillary ridges in a <i>lemur</i>
-and 69 that of a brown <i>sapajou</i>.</p>
-
-<div class="figleft" style="width: 250px;">
-<a id="Fig_70"></a>
-<img src="images/i_168.jpg" alt="" height="439" width="250" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="tac">Fig. 70.—Left hand of chacma baboon.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Fig. 70 of the <i>Chacma baboon</i>, playfully called by the Boers
-Adonis, is a very active and wary animal which lives on the rough
-rocky slopes of the Cape. It is very much of a pedestrian and the<span class="pagenum" title="166"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166"></a></span>
-response of its mode of life and use of its forefoot is shown in five
-great pads of muscle and efficient whorls of ridges for touch, those
-on the digits being very nearly all transverse in accordance with
-simple flexion of these joints. This again is what one would expect
-if my hypothesis be sound. The purely non-slipping mechanism
-supposed by the rival view is not here well supported by the facts.</p>
-
-<p>Neither the arrangements of ridges (Fig.&nbsp;<a href="#Fig_61">61</a>), in <i>loris</i>, nor the
-<i>hedgehog</i> (Fig.&nbsp;<a href="#Fig_62">62</a>), nor the <i>squirrel</i> (Fig.&nbsp;<a href="#Fig_63">63</a>), need further reference,
-but they are all, I think, very consistent with the prolonged effects
-of use and habit.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Some Undesigned Experiments in Ridges.</h3>
-
-<p>This section of the subject has afforded a good supply of
-indirect evidence, but so far no direct proof that papillary ridges<span class="pagenum" title="167"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167"></a></span>
-can be created and disposed in their lines by pressure, friction and
-response. The clearest case is one I brought forward at the
-Zoological Society of London in 1905, and which was published in
-its proceedings of April 18th. It was an instance of the hand of a
-<i>chimpanzee</i> with papillary ridges produced in an aberrant or
-abnormal situation by walking, and was given as <span class="nowrap">follows:—</span></p>
-
-<p class="ml2em">“In the course of an examina­tion of the papillary ridges
-in some specimens of anthropoid apes and monkeys certain
-groups of ridges were found on the <i>extensor</i> surface of the
-terminal phalanges of the hand, apparently identical with
-those of the palmar and plantar surfaces. Three specimens
-of chimpanzee living in the Society’s menagerie were examined,
-of the ages: one year eight months, two-and-a-half years and
-six years. In the oldest of these, called “Mickie,” the ridges
-were definite and well-developed, on the second, third and
-fourth digits on both hands; in the youngest specimen, “Jack,”
-they were absent; and in “Jimmie,” two-and-a-half years
-old, they were small and ill-defined, as if in process of
-development.</p>
-
-<h3>Direction of Ridges.</h3>
-
-
-<div class="center">
-<table class="fs100" summary="" border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" width="75%">
-<col width="17%" /><col width="5%" /><col width="3%" /><col width="42%" /><col width="13%" /><col width="5%" /><col width="3%" /><col width="13%" />
-<tr><td class="tal vat"><i>Mickie.</i></td><td class="tal pl11hi" colspan="7">Ridges longitudinal and reaching to the matrix of the nail on the second, third and fourth digits.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tal"><i>Jimmie.</i></td><td class="tal pl11hi" colspan="7">Showed ridges as follows:—</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tar">&nbsp;&nbsp;R.&nbsp;hand&nbsp;</td><td class="tal">1st</td><td class="tal">D</td><td class="tal">&nbsp;none.</td><td class="tar">L.&nbsp;hand&nbsp;</td><td class="tal">1st</td><td class="tal">D</td><td class="tal">&nbsp;none.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tal"></td><td class="tal">2nd</td><td class="tal">&nbsp;"</td><td class="tal">&nbsp;oblique.</td><td class="tar"></td><td class="tal">2nd</td><td class="tal">&nbsp;"</td><td class="tal">&nbsp;oblique.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tal"></td><td class="tal">3rd</td><td class="tal">&nbsp;"</td><td class="tal"><span class="ilb">&nbsp;transverse at base of D.</span></td><td class="tar"></td><td class="tal">3rd</td><td class="tal">&nbsp;"</td><td class="tal">&ensp;&emsp;"</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tal"></td><td class="tal">4th</td><td class="tal">&nbsp;"</td><td class="tal"><span class="ilb">&emsp;&emsp;"&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&ensp;"&emsp;&emsp;"</span></td><td class="tar"></td><td class="tal">4th</td><td class="tal">&nbsp;"</td><td class="tal">&ensp;&emsp;"</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tal"></td><td class="tal">5th</td><td class="tal">&nbsp;"</td><td class="tal">&nbsp;nearly longitudinal.</td><td class="tar"></td><td class="tal">5th</td><td class="tal">&nbsp;"</td><td class="tal">&nbsp;none.</td></tr>
-</table></div>
-
-<p class="ml2em"><i>In these three specimens ridges were absent from the corresponding
-surfaces of the foot.</i></p>
-
-<p class="ml2em">“The well-defined longitudinal direction of the ridges
-in “Mickie” is worth notice. It must be remembered in
-this connec­tion that a chimpanzee walks with the extensor
-surfaces of the phalanges touching the ground and the digits
-turned inwards, so that their long axis are at right angles to
-the line of progression of the animal, and accordingly the ridges
-of this part also occupy the same relative position. There is
-no correla­tion in this instance between the act of prehension
-and the direction of the ridges, though it agrees closely with
-the general rule which obtains in so many regions, that the
-ridges lie at right angles to the line of incidence of the
-predominating pressure on the part.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" title="168"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168"></a></span></p>
-
-<p>In this example of ridges developed on an abnormal situation we
-see what is, perhaps, an undesigned experiment as to the produc­tion
-of ridges by a more frequent habit of walking in captivity than
-would be found to occur in the wild state, for, as Lydekker says
-in the <i>Royal Natural History</i>, Vol.&nbsp;I, p.&nbsp;27, “When the chimpanzee
-goes on all-fours, he generally supports himself on the backs of his
-closed fingers rather than on the palm of the hand (see Fig.&nbsp;6 of the
-illustra­tion on p.&nbsp;15) and
-he goes <i>sometimes</i> on the
-soles of his feet and <i>sometimes</i>
-on his closed toes.”</p>
-
-<p>I have underlined
-purposely this word “sometimes,”
-for in the instance
-I have described, not only
-the presence of the ridges
-and their direction on the
-backs of the fingers but
-their absence on the backs
-of the toes is significant,
-and I suggest that the
-<i>chimpanzees</i> examined have
-not sufficiently often exposed
-the backs of their
-toes to pressure and friction
-for the produc­tion of ridges,
-whereas those on the backs
-of the fingers have done so.
-Another point worth notice
-is that in the oldest of the
-three <i>chimpanzees</i>, “Mickie,”
-æt six years, the greatest
-number of ridges is present;
-in “Jimmie,” æt two-and-a-half
-years, they were
-“small and ill-defined as if in process of development,” and in
-“Jack,” æt twenty months they were absent. This would agree at
-any rate with the hypothesis that the element of time and frequent
-repeti­tion of stimuli enter into the causation of aberrant ridges.</p>
-
-<p>A similar condition, with aberrant papillary ridges, has been
-found on the digits of the hand of the <i>orang</i>.</p>
-
-<p>On the heel of adult man ridges are found surrounding it, of
-the average depth of one inch from the plantar surface, and in one<span class="pagenum" title="169"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169"></a></span>
-particular case of a woman aged forty-nine, the depth of this area
-on each foot measured was one and a half inches from the plantar
-surface.</p>
-
-<p>The extensor surface, or back, of the little toe shows ridges
-when it is distorted by ill-fitting boots.</p>
-
-<p>In man ridges frequently appear on the radial side of the back
-or extensor surface of the index finger to nearly the middle line
-of the finger, and this is often more on the right than the left hand.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" title="170"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170"></a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XIX.<br />
-
-FLEXURES OF THE PALM AND SOLE.</h2>
-
-
-<p>Those flexures of the palmar and plantar skin which are called
-by Galton chiromantic creases, and said by him to be no more
-significant to others than palmists than the creases of old clothes,
-have received a remarkable amount of pseudo-scientific attention
-since earliest times in Chinese and Greek history. The former
-even added podoscopy to their chiromancy. The line of life, the
-line of the head, the line of the heart, the line of fortune and that
-of the liver, figure freely in fortune-telling of modern drawing-rooms
-by women who ought to be in Holloway gaol, but are not. The
-gipsies, their predecessors and equally honest teachers, did not
-employ such high-sounding words, but I believe that by observing
-closely the bearing, looks, dress and manner of their dupes, while
-pretending to study their palms, both classes of practitioners, like
-phrenologists, are able to tell a good deal of what their customers
-<i>are</i>, and being shrewd persons they are able to guess pretty well
-what they <i>will be and will do</i>.</p>
-
-<p>I agree with Galton that these creases of hand and foot are
-no more significant than those of an old coat-sleeve, a pair of
-trousers, or boots; but they are not less significant of certain muscular
-habits of the wearers of those articles<span class="nowrap">.<a id="FNanchor_65" href="#Footnote_65" class="fnanchor">65</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The flexures in question are in line with the subjects of the
-two preceding chapters, and require little more descrip­tion in detail
-than is afforded by the accompanying illustra­tion of mammalian
-hands and feet.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Description of Flexures.</h3>
-
-<p>There are two classes which may be conveniently called here
-Primary and Secondary, the latter being too variable and accidental
-for further notice. The former lie in three main directions and are
-longitudinal, oblique or transverse. They represent in graphic
-characters the nature and degree of the functions exercised by<span class="pagenum" title="171"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171"></a></span>
-muscles moving the joints which underlie them, and are often
-called “flexion-lines.” They are “folds so disposed that the
-thick skin shall be capable of bending in grasping while it at the
-same time requires to be tightly bound down to the skeleton of
-the hands and feet, so as to prevent slipping of the skin which would
-necessarily lead to insecurity of prehension, just as the quilting
-and buttoning down of the covers of furniture by upholsterers
-keeps them from slipping. For this purpose the skin is tied by
-fibres of white fibrillar
-tissue to the deep
-layer of the dermis
-along the lateral and
-lower edges of the
-palmar fascia and to
-the sheaths of the
-flexor tendons. The
-folds, therefore, which
-are disposed for the
-purpose of making the
-grasp secure, vary with
-the relative lengths of
-the metacarpal bones,
-with the mutual relations
-of the sheaths
-of the tendons and
-the edge of the
-palmar and plantar
-fascia.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. The
-sulci are emphasised
-because the subcutaneous
-fat, which is
-copious in order to
-pad the skin for the
-purpose of holding,
-being restricted to
-the interval between
-the lines along which
-the skin is tied down, makes these intervals project, and
-these are the monteculi.<span class="nowrap">”<a id="FNanchor_66" href="#Footnote_66" class="fnanchor">66</a></span></p>
-
-<p>This account of them from a leading anatomist shows that
-not for nothing have these creases been evolved. They are
-inherited, have an important function and are worthy of study in<span class="pagenum" title="172"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172"></a></span>
-their humble way: they may be even dignified with the name
-“character.”</p>
-
-<p>They are often double over the joints of the fingers and toes,
-but, from the functional point of view and for simplicity, may be
-reckoned as single.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Chief Types.</h3>
-
-<div class="figright" style="width: 290px;">
-<a id="Fig_71"></a>
-<img src="images/i_171.jpg" alt="" height="462" width="290" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="tac">Fig. 71.—Flexures on palm of right hand.
-Drawing made from impression.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The most common types of them in the hand of man are
-shown in the example given in Fig.&nbsp;71.</p>
-
-<p class="ml2em">1. A flexure over each phalangeal joint.</p>
-
-<p class="ml2em">2. A flexure at the bases of the digits.</p>
-
-<p class="ml2em">3. A flexure over the metacarpo-phalangeal joints of D 2, 3, 4
-and 5 with an oblique direction, called <i>linea mensalis</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="ml2em">4. A flexure over these same joints and oblique in direction,
-but nearer to the wrist—the <i>linea cephalica</i>. These
-flexures 3 and 4, though arising from the flexion of one
-set of joints should be looked at as separate folds because
-of their time-honoured popular names.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" title="173"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173"></a></span></p>
-
-<p class="ml2em">5. A curving flexure surrounding the thenar eminence,
-extending from the centre of the wrist along the palm
-and terminating at the radial border.</p>
-
-<p class="ml2em">6. Variable longitudinal and oblique flexures not specified,
-which I have called secondary.</p>
-
-<h3>Meaning.</h3>
-
-<p>Whatever be the meaning and origin of these flexures they
-are not mere folds such as one makes in a garment and leaves it so.
-Action, function and fitting of the structures of the hand and foot
-are involved in their history. They may loosely be termed
-“ergographs” without any reference to the exact measurement
-of work done. No proper idea can be formed of them if the original
-function and evolution of the walking-pads of earlier mammals
-be omitted. If one goes back and back until one reaches some
-lowly marsupial as a <i>vulpine phalanger</i>, or insectivore such as a
-common <i>hedgehog</i>, one may even metaphorically see these animals<span class="pagenum" title="174"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174"></a></span>
-being fitted by a shoemaker with rude shoes or walking-pads for
-the better locomo­tion on or under ground, or in the branches of
-trees. These pads are projecting masses of hard fat with fibrous
-tissue interspersed and they early become fitted or adapted <i>to</i> or <i>by</i>
-the use to which they are put. It is impossible to suppose that
-certain rudimentary pads are devised by selective processes prior
-to the altered habits of walking of the animal that acquires them.
-From the shoemaking point of view the fashion is rough and
-generalised, and the changing habits of the animal adapt the shoe
-by degrees to the function employed, much as many a private
-soldier knows to his cost that he has had to adapt slowly and
-painfully his army boot to his particular foot. This process in an
-early pedestrian mammal involves the breaking up and limiting
-of the rudimentary pads by sulci in the dense skin, and the process
-of struggle and adjustment between the pads and their bordering
-furrows issues in the characteristic flexure of each mammal. From
-experiences in the human body one knows how easily fibrous
-adhesions between the skin and deeper parts, notably in cases of
-Dupuytren’s contrac­tion of the palmar fascia, are formed by close
-apposi­tion of the two layers. Such adhesion is precluded when
-much movement of the part occurs, but <i>ex-hypothesi</i> the rudimentary<span class="pagenum" title="175"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175"></a></span>
-flexures are distinguished by absence of movement, and the conditions
-for fixing down the deeper layers of the skin to the bones
-beneath are clearly present. That these are not indifferent structures
-is evident from what Macalister says, and though they be
-small or even trivial may be held to have acquired at some time or
-other selective value. Their early stages would necessarily be
-too tentative, varied and slight to acquire such value.</p>
-
-<div class="figcontainer">
-<div class="figsub" style="width: 150px;">
-<a id="Fig_72"></a>
-<img src="images/i_172-a.jpg" alt="" height="411" width="150" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="tac">Fig. 72.—Foot of common
-squirrel.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figsub" style="width: 200px;">
-<a id="Fig_73"></a>
-<img src="images/i_172-b.jpg" alt="" height="411" width="200" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="tac">Fig. 73.—Flexures on foot of
-vulpine phalanger.</p></div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Fig. 72 is a sketch of the hand and foot of a squirrel (Sciurus)
-and the numbers 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 and 6 are placed conspicuously
-on the walking pads in accordance with the teaching of Dr. and
-Mrs. Wilder Harris as to the six palmar and plantar walking-pads,
-of which the typical palm and sole is constructed. The thick, black
-lines indicate the flexures formed round the pads by the exercise
-of the functions of the hand and foot.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" title="176"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176"></a></span></p>
-
-<p>Fig. 73 represents the clumsy, thick walking-pads of a
-marsupial the vulpine phalanger, <i>trichosurus vulpecula</i>.</p>
-
-<div class="figcontainer">
-<div class="figsub" style="width: 250px;">
-<a id="Fig_74"></a>
-<img src="images/i_173-a.jpg" alt="" height="388" width="250" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="tac">Fig. 74.—Foot of loris.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figsub" style="width: 178px;">
-<a id="Fig_75"></a>
-<img src="images/i_173-b.jpg" alt="" height="388" width="178" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="tac">Fig. 75.—Foot of ring-tailed
-lemur.</p></div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Fig. 74, the highly-developed prehensile foot of the loris.</p>
-
-<p>Fig. 75, the foot of a ring-tailed lemur.</p>
-
-<div class="figcontainer">
-<div class="figsub" style="width: 158px;">
-<a id="Fig_76"></a>
-<img src="images/i_174-a.jpg" alt="" height="342" width="158" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="tac">Fig. 76.—Foot of squirrel-monkey.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figsub" style="width: 180px;">
-<a id="Fig_77"></a>
-<img src="images/i_174-b.jpg" alt="" height="342" width="180" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="tac">Fig. 77.—Foot of macaque.</p></div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Fig. 76, the foot of a squirrel-monkey (Chrysothrix Sciurea).</p>
-
-<p>Fig. 77, the foot of a macacus
-(Macacus cynomologus).</p>
-
-<div class="figcontainer">
-<div class="figsub" style="width: 178px;">
-<a id="Fig_78"></a>
-<img src="images/i_175-a.jpg" alt="" height="469" width="178" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="tac">Fig. 78.—Foot of gibbon.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figsub" style="width: 250px;">
-<a id="Fig_79"></a>
-<img src="images/i_175-b.jpg" alt="" height="469" width="250" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="tac">Fig. 79.—Hand of chimpanzee.</p></div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Fig. 78, the foot of a gibbon.</p>
-
-<p>Fig. 79, the hand of a chimpanzee
-and here the resemblance
-to the <i>hand</i> of man and <i>not to the
-foot of man</i> is very striking.</p>
-
-<p>A description has already been
-given of man’s flexures of the
-palm.</p>
-
-<div class="figright" style="width: 210px;">
-<a id="Fig_80"></a>
-<img src="images/i_176.jpg" alt="" height="536" width="210" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="taj">Fig. 80.—Drawing of flex­ures of
-sole of foot in young adult.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Fig. 80 is a careful drawing
-of the sole of a young active
-woman with a well-formed foot,
-and there is little typical in the
-mode of arrangement of its creases
-except the slight tendency to
-transverse lines of flexure. In all
-the feet I have examined I have
-found no single flexure that is
-constant, and the longitudinal ones
-here shown are often absent.</p>
-
-<p>Reviewing these examples one
-observes an evolutional decay of a
-minor but necessary piece of
-mechanism of the Primate hand and
-foot. The general similarity, <i>mutatis
-mutandis</i>, of the flexures of the
-palm and sole in Primates is very
-noticeable, and is associated with the
-strong prehensile power of the
-foot of all the forms below man.
-In the cases of the two apes
-shown in this series, the resemblance is still well marked,
-more so even in the chimpanzee than the gibbon, so that
-the disappearance from the sole of man’s foot of any
-important flexure is very significant of his loss of prehensile
-and gain of locomotive perfec­tion, and I find it impossible to
-conceive any process of evolutionary change where a loss of the<span class="pagenum" title="177"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177"></a></span>
-flexures of a prehensile foot could come under the power of selection,
-on its own merits. On the other hand this remarkable instance of
-disuse of a formerly useful structure is adequately accounted for
-by the evolution of an organ like the human foot which in course
-of long periods of time became an organ of one function. Weismann
-might score a point over Spencer from his laboured explanations
-of man’s dwindling little toe, but here, I submit, he would have
-had to take refuge in silence, and pass to characters of a higher
-and more debateable kind.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" title="178"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178"></a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XX.<br />
-
-THE EVOLUTION OF A BURSA.</h2>
-
-
-<p>A bursa exercises a function in the animal body which is the
-direct opposite of that shown to belong to the flexures of the hand
-and foot. Whereas the latter are adapted to the preven­tion of
-slipping in the act of prehension, bursæ are delicate contrivances
-for producing the maximum effect of sliding, within certain limits,
-between two opposed surfaces, either between the skin and a hard
-surface beneath it, between two muscles, or a tendon as it moves
-over a bone. As they are very variable and most of them are
-inherited and congenital, while some are produced only in the lifetime
-of the individual, they are useful for considera­tion in regard
-to the questions of transmission of modifications and of the origin
-of initial variations. Their degree of utility ranges, for example,
-in man, from that of the prepatellar bursa without which no useful
-movement of the knee-joint is imaginable, to the insignificant
-bursa which may or may not be found on the dorsal surface of a
-phalangeal joint of the foot. The principle laid down by Lyell, to
-which allusion has been made elsewhere, that is, of “explaining
-changes in the surface of the earth by reference to causes now in
-action,” is applicable in this small department of the evolution of
-a minor structure of the animal body. As man furnishes the largest
-of all collections of these lubricating organs, his skeleton and skeletal
-muscles will form the main subject of this chapter, and I venture,
-if one may say so, to “Lyell” them. None of the sections of this
-book except that on the mammalian hair affords so simple and easy
-a field for watching in operation certain mechanical forces. We
-may here go down to the potter’s house and watch him moulding
-his clay, or the cobbler his leather. So much are bursæ in the human
-body under the power of extraneous forces that I venture to say
-that if some young surgeon of an inquiring mind were to choose
-a place and time when the Honourable and Vigilant Stephen
-Coleridge was out of the way, and were to produce in a young
-<i>chimpanzee</i> under an anæsthetic a “greenstick fracture” of his
-radius and ulna, immobilising it at a right angle for a month, the
-animal would exhibit at his death some years later a highly developed<span class="pagenum" title="179"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179"></a></span>
-bursa over the bony protuberance nearly as good as the olecranon
-bursa on the uninjured side, and better than that of the injured
-limb. As I have reason to know the meticulous vigilance of this
-professional and expert humanitarian I hasten here to say in advance
-that I do not recommend this experiment, not because it would
-not be entirely justifiable, but because nature herself in the highest
-Primate has produced many undesigned experiments of nearly
-equal value, as I hope to show.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Bursæ Described.</h3>
-
-<p>Broadly considered a bursa is a sac lined by synovial membrane,
-and an extreme example of the simplest form in which it is found
-may be said to be that of the condition found in a domestic dog.
-Under its skin, except on such regions as the snout, the tail and the
-feet, there is hardly a place where a bursal surface does not exist.
-Here and there trabeculæ may divide the great sac imperfectly,
-but from the protective and selective point of view this mechanism
-under a dog’s skin may be compared to the oil with which an Indian
-criminal lubricates his naked body so as to elude capture. To us
-who are too familiar with dog-fights (to which the Hon. Bertrand
-Russell likened the recent Great War, as we all remember) and who
-know how much noise and ferocious attempts are made by the
-warriors to bite one another, and how little success they achieve,
-the beautiful adapta­tion of nature in the dog far surpasses that of
-the Indian criminal. Indeed the latter may well have been suggested
-by the former.</p>
-
-<p>Between such a simple and undifferentiated bursal surface
-as this and another such as the small but essential bursa under
-the tendo achillis there are endless variations adapted to particular
-uses and regions.</p>
-
-<p>The descrip­tion of bursæ given by Macalister is too clear and
-good not to be given in his own words<span class="nowrap">.<a id="FNanchor_67" href="#Footnote_67" class="fnanchor">67</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="ml2em">“Synovial membranes are found either as the lining of
-joints, or as <i>Bursæ</i>, which are closed sacs (<i>a</i>) between contiguous
-soft parts, or (<i>b</i>) beneath soft parts which glide tensely
-over a bone. Bursæ are formed around and beneath tendons
-in the neighbourhood of joints; and the hard part on which
-the tendon plays is often invested with a layer of cartilage
-over which the synovial membrane does not extend. When
-they completely surround tendons, as in the finger and toes
-they are called <i>thecæ</i> or sheaths, and the tendons are connected
-to the sheaths by synovial reflections. Sometimes<span class="pagenum" title="180"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180"></a></span>
-bursæ lie between exposed areas of skin and projecting bony
-points, such as the patella, olecranon, ankles, etc.</p>
-
-<p class="ml2em">“Their (synovial) membrane differs from the synovial
-membrane of joints in not having so continuous or definite
-an endothelial lining; indeed, while some bursæ, such as that
-beneath the ligamentum patellæ, have a more or less regular
-lining of regular endothelium, others have only elongated
-connective cells forming an imperfect lamella, and there are
-all possible gradations met with between the regular saccular
-bursa, and a loose meshwork of areolar tissue of which the
-bursa is only a specialisa­tion. Bursæ may be (1) subcutaneous,
-(2) subfascial, (3) between two tendons, or (4) between tendons
-and subjacent ligaments or bone. Of these, some communicate
-with the neighbouring joints always, some occasionally, and
-some never. Bursæ underlying parts which have an extensive
-range of motion are <i>unilocular</i>, with a single cavity. Bursæ
-spread over an extensive surface, and whose walls move but
-little on each other, are often divided by imperfect fibrous
-septa, and are called <i>multilocular</i>. Almost all the lesser
-bursæ are unilocular, most of the subcutaneous bursæ are
-multilocular.”</p>
-
-<p>Now if one were not engaged upon such a problem as that of
-initiative in evolution and in trying to give examples of it there
-would be no Gordian knot to cut, and the condensed statement
-of Macalister might be simply taken as an accepted account of the
-manner in which reading between the lines a bursa is formed in the
-animal body. But, when an hypothesis such as the present is in
-question, one may not cut the Gordian knot in this way, and must
-produce briefly certain observations of the process, not only those
-known in man by anatomists and surgeons but also some found in
-lower Primates.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Human Bursæ Enumerated.</h3>
-
-<p>The following is a list of bursæ in man of which some are
-normal or always present, and others which are both occasional
-in their appearance and often imperfectly developed.</p>
-
-<p class="mb-05em"><i>Front of Neck.</i></p>
-<div class="table">
-<div class="row"><div class="cell">(<span class="lowercase smcap">A</span>)&nbsp;</div><div class="cell">One in front of the pomum adami.</div></div>
-<div class="row"><div class="cell">(<span class="lowercase smcap">B</span>)&nbsp;</div><div class="cell">One in the thyro-hyoid space extending to the under surface of the hyoid bone.</div></div>
-<div class="row"><div class="cell">(<span class="lowercase smcap">C</span>)&nbsp;</div><div class="cell">One beneath the stemo-hyoid muscle.</div></div>
-<div class="row"><div class="cell">(<span class="lowercase smcap">D</span>)&nbsp;</div><div class="cell">One above the hyoid bone.</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" title="181"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181"></a></span></p>
-
-<p class="ml22hi"><i>Pharynx.</i> A small central pit constituting a single bursa the <i>bursa
-pharyngea</i>.</p>
-
-<p><i>Behind the angle of the lower jaw.</i> One.</p>
-
-<p><i>On the symphysis of the chin.</i> One.</p>
-
-<p><i>On the Acromion process.</i> One.</p>
-
-<p class="ml22hi"><i>Beneath the deltoid</i> and the acromion process, one large bursa often
-opening into the shoulder-joint.</p>
-
-<p class="mb-05em"><i>Elbow.</i></p>
-<div class="table">
-<div class="row"><div class="cell">(<span class="lowercase smcap">A</span>)&nbsp;</div><div class="cell">One over the olecranon.</div></div>
-<div class="row"><div class="cell">(<span class="lowercase smcap">B</span>)&nbsp;</div><div class="cell">One occasionally over the inner epicondyle.</div></div>
-<div class="row"><div class="cell">(<span class="lowercase smcap">C</span>)&nbsp;</div><div class="cell">One over the internal condyle of the humerus.</div></div>
-<div class="row"><div class="cell">(<span class="lowercase smcap">D</span>)&nbsp;</div><div class="cell">One over the external condyle of the humerus.</div></div>
-<div class="row"><div class="cell">(<span class="lowercase smcap">E</span>)&nbsp;</div><div class="cell">Small one between the biceps tendon and the head of the radius.</div></div>
-<div class="row"><div class="cell">(<span class="lowercase smcap">F</span>)&nbsp;</div><div class="cell">Often a second bursa which separates the tendon from the oblique ligament crossing it.</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="mb-05em"><i>Wrist.</i></p>
-<div class="table">
-<div class="row"><div class="cell">(<span class="lowercase smcap">A</span>)&nbsp;</div><div class="cell">One over the styloid process of the radius.</div></div>
-
-<div class="row"><div class="cell">(<span class="lowercase smcap">B</span>)&nbsp;</div><div class="cell">One over the styloid process of the ulna.</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="mb-05em"><i>Hand.</i></p>
-<div class="table">
-<div class="row"><div class="cell">(<span class="lowercase smcap">A</span>)&nbsp;</div><div class="cell">One over each of the metacarpo-phalangeal joints.</div></div>
-<div class="row"><div class="cell">(<span class="lowercase smcap">B</span>)&nbsp;</div><div class="cell">One over each of the phalangeal joints.</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="mb-05em"><i>Region of hip.</i></p>
-<div class="table">
-<div class="row"><div class="cell">(<span class="lowercase smcap">A</span>)&nbsp;</div><div class="cell">One over the anterior superior spine of the ilium.</div></div>
-<div class="row"><div class="cell">(<span class="lowercase smcap">B</span>)&nbsp;</div><div class="cell">Large one between the great trochanter and the gluteus maximus muscle.</div></div>
-<div class="row"><div class="cell">(<span class="lowercase smcap">C</span>)&nbsp;</div><div class="cell">One between the gluteus medius and the bone.</div></div>
-<div class="row"><div class="cell">(<span class="lowercase smcap">D</span>)&nbsp;</div><div class="cell">One between the gluteus minimus and the bone.</div></div>
-<div class="row"><div class="cell">(<span class="lowercase smcap">E</span>)&nbsp;</div><div class="cell">One between the psoas and iliacus muscles often opening into the hip-joint.</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="mb-05em"><i>Thigh.</i></p>
-<div class="table">
-<div class="row"><div class="cell">(<span class="lowercase smcap">A</span>)&nbsp;</div><div class="cell">One over external condyle of the femur.</div></div>
-<div class="row"><div class="cell">(<span class="lowercase smcap">B</span>)&nbsp;</div><div class="cell">One over internal condyle of the femur.</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="mb-05em"><i>Knee-joint.</i> The prepatellar bursæ.</p>
-<div class="table">
-<div class="row"><div class="cell">(<span class="lowercase smcap">A</span>)&nbsp;</div><div class="cell">Between the skin and superficial fascia at the lower edge
-of the patella there is often a small subcutaneous bursa.</div></div>
-<div class="row"><div class="cell">(<span class="lowercase smcap">B</span>)&nbsp;</div><div class="cell">Beneath the superficial fascia over the fascia lata there
-is always a large interfascial bursa, intersected by smooth
-fibrous bands extending downwards over the upper part
-of the patellar ligament.</div></div>
-<div class="row"><div class="cell">(<span class="lowercase smcap">C</span>)&nbsp;</div><div class="cell">One still deeper between the deep fascia and front of the
-bone there is a layer of lax connective tissue.<span class="pagenum" title="182"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182"></a></span></div></div>
-<div class="row"><div class="cell">(<span class="lowercase smcap">D</span>)&nbsp;</div><div class="cell">Sometimes a third or deep subfascial bursa.<br />
-“These bursæ over the knee-joint appear in fœtal life and
-vary in size in persons of different occupations, being
-often large in housemaids and carpet-nailers, and
-often communicating with each other.<span class="nowrap">”<a id="FNanchor_68" href="#Footnote_68" class="fnanchor">68</a></span></div></div>
-<div class="row"><div class="cell">(<span class="lowercase smcap">E</span>)&nbsp;</div><div class="cell">Occasionally the upper part of the synovial pouch of the
-knee-joint is shut off from the general cavity and forms a
-separate bursa beneath the extensor muscles. It always
-communicates with the knee-joint though originating
-independently.</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="mb-05em"><i>In the Ham.</i></p>
-<table class="ml2em fs100" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="Bursae in the ham">
-<tr><td class="tal vat">(<span class="lowercase smcap">A</span>)&nbsp;</td><td class="tal" colspan="3">Large bursa between the inner condyle of the femur and
-the gastrocnemius muscle, often opening into the joint.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tal vat">(<span class="lowercase smcap">B</span>)&nbsp;</td><td class="tal" colspan="3">A smaller one on the outer side.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tal vat">(<span class="lowercase smcap">C</span>)&nbsp;</td><td class="tal" colspan="3">One between the biceps tendon and the external lateral ligament.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tal vat">(<span class="lowercase smcap">D</span>)&nbsp;</td><td class="tal wid50 nowrap">One between the semimembranosus</td><td class="tal vab" rowspan="5"><img src="images/91x6br.png" alt="" height="91" width="6" /></td><td class="tal" rowspan="5">&nbsp;and&nbsp;the&nbsp;bone.&nbsp;    &nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tal">(<span class="lowercase smcap">E</span>)&nbsp;</td><td class="tal wid50">One between the popliteus</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tal">(<span class="lowercase smcap">F</span>)&nbsp;</td><td class="tal wid50">One between the sartorius</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tal">(<span class="lowercase smcap">G</span>)&nbsp;</td><td class="tal wid50">One between the gracilis</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tal vat">(<span class="lowercase smcap">H</span>)&nbsp;</td><td class="tal wid50">One between the semitendinosus</td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="mb-05em"><i>Tibia.</i></p>
-<div class="table">
-<div class="row"><div class="cell">(<span class="lowercase smcap">A</span>)&nbsp;</div><div class="cell"><span class="ilb">One&nbsp;over&nbsp;the&nbsp;tuberosity.</span></div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="mb-05em"><i>Ankle.</i></p>
-<div class="table">
-<div class="row"><div class="cell">(<span class="lowercase smcap">A</span>)&nbsp;</div><div class="cell">Over both malleoli.</div></div>
-<div class="row"><div class="cell">(<span class="lowercase smcap">B</span>)&nbsp;</div><div class="cell">Between the tendo achillis and the os calcis.</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="mb-05em"><i>Foot.</i></p>
-<div class="table">
-<div class="row"><div class="cell">(<span class="lowercase smcap">A</span>)&nbsp;</div><div class="cell">Over plantar surface of the great toe.</div></div>
-<div class="row"><div class="cell">(<span class="lowercase smcap">B</span>)&nbsp;</div><div class="cell">Over plantar surface of the little toe.</div></div>
-<div class="row"><div class="cell">(<span class="lowercase smcap">C</span>)&nbsp;</div><div class="cell">Over the dorsal surfaces of all the phalangeal joints of the toes.</div></div>
-<div class="row"><div class="cell">(<span class="lowercase smcap">D</span>)&nbsp;</div><div class="cell">Over the dorsal surface of metatarso-phalangeal joint of the great toe.</div></div>
-<div class="row"><div class="cell">(<span class="lowercase smcap">E</span>)&nbsp;</div><div class="cell">Over the plantar surfaces of the metatarso-phalangeal joints of all the toes.</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>I calculate that there are at least fifty-two separate bursæ
-(about one hundred on the two sides of the body) in the normal
-or fully developed state, though of these many will be found either
-absent or with very little of the full structure of a bursa. One small
-but significant point may be referred to here. We are all familiar<span class="pagenum" title="183"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183"></a></span>
-with the prominence of the knuckles of the hand and the very
-efficient bursæ which cover them, but most persons do not recognise
-that the foot has no such knuckles (or prominent metatarso-phalangeal
-joints) and no bursæ over these joints, except that
-of the great toe which happens to be very much more exposed to
-friction and has a much greater range of action than the other four
-metatarso-phalangeal joints. This might be called by some persons
-a beautiful bit of adapta­tion <i>for</i> locomo­tion and by others an
-equally admirable bit of adapta­tion produced <i>by</i> locomo­tion.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Examination of Two Still-born Children.</h3>
-
-<p>Some further light may be thrown upon the human bursæ by
-an examina­tion of two still-born children I dissected in 1908 in
-Lewisham infirmary, and give here the results as to the more
-important subcutaneous bursæ.</p>
-
-<p><i>Male Child</i>: full term.</p>
-
-<div class="ml2em">
-<div><i>Shoulder</i>: bursæ under acromion processes absent.</div>
-
-<div><i>Elbow</i>: bursæ over outer condyle of humerus present.</div>
-<div class="ml4em"> "  " inner  "    "  absent.<br />
- "  " olecranon both present.</div>
-
-<div><i>Wrist</i>: bursæ over styloid process of ulna present.</div>
-<div class="ml4em"> "  "  "   "  of radius present.</div>
-
-<div class="ml55hi"><i>Hand</i>: bursæ over metacarpo-phalangeal joints D 1 absent,
-D 2, 3, 4, 5 present.</div>
-<div class="ml52hi">bursæ over phalangeal joints, first set present,
-second set absent.</div>
-
-<div class="ml55hi"><i>Hip</i>: bursæ over anterior superior spine of the ilium both
-absent.</div>
-
-<div><i>Knee</i>: prepatellar bursæ well-developed.</div>
-
-<div><i>Ankle</i>: bursæ over both malleoli present:</div>
-<div class="ml3em">bursæ beneath tendo achillis well-developed.</div>
-
-<div><i>Great toe</i>: plantar bursa present.</div>
-
-<div><i>Little toe</i>: plantar bursa absent.</div>
-
-<div class="ml55hi"><i>Toes</i>: D 1 (great toe) bursa over metatarso-phalangeal
-joint present.</div>
-<div class="ml52hi">D 2, 3, 4, 5 bursæ over metatarso-phalangeal joints
-absent.</div>
-
-<div class="ml2em">Bursæ over <i>Phalangeal joints</i>.</div>
-<div class="ml5em">D 1 present.</div>
-<div class="ml72hi">D 2, 3, 4, none over either of the phalangeal
-joints.</div>
-<div class="ml72hi">D 5 bursa present over the first and absent
-over the second phalangeal joint.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" title="184"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184"></a></span></p>
-
-<p>This example of a still-born, but otherwise normal infant
-illustrates well the previous statement that certain bursæ are
-congenital and others of less functional importance are formed
-after birth. Whereas the olecranon, wrist, patellar, ankle and
-tendo achillis bursæ are fully formed, those under the acromion
-processes, one of those of the condyles of the femur, and the digits
-of the hand, those over the superior anterior spines of the ilium
-and those of the foot are little if at all developed in this case.</p>
-
-<p>Another still-born child at seven months was also dissected
-and this had well-formed prepatellar bursæ, scanty ones over the
-olecranon processes, also over the small joints of the hand and
-foot where they were difficult to isolate and over the malleoli they
-were only slightly developed.</p>
-
-<p>A fœtus in spirit I examined and found no commencement of a
-prepatellar bursa.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Examination of Living Primates.</h3>
-
-
-<p><i>Anthropoid Apes.</i></p>
-
-<p>Eight of these I examined during life at the London Zoological
-Society’s gardens in 1908, four <i>chimpanzees</i>, two <i>orangs</i> and two
-<i>gibbons</i>. These afforded the opportunity of ascertaining by means
-of touch the presence, and in a minor degree the size and efficiency
-of the main subcutaneous bursa, just as one can do this in a human
-subject. The <i>chimpanzees</i> were A, aged thirteen; B, aged seven;
-C, aged three; and D, aged two-and-a-half years; the orangs E,
-aged thirteen; F, aged three years; the gibbons G and H both
-two to three years.</p>
-
-<p>These eight specimens possessed good examples of the leading
-subcutaneous bursæ over the olecranon process, the styloid process
-of the ulna, the patella and both malleoli.</p>
-
-<p>The smaller and less definite bursæ gave the following
-results.</p>
-
-
-<p class="mb-05em"><i>Chimpanzees.</i></p>
-
-<div class="ml2em">
-<div class="ml55hi">A. <i>Hand.</i> Bursæ on all the metacarpal and first phalangeal
-joints; none on the second phalangeal joints of
-D 2, 3, 4, 5.</div>
-
-<div class="ml54hi"><i>Foot.</i>  Bursæ well marked on the five metatarsal first
-phalangeal joints; none on D 2, 3, 4, 5 joints,
-but one on that of D 1. None found on second
-row of phalangeal joints.</div>
-
-<div class="ml22hi">B. Moderate development of bursæ on metacarpo- and meta­tarso-phalangeal
-joints of D 1; doubtful on those of
-D 2, 3, 4, 5.<span class="pagenum" title="185"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185"></a></span></div>
-
-<div class="ml31hi">On hand and foot first phalangeal joints, bursæ present,
-on second row absent.</div>
-
-<div>C and D were similar.</div>
-<div class="ml31hi">Metacarpo- and metatarso-phalangeal joints, none in C
-and scanty in D.</div>
-
-<div class="ml31hi">No bursæ on any phalangeal joints of hand or foot.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="mb-05em"><i>Orangs.</i></p>
-
-<div class="ml2em">
-<div class="ml22hi">E. Metacarpo- and metatarso-phalangeal joints, bursæ ill-developed,
-first row of phalangeal joints of hand and foot
-moderate, second row none.</div>
-
-<div class="ml22hi">F. Metacarpo- and metatarso-phalangeal joints more marked
-than in E., and well developed on all phalangeal joints.</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="mb-05em"><i>Gibbons.</i></p>
-
-<div class="ml2em">
-<div class="ml22hi">G. Metacarpo- phalangeal and metatarso-phalangeal joints
-poorly developed on D 2, 3, 4, 5, and none on those of D 1.
-Absent on all phalangeal joints.</div>
-
-<p class="ml02hi">The digits of the gibbons were very long and evidently
-efficient in action, but were never flexed to any great degree.</p>
-</div>
-
-<h3>Dead Specimens.</h3>
-
-<p>I also examined the hands and feet after death of certain lower
-Primates in <span class="nowrap">1909:—</span></p>
-
-<div class="table3">
-<div class="row"><div class="cell tal">H.</div><div class="cell tal pl07">Hapalemur Griseus.</div></div>
-<div class="row"><div class="cell tal">I.</div><div class="cell tal pl07">Hapale Jacchus.</div></div>
-<div class="row"><div class="cell tal">J.</div><div class="cell tal pl07"><span class="ilb">Cercopithecus&nbsp;Callitrichus.</span></div></div>
-<div class="row"><div class="cell tal">K.</div><div class="cell tal pl07">Cercopithecus Mona.</div></div>
-<div class="row"><div class="cell tal">L.</div><div class="cell tal pl07">Macacus Rhoesus.</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="ml25hi mb-03em lh114em"><i>Hapalemur Griseus</i> H. <i>Hands.</i> No bursæ on styloid processes of
-radius and ulna, and no localised bursæ on any metacarpo-phalangeal
-or phalangeal joints.</p>
-
-<div class="ml64hi"> <i>Feet.</i> Bursæ under tendo achillis small but distinct. Present
-over both malleoli.</div>
-
-<div class="ml61hi">Metatarso-phalangeal joints D 1, 2, 3, rudimentary
-D 4 and 5 absent.</div>
-
-<div class="ml61hi">First phalangeal joints of D 1, 2, 3, 4, rudimentary
-absent over D 5.</div>
-
-<div class="ml61hi">Second phalangeal joints absent on all digits.</div>
-
-<p class="mb-05em"><i>Hapale Jacchus</i> I.</p>
-
-<div class="ml64hi"><i>Hand.</i> Lower end of ulna, which is very prominent, a bursa
-present, over end of radius, <i>which is much less
-prominent</i>, absent.</div>
-
-<div class="ml61hi">Metacarpo-phalangeal joints, present in all.<span class="pagenum" title="186"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186"></a></span></div>
-
-<div class="ml61hi">First phalangeal joints, which are prominent, present
-in all digits.</div>
-
-<div class="ml61hi">Second phalangeal joints absent in all.</div>
-
-<div class="ml64hi"> <i>Foot.</i> Bursa under tendo achillis and over both malleoli.</div>
-
-<div class="ml61hi">Metatarso-phalangeal joints absent on D 1; present
-on D 2, 3, 4, 5.</div>
-
-<div class="ml61hi">First phalangeal joints, present in all.</div>
-
-<div class="ml61hi">Second phalangeal joints, absent in all.</div>
-
-<p class="mb-05em"><i>Cercopithecus Callitrichus</i> J.</p>
-
-<div class="ml64hi"><i>Hand.</i> Dorsal surface of the whole hand shows no localised
-bursæ, only a loose areolar tissue under the skin.
-Styloid processes of radius and ulna no bursæ.</div>
-
-<div class="ml64hi"> <i>Foot.</i> Dorsal surfaces over the whole foot similar to that
-of the hand.</div>
-
-<div class="ml61hi">Bursæ present over both malleoli.</div>
-
-<div class="ml61hi">Well-formed small bursæ under tendo achillis.</div>
-
-<p class="mb-05em"><i>Cercopithecus Mona</i> K.</p>
-
-<div class="ml64hi"><i>Hand and Foot.</i> Dorsal surfaces similar to those of J and
-similar loose areolar tissue over styloid processes of
-ulna and radius.</div>
-
-<div class="ml61hi">Bursæ over both malleoli.</div>
-
-<div class="ml61hi">Well-formed bursa under tendo achillis.</div>
-
-<p class="mb-05em"><i>Macacus Rhoesus</i> L.</p>
-
-<div class="ml61hi">This specimen showed more examples of bursæ than
-the two of Cercopithecus.</div>
-
-<div class="ml61hi">Bursæ present over styloid processes of ulna and radius,
-also over metacarpo-phalangeal joints.</div>
-
-<div class="ml61hi">Bursa well-marked over malleoli and under tendo
-achillis.</div>
-
-<div class="ml61hi">Bursæ present over metacarpo-phalangeal and metatarso-phalangeal
-joints.</div>
-
-<div class="ml61hi">No bursæ over phalangeal joints.</div>
-
-
-<h3>Further Undesigned Experiments.</h3>
-
-<p>The preceding facts as to the natural history of bursæ in man
-and some lower Primates, even if they stood alone, are enough
-to produce convic­tion as to the manner in which bursæ of all degrees
-of perfec­tion are formed by function, and point to the origin of the
-initial stages of these structures. But they do not stand alone, for
-in man there have been carried out certain undesigned experiments
-in a similar direction, comparable to those described in the sections
-on direction of hair and arrangement of papillary ridges. These<span class="pagenum" title="187"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187"></a></span>
-demonstrate the fact that frequent friction of skin over a hard
-surface has the power of producing adventitious bursæ in regions
-where they are not found in the normal state.</p>
-
-<p>These adventitious bursæ are the <span class="nowrap">following:—</span></p>
-
-<p>In the first place certain normal bursæ in important situations
-are frequently so much enlarged by the constant irrita­tion of
-pressure and friction that they become considerably enlarged.
-This enlargement may go on to definite pathological changes and
-thus come under the care of surgeons.</p>
-
-<div>They are Prepatellar bursæ—“housemaid’s knee.”</div>
-<div class="ml62hi">Olecranon bursæ—“student’s elbow” and “miner’s elbow.”</div>
-<div class="ml4em">Tuber ischii bursæ—“weaver’s bottom.”</div>
-
-<p>These may be called “occupa­tion-bursæ” and may be classed
-with three other well-known adventitious bursæ which are formed
-on the shoulder in “deal runners,” on the scalp in “fish porters”
-and in the back of the neck in Covent Garden porters, known as
-a “hummy.” Entirely new bursæ are formed also over the cuboid
-bone in talipes equino-varus, over the internal condyles of the femur
-in bad cases of knock-knee from friction of one joint against the
-other, over the prominent vertebrae in a humpback. A structure
-closely resembling a bursa and arising from similar causes to those
-producing adventitious bursæ is found in unreduced dislocations
-or ununited fractures.</p>
-
-<p>A small example of an adventitious bursa came under my
-notice. A woman, E.&nbsp;L., aged 49, had remarkable enlargement of
-the metatarso-phalangeal joint of her great toe of the left foot,
-and over this joint was formed a well-marked bursa on the dorsal
-surface. The right foot showed a much less prominent joint and
-only a very slight development of the corresponding bursa.</p>
-
-<p>This instance of a bursa-like structure being produced in
-unreduced dislocations and ununited fractures suggests the concep­tion
-which I here propose, but do not attempt to verify that <i>all
-joints in all animal forms from the lowest up to man have been
-evolved in a manner to which this pathological experiment may give
-a clue</i>.</p>
-
-<p>A remarkable case reported by Sir William MacEwen in the
-Royal Society’s <i>Phil. Transactions</i>, Series B, Vol. 199, pp.&nbsp;253,
-279, is worth referring to in this connec­tion. It was a case of a
-growth of bone in muscle connected with an old injury to the thigh
-of a man 38 years old, and healthy. At the operation performed by
-the author of the paper the tumour was found to be movable, partly
-attached to the fascia lata of the thigh, and the upper part of the<span class="pagenum" title="188"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188"></a></span>
-tumour moved on the lower. It was found that the tumour consisted
-of two parts, the upper three-and-a-half and the lower seven inches
-long, altogether a mass about ten inches in length. Muscular
-bundles of the vastus externus were included in this ossific formation,
-one passed through a tunnel in the bone through which it
-worked, and the sides of it were polished. <i>At the point where the
-newly formed bone came in contact the surfaces fitted each other and
-were polished as if they were covered with cartilage, and were here
-surrounded by a capsule.</i> (Italics not in original.) This fibrous
-covering when opened was seen to contain a thin serum, which,
-though not of the consistence of synovial fluid, still aided in
-lubricating the polished surfaces as they played over one another.</p>
-
-<p>A similar case was reported also by Dr. C. Paterson, surgeon
-to the Glasgow Royal Infirmary.</p>
-
-<p>A very interesting address by the Hunterian Professor, Mr.
-Jonathan Hutchinson, was given in February, 1917, on Dupuytren’s
-work, especially in the discovery of the cause and treatment of
-the contrac­tion of palmar fascia known by his name. Professor
-Hutchinson described his method of curing this by the removal
-of the head of the first phalanx, and showed excellent results and
-evidence of the formation of a perfect new joint to take the place
-of the old distorted one, and the fingers were as efficient as in the
-normal state in the exercise of flexion. He gives photographs of
-the hand some months after the operation showing it to be capable
-of easy and full extension as well as of flexion. This again agrees
-well with the cases of Sir W. MacEwen and Dr. Paterson of the
-formation of a functional joint <i>by</i> use and habit.</p>
-
-<p>Another distinguished Hunterian Professor A. Keith, also gave
-two lectures in January, 1918, on the “Introduc­tion of the Modern
-Practice of Bone-grafting,” which, in its modern form, he assigns
-to the credit of Sir William MacEwen. He lays great stress on
-the important work performed in such cases by the osteoblasts
-without whose living and formative action these results could not
-be obtained. He explains how necessary it is that these living
-elements should be stimulated into action by <i>work</i>. They thrive
-only so long as they have work to do. Another surgeon, Ollier,
-“wondered why the fragments of bone which he had succeeded in
-raising from slips of periosteum planted beneath the scalp or
-amongst muscles ceased to grow and tended to disappear. These
-bony grafts withered because they were not subjected to the strains
-and stresses which rouse the activity of osteoblasts.” MacEwen,
-“by a fortunate chance, planted his tibial grafts in a situation
-where they soon became subjected to muscular strains and stresses.<span class="pagenum" title="189"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189"></a></span>
-In a short time bony fragments gathered from the legs of six boys
-became intrinsic parts of the humerus of a seventh; from the moment
-of primary union the bone cells of the graft were brought under the
-stimulating impulses of the biceps and triceps. Osteoblasts are
-the obedient slaves of muscles; <i>muscular dominance is their breath
-of life</i>.” (Italics not in the original.)</p>
-
-<p>“Wolff was the first to devote thirty years of constant work
-and observa­tion to prove that the shape and structure of growing
-bones and adult bones depend on the stresses and strains to which
-they are subjected. By altering the lines of stress the shape of a
-bone can be changed.”</p>
-
-<p>Wolff’s law is simply this: “Osteoblasts at all times build
-and unbuild, according to the stresses to which they are subjected.”</p>
-
-<p>Professor Keith says further: “We are driven, as I have
-pointed out in a previous lecture, to look for the primary cause,
-not in the bones, but in the muscles, particularly in those which are
-tonically and constantly in action so long as we are standing.”</p>
-
-<p>A terse expression of Wolff’s law is quoted from Dr. John
-B. Murphy, of Chicago: “The amount of growth in a bone depends
-upon the need for it.”</p>
-
-<p>A remarkable illustra­tion of a similar process is given in the
-construc­tion of sponges by the scleroblasts and it is stated: “The
-soft walls of this sponge are constantly exposed to the force of
-moving waters, and we shall see that the spicule-builders—the
-scleroblasts—are endowed with the same properties as osteoblasts—the
-powers of fashioning and depositing the elements of the skeleton
-so that the sponge can best resist the forces to which it is habitually
-exposed.”</p>
-
-<p>One more important quotation from this lecture will suffice.
-“No one who has watched the behaviour of scleroblasts and marked
-the design in their workmanship can doubt that they have acquired
-certain characteristic qualities, chief of which is a sensitiveness to
-vibrations—to stresses. We see them build the same form of
-spicules as their ancestors, and therefore must suppose that their
-building quality is a gift of inheritance. We see them alter their
-mode of building as stresses change; we must therefore suppose
-that their inherited powers can be changed by the circumstances
-under which they work.<span class="nowrap">”<a id="FNanchor_69" href="#Footnote_69" class="fnanchor">69</a></span></p>
-
-<p>In regard to the action of the scleroblasts of sponges I have
-only to point out that the cautious words of Professor Keith on the<span class="pagenum" title="190"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190"></a></span>
-treacherous ground of inheritance amount to the very same concep­tion
-of personal selection and inheritance as are involved in the
-term “educability” of Sir E. Ray Lankester. Whether or not
-in the case of sponges this be a complete account of the matter it
-at any rate is a very important piece of evidence, if valid, for
-selection. Whether or not further it is a piece of evidence for a
-Mendelian factor implicit in the primordial sponges and released
-by some loss of inhibiting factors, as Professor Bateson would
-probably claim, is another and far more imaginative concep­tion.
-The mere neo-Lamarckian with the aid of personal selection fails
-to see any difficulty in realising the wonderful process described
-by Professor Keith.</p>
-
-<p>An apology must be offered here to the patient reader for the
-introduc­tion under the heading of the “Evolution of a Bursa”
-of the apparently alien subjects of bone-grafts, artificial new joints
-and sponge-spicules, but I have hazarded the guess that all joints
-in all animals have been fashioned—“forged by the incident of
-use,” to employ a fine phrase of Professor Macdonald’s in another
-connec­tion—in slow but intelligible ways by use, and that in them,
-as elsewhere, function has preceded structure. This arose so simply
-out of the story of the bursæ that I ventured to digress as aforesaid
-rather than make it the subject of a separate section.</p>
-
-
-<h3>The Significance of the Proceeding.</h3>
-
-<p>The foregoing slender contribu­tion to the comparative anatomy
-and physiology of bursæ is sufficient to show that at certain
-important and “critical” points in the mammalian anatomy,
-efficient bursæ are always present. One cannot indeed conceive
-the function of the parts involved being carried on at all without
-these ingenious contrivances, and no doubt can exist that in certain
-of the leading bursæ selection guides and guards, while use and habit
-maintain them. Over such as these “dominance” or the appearance
-of mutations might perhaps be supposed to preside, and
-possibly some useful statistical results might arise from their study
-from these points of view. But, between these major bursæ in
-man and lower Primates and the undifferentiated sacs which hardly
-deserve the name of bursæ, there is a perfect little host of insignificant
-structures, which at the first attempt at dominion over them on
-the part of Mendel or de Vries would hoist the standard of revolt.
-These would even refuse allegiance to Personal Selection under the
-persuasive banner, “Educability,” which however valuable elsewhere,
-must stand aside in this little province of Nature. I have
-thus attempted to “Lyell” this body of facts. Basing the state<span class="pagenum" title="191"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191"></a></span>ment
-on an analysis of a considerable mass of small facts which
-no one disputes I claim that the modifications drawn from normal
-anatomy on the one hand and on the other adventitious structures,
-produced by acknowledged mechanical forces, are examples of the
-transmission of modifications, and illustrate the mode of formation
-of certain initial variations. In other regions where Plasto-diēthēsis,
-as I conceive it, is at work in producing adapted organisms,
-there may be included in the hyphenated area certain factors of
-heredity, Mendelian, mutational and others, but not in this group.
-This is merely an assertion of an opinion though I submit that there
-is good evidence for it. Not even the hardest hearted Weismannian,
-Mendelian or mutationist, and not even the biometrician can
-refuse to this poor little province the required time and mechanical
-forces, and, unless an opponent can offer some explana­tion more
-consistent with the facts than that here offered, the proof of causation
-is as sound as that shown in the larger one of the direction of hair.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" title="192"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192"></a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XXI.<br />
-
-THE PLANTAR ARCH.</h2>
-
-
-<p>The principle of Lyell cannot be applied to this section of my
-subject for it is unique in the animal world. There is here a simple
-compila­tion of facts such as the medical schoolboy is supposed to
-know, and only requires for its setting forth the valuable expert
-knowledge of our predecessors in anatomy. It is indeed a pedestrian
-chapter.</p>
-
-<p>Man alone possesses this mark of a high lineage, and it adds
-point to Shakespeare’s descrip­tion of man as “paragon of animals,”
-and Huxley’s “a superb animal, head of the sentient world.”
-For winning this integral part of a perfect walking-foot man must
-stoop to conquer; he must descend from the trees in order that
-he may have life and liberty; whether he bears the ancient surname
-of Tarsius or the more honoured one of Pithecus matters not.
-Names had not in those early times usurped that tyranny over
-man’s mind which they have done among his modern descendants.
-He came into that terrestrial kingdom which was to be his own
-with many a limita­tion, but with the promise and potency of an
-unexampled evolution, when he assumed more fully the erect
-posture and saw that his inheritance was very good. Neither
-then nor since has he ever reached the fleetness of foot of the
-Thibetan wild ass, the astonishing sense of smell of the dog or
-horse, the keen sight of the hawk, or the climbing power of that
-simian family upon whom he turned his back as on a poor relation.
-He became <i>par excellence</i> the walking biped of earth, as, even
-with greater value to his mastery of the world he learned to talk
-in articulate language. A walking animal and a talking animal,
-with vast stretches of time for training these new powers of his,
-he became modified into the variegated human stocks, black, yellow
-and white, that now inhabit the earth.</p>
-
-
-<h3>A Crumbling Arch.</h3>
-
-<p>A digression, I hope, will be pardoned here before the value
-and beauty of the plantar arch and its mode of forging are described,
-and it is possible the latter may add some force to the former.
-Scientific (or, must I say?) semi-scientific writings are not concerned<span class="pagenum" title="193"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193"></a></span>
-with the snobbishness of much of the pride of birth which still
-survives among us. But I would indeed think myself to be doing
-“my bit” if I could induce the present genera­tion of young women
-and men to think highly of their plantar arches, nobler evidence of a
-“good” family than soft fair skin, taper fingers, Grecian nose,
-slender waist or that hair of which the decaying line of the long-haired
-kings of old France were too proud. For one reason or
-another, probably analogous to those for which he has lost so
-much the vigour of his hair of the scalp, or his dwindling wisdom-teeth
-and shrinking little toes, in other words, racial degenera­tion,
-modern man seems to be losing his plantar arch. For about three
-years I have made careful but saddening study of the ankles and
-feet of young women, and have embodied it in a variety of journals.
-This study has included about two thousand examples in young
-women of incipient or advanced flat-footedness as revealed, nay,
-flaunted before us in our towns and villages. This revela­tion has
-been offered by women’s shortened skirt, so that one can now note
-for oneself the ugly and disabling ankles and feet in the streets of
-any town, without the complicated business of a surgical examina­tion.
-Such an examina­tion, as it happens, and as it is usually
-undertaken, serves only to show a moderately advanced degree of
-this deformity, indeed, just so much as induces a patient to go to a
-doctor for relief of pain or obvious deformity. This is wholly
-insufficient for the study of a defect which in the various degrees
-of its development affects nearly 90 per cent. of all youngish women
-so far observed and noted. The doctors may—or may not—cure
-this evil, but they are not likely to find time even to discover during
-their strenuous lives, the great spread of this physical defect. But
-the merciful ukases of fashion, from Paris or elsewhere, and the
-obvious benefits, for once, of a fashion, are so powerful that the
-short skirt has remained with us for several years past and does
-not seem likely to go. I can only hope it will last until women
-who lead their sex in these days become ashamed of the feet of their
-sisters and their own, and make a forcible attack upon the Health
-Minister or Minister of Education, or both, so that systematic
-foot-drill in all elementary schools may be established. No other
-means than this, added to improved general health, can be conceived
-as able to correct so widely spread a deformity. I do not desire
-to be considered as making an attack on the bodily charms of
-women, for whose multifarious attractions I yield to none in sincere
-regard. But here is the revela­tion, here are the cases walking
-unashamed before us, and if the skirts <i>should</i> lengthen again and
-cruelly hide up the evil, no one will be induced again to take up the<span class="pagenum" title="194"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194"></a></span>
-unpopular attitude of saying that nearly all young women have
-feet that are deformed and ugly and, therefore, more or less inefficient.
-There is, alas! only too much reason to know that the
-evil is great among the better class, even of boys, for in 1919 Captain
-Coote said publicly at a Schoolmasters’ Conference that fully
-30 per cent. of the new boys entering leading public schools had
-flat-foot, and Captain Coote, the highest exponent of physical
-training in the Navy, knows a flat-foot when he sees it. The
-measures here suggested in connec­tion with the feet of women
-have the great merit that from them boys and girls will alike benefit.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Non-Arboreal Man.</h3>
-
-<p>Many problems faced non-arboreal man as he descended from
-the trees to claim his suzerainty and place of toil. Not least
-among them was the question of methods of protec­tion against
-the terrible creatures among which he was to live. Their produc­tion
-must needs be slow, and for him to meet by “direct action” with
-weapons invented <i>ad hoc</i> the fierce large carnivora and clumsy but
-dangerous dinosaurs would have proved highly dangerous. Too
-long had they been in possession of his Canaan, and he could not
-cross his Jordan, walk seven times round their Jericho, blowing
-with trumpets of rams’ horns, and on the seventh day march in
-and “consolidate his position.” He had first to do what his
-descendants have always been bound to do; he had to learn to
-walk terrestrially long before he could think and live imperially.
-Sufficient for him was the evil of his day, and, as an old arboreal
-denizen he had much to learn and not a little to unlearn; and we
-know from the prehistoric pictures of his own doings and trophies,
-that he did in course of ages learn to walk, run and jump with variety
-of step and efficiency unknown in any other Primate group. We can
-ask, and we can but supply speculative answers as to the details
-of <i>how</i> he did it, but somewhere and at some time he learned first
-to become as good a walking animal as later he became a talking
-one, and some at any rate of the steps of the process are plain for
-all to read to-day.</p>
-
-
-<h3>How the Arch was Built.</h3>
-
-<p>Did I not know something of the severity of the judges in such
-a Court of Appeal as we are facing in this case and of the opposing
-counsel—of the jury I have less fear—I should be disposed to settle
-on a half-sheet of note-paper the problem that non-arboreal man
-settled ages ago for himself on the ground, by a familiar saying.
-It really meets the non-scientific mind which is not weighed
-down by what Captain Marryat used to call <span class="pagenum" title="195"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195"></a></span>“top-hamper,”
-to answer <i>Solvitur Ambulando</i>. But I hear judges and counsel
-both saying “This will never do,” and must address myself
-to opening up the case.</p>
-
-<p>If an adventurous gorilla and his mate, whom we may call
-gorilla Columbi, had long ago made a bid for a life completely
-terrestrial rather than partly arboreal, it is difficult to imagine
-how the feet of this pair could have failed to adjust themselves
-and their separate tarsal elements to a better if rudimentary form
-like that of man, and that their progeny would not have followed
-or improved upon this. Professor Keith<span class="nowrap">,<a id="FNanchor_70" href="#Footnote_70" class="fnanchor">70</a></span> in his work referred to,
-and Professor Wood Jones in <i>Arboreal Man</i>, have much to say on
-the evolution of man’s foot and arch, and I mention this <i>ab initio</i>
-so as to be free from any supposed claim to originality which is apt
-in the present extended range of scientific progress to be as damaging
-to a man as for him to proclaim his honesty or a woman her virtue.
-And I also formally grant to the Mendelians and Mutationists, without
-offence and with some possible relief to their minds, a period
-of leave from this poor trench-warfare—<i>Plasto-diēthēsis</i> will not be
-obliged to call in at the place of its hyphen any reinforcements
-from these of the higher command.</p>
-
-<p>The assumed precursor of our human walker was probably
-more highly evolved in his own special line than the real ancestor,
-but we have so little yet of discoveries of whole skeletons of earliest
-man that the bodily structure of gorilla C. may fairly be taken
-as a starting point, indeed he is for this purpose a valuable lay-figure,
-almost artistic for once, on which may be draped the following
-story of the making of an arch. The ultimate verdict, which
-word I use in the old English sense of a “true saying” rather than
-the most recent declara­tion of those who “ride on white asses and
-sit in judgment,” does not therefore invalidate the verisimilitude
-of this picture. One may go farther and affirm that, given certain
-anatomical and physiological facts in an earlier Primate stock,
-which marvellously resemble those of modern man, and it must
-follow as the night the day that his more primitive physical basis
-employed in a new mode of progression, that is of terrestrial walking
-on two feet, will be converted by use and habit into the construc­tion
-of such new formations as will best agree with the new style—in
-other words, in this instance, a plantar arch.</p>
-
-
-<h3>An Unique Phenomenon.</h3>
-
-<p>That a plantar arch is peculiar to man is a matter of fact,
-and Lydekker in the <i>Royal Natural History</i>, Vol.&nbsp;I., p.&nbsp;41, says<span class="pagenum" title="196"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196"></a></span>
-of the gorilla’s foot incidentally “there is no sort of resemblance
-to the human instep in the whole foot,” and Professor Keith in
-the work referred to “the arch is a human character.” One may
-see this for oneself in living apes and monkeys and in the wonderful
-series of drawings of apes in all kinds of postures in the <i>Royal
-Natural History</i>, and indeed in the feet of dead apes and monkeys.
-All Primates other than man walk on a flat sole.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Equipment.</h3>
-
-<p>Our adventurer starts with the following equipment of tools
-for making his arch as he learns to walk entirely on the ground
-which it must be remembered he can only do by unlearning <i>pari
-passu</i> his highly cultivated power of grasping with his foot. The
-old and the new cannot flourish together. The evolving foot of
-man is an example of a slow change in the function of an organ and
-consequent modifica­tion of certain structures in it. He walks with
-his feet turning in, or in the axis of the leg; his great toe is not in
-this axis but may even lie at a right angle to the foot; he rests
-weight on his heel and even more on the outer border of his sole,
-and thus the sole of one foot turns more or less towards the other;
-and he puts a good deal of weight on his toes which are frequently
-doubled over; and his gait, though erect, is never completely
-so, and is clumsy in appearance.</p>
-
-<p><i>Bones</i>: his heel-bone is relatively long and pointed and
-slightly arched below; the bones of his great toe are short and thick,
-and the other four toes relatively long and slender. You can see
-at once it is not primarily a walking foot. Any active boy of
-twelve could give him points and a beating in a race for life in the
-open. Further, his foot shows a much larger propor­tion of the whole
-foot in front of the end of the great toe than is ever seen in man.
-The <i>ligaments</i> which bind the joints of his foot together, while
-the muscles play upon them, are little different from those he will
-require for the girders of his arch, except for such a throwing out
-of slips, and shifting under the stresses and strains of such walking
-as his new gait involves.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>muscles</i> of his leg and foot are the most important by far
-of his original equipment with which to set about making his arch:
-he could no more do this out of his present muscles than a Hebrew
-could make bricks without clay. It is these variable and plastic
-structures which are most readily adapted by use in a fresh direction
-or increased degree. He has the great flexors of the ankle and foot
-in his poorly-shaped calf (this feature might be adduced as a human
-character and studied in this manner if it were not of so elusive<span class="pagenum" title="197"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197"></a></span>
-a nature) and the long flexors of his four outer toes, the special
-long flexor of the great toe, which in his case does not of course act
-in the axis of the other metatarsal bones. He is lacking here in
-the special detached portion of the <i>flexor accessorius</i>, which eventually
-becomes of use in maintaining the arch, between the heel-bone
-and the tendons of certain digits. He has, in a measure, the
-<i>oblique adductor</i> muscle of the great toe and the <i>transverse adductor</i>
-muscle, more for future use perhaps than of much present value.
-Like all apes and monkeys he has a <i>peroneus longus</i> with its tendon
-passing across the sole from the outer border to the base of the
-great toe and a <i>peroneus brevis</i>, both of them for everting the foot
-and supinating it. But here again he is lacking, for he has no
-little <i>peroneus tertius</i>, which Professor Keith speaks of as a muscle
-“peculiar to man” and “a special evertor of the foot”—a muscle
-passing from the tendons of the <i>extensors</i> of the toes and inserted
-into the little toe. He has also the <i>tibialis anticus</i> and <i>tibialis
-posticus</i>, the latter which flexes the ankle on the leg, and the former
-which also flexes it and everts the foot; he has also the special
-<i>extensors</i> of the toes.</p>
-
-<p>This enumera­tion of the bony, ligamentous, and muscular
-possessions of gorilla C. is enough to show that, though he has
-little of new tools to make, he has to modify greatly those he
-has learnt to use so well, so that one can almost hear him echo the
-words of David to Saul as to his new armour.</p>
-
-<p>The problem of an arch remains to be solved by eversion
-instead of inversion of the foot, growth in all directions of the heel-bone,
-and the enlargement and straightening of the great toe,
-and the “setting” of the foot in a certain degree of pronation and
-over-extension.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Description of the Arch.</h3>
-
-<p>The plantar arch is double, but the longitudinal one must
-be chiefly considered here. It lies under the concave roof of the
-tarsal bones, seven in number, and the metatarsal bones, and rests
-in a well-formed foot in front on the heads of the latter, and behind
-on the inferior surface of the heel-bone. The <i>astragalus</i> alone of
-these bones in contact with those of the leg, acts like a washer to
-the ankle joint, and has no muscles attached to it. Three more
-of the <i>tarsal</i> bones need reference: these are the three <i>wedge-shaped</i>
-bones which have their bases on the dorsal and their apices directed
-towards the plantar surface. With such a set of bony tools as
-this, all the requisites for an arch are at hand. Let the half-tree,
-half-ground walker become a complete ground-walker, and in
-the first place the manifest increase of the action of the flexors of<span class="pagenum" title="198"><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198"></a></span>
-the leg will pull to an unusual extent on the <i>tendo achillis</i> and
-heel-bone, leading, in accordance with a well-known law, to steady
-enlargement of the parts near to which it is attached. The greater
-amount of weight thrown henceforth on the heel tends in just the
-same direction, indeed, to general enlargement of the whole bone.
-The <i>astragalus</i> being in No Man’s Land, so to speak, takes less part
-in the change than any other tarsal bone. The <i>wedge-shaped</i>
-bones are exactly so constructed as to retreat a little in a dorsal
-direction as the modified walking increases under the action of
-certain muscles which will later be mentioned. This, in conjunc­tion
-with the projec­tion backwards of the heel and the general growth
-of the bone, permits, as far as the bony parts go, a gradual hollowing
-out of the originally flat plantar surface, and the increasing eversion
-of the foot places more weight on the front pier of the arch, that is,
-the heads of the <i>metatarsal</i> bones. The squeezing-up process of
-the smaller <i>tarsal</i> bones contributes also to the formation of the
-transverse arch.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>ligaments</i> need no new invention on his part but only a
-more human degree of development, and in particular the <i>calcaneo-navicular</i>
-ligament and <i>internal lateral</i> of the ankle undergo in the
-human foot great development, and the long plantar ligament,
-originally part of the tendon of the <i>gastrocnemius</i>, comes in to
-the aid of the arch and goes to bind it together, so that these
-humbler structures follow in the wake of the changing and enlarging
-bones.</p>
-
-<p>The plantar fascia, though a powerful protective armour for
-the deeper parts of the sole, cannot be held to enter into the formation
-of the arch. The <i>initiative</i> in this process lies with the muscles,
-and, even if neither gorilla C. himself, nor his descendants, had
-altered the muscles of his foot and just given up climbing for
-walking, there were muscles strong enough and appropriate for
-modifying very profoundly his simian foot, though he might not
-have arrived at an arch. He or they might have become long-distance
-walkers, but never sprinters.</p>
-
-<p>If the sole of the dissected foot is observed it is seen that
-the plantar arch lies approximately over a triangle of which the
-base is formed by the <i>transverse adductor</i> muscle of the great toe,
-across the heads of the metatarsal bones, and the two sides by the
-<i>oblique adductor</i> of the great toe and the <i>short flexor</i> of the little toe.
-It extends, of course, somewhat further back under the heel-bone,
-but this is its highest part.</p>
-
-<p>In the changing foot the <i>tibialis posticus</i>, which was originally
-a flexor of the metatarsal bones, obtains a secondary attachment<span class="pagenum" title="199"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199"></a></span>
-to the <i>scaphoid</i> bone, and the <i>tibialis anticus</i> becomes inserted anew
-into the internal <i>wedge-shaped</i> and metatarsal bones. “Both of
-these muscles, thus modified, help to maintain the arch of the foot.
-So does the tarsal part of the tendon of the <i>tibialis posticus</i>.”
-(Keith).</p>
-
-<p>The three <i>peronei</i> muscles, especially the new <i>peroneus tertius</i>,
-attached to the little toe, are called in by increased walking to
-redress the balance of forces in the foot and produce that eversion,
-with some supina­tion, which is essential to the arch. No arch was
-possible till these muscles came into some preponderance of action
-over the <i>flexors</i>, so beloved of gorilla C. The <i>short flexor of the
-digits</i> becomes modified so that its attachment to the tendons of
-the <i>long flexors</i> in the sole has its <i>origin</i> completely transferred
-to the heel-bone in man (Keith). “It can thus act more powerfully
-in maintaining the arch,” and finally the <i>flexor accessorius</i>, a muscle
-which cannot fail to surprise the dissector when he first penetrates
-into the deep layer of muscles of the sole, and which is a detached
-piece of the <i>long flexor of the great-toe</i>, becomes especially well-developed
-and helps to maintain the arch.</p>
-
-<p>The order of events then is: first, increased and altered muscular
-function; second, growth of bones and adjustment; third, binding
-together of these by new or modified ligaments. If it were possible
-to separate in this way the age-long formation of such a
-living tool as the human foot, this is the order in which alone, I
-submit, the sequence of events can be placed. It is a convenient,
-because simple and plain example of initiative in evolution, and
-I cannot say how much I owe to Professor Keith’s teaching on the
-subject<span class="nowrap">.<a id="FNanchor_71" href="#Footnote_71" class="fnanchor">71</a></span></p>
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" title="200"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200"></a></span></p>
-
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XXII.<br />
-
-MUSCLES.</h2>
-
-
-<p>A work of great value to the biologist has been written by one
-whose work has led him in the widening path of human physiology
-and its very title is instinct with meaning. The Integrative action
-of the Nervous System may not aid the systematist or the student
-of genetics, but for insight into formative powers, where the former
-can but record facts and find no interpreta­tion, such a work is
-of supreme importance. When the plant sealed its fate and
-enclosed itself in a cell-wall and abandoned a life of movement,
-it was foreordained that its rival would be that cell and its descendants
-which could adopt a free life, and that the future of the world
-would lie at the proud foot of that conqueror who could command
-and mobilize the resources of a nervous system. And, as we know,
-it has fallen to man to receive the rewards of this promise and
-potency of a higher life. If one seeks to understand the steps by
-which man has arrived at his primacy it can only be by the highway
-of nervous progress, however much the tracing of certain connecting
-or collateral paths may throw light on contributing causes. So
-that man’s place in Nature is nearly synonymous with the structural
-evolution of his brain, as Huxley has shown in his clear and simple
-manner. Even if man is to remain still an animal Melchisedec for
-generations to come, or to put it lower, a foundling, no future
-discoveries that can be imagined will disprove Huxley’s declara­tion,
-“Evolution is no longer an hypothesis, but an historical fact.”
-And yet if man has become adapted to his world, and, in it, crowned
-with glory and honour by the unfolding of some original complexity,
-or as the result of some fortunate mutations in the distant past,
-the human brain, with its cranial capacity of nearly three times the
-number of cubic centimetres to that of the gorilla, has been making
-false claims to a paramountcy over all factors in the wonderful
-initiative of fresh capacities and their mobilisa­tion for conquest.
-Nothing less than such a “claim” was understood by the ancients,
-and, though metaphysics had to supply the lack of anatomy and
-physiology, it has always been held that mind was lord of matter,
-and now scientific research has told us why. But no one, even the<span class="pagenum" title="201"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201"></a></span>
-most hard-shelled scholastic, can refuse to the brain organ its
-predominant share in the making of man. This is seen even in the
-frigid sphere of science by the difference of interest there is shown
-between any great discovery bearing on the evolution of man,
-or on some new lower animal form. When Sir. H.&nbsp;H. Johnston
-astonished zoologists in 1901 by his discovery and proof of the
-existence of an archaic large mammal which had been interned
-for an incalculable time in the Semliki Forest, the thrill felt at that
-historic meeting passed off very soon when the leading British
-biologist had monographed the Okapi, settled its name and surname
-and introduced it into text-books. This is never the fate of such as
-Pithecanthropus or Eoanthropus dawsoni, or of the more recent
-genealogical theory and researches as to arboreal man. The
-call of these studies of man’s evolution is felt by all, and the difference
-in the two branches of biology may account for what must have
-struck many others, that is the neglect of adding the blue ribbon
-of science to the honours of the discoverer of the Okapi.</p>
-
-<p>These few trite remarks as to the importance of the nervous
-system in the making of man have been introduced here, though
-they bear more closely on the next two chapters, because this
-importance comes in at every stage of the present treatment of
-the origin of modifications in muscle.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Anatomists’ Views of Muscles.</h3>
-
-<p>There is a very strict and austere custom among anatomists,
-which doubtless is in a measure necessary, of insisting upon following
-rigorously the homologies of muscles, especially in human anatomy,
-and in this branch of a greater subject the canons are followed
-to an extent that surprises the seeker after origins. A remarkable
-example of this is in a paper by an eminent anatomist, now Professor
-at King’s College, Dr. E. Barclay Smith. It is a paper on the
-“Morphology of the short extensor of the human fingers.<span class="nowrap">”<a id="FNanchor_72" href="#Footnote_72" class="fnanchor">72</a></span> He says
-“the precise significance of this occasional <i>extensor brevis digitorum
-manus</i> is a matter of considerable interest.” He gives four possible
-interpretations of this unusual muscle. The last, viz., that it is
-derived from a new muscle-germ alone interests us here because of
-the remarkable caution and austerity of his remarks on this interpreta­tion.
-“If an <i>ext. brevis dig. manus</i> cannot be regarded as an
-atavistic anomaly, or as a derivative from any existing musculature,
-the only way in which its presence can be accounted for is to suppose
-that it is of entirely new origin—the product of a new muscle-germ.<span class="pagenum" title="202"><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202"></a></span>
-Such an explana­tion is, of course, the last resort, and all other
-possible derivations must be disproved before it can be accepted.”
-The physiologist would probably think such an interpreta­tion was
-the obviously first resort. The same writer discusses at length the
-homology of an exceedingly rare anomaly among muscles, the
-<i>extensor ossis metacarpi hallucis</i>, and his desire on the one hand to
-find a missing parent for Japhet, and his honesty and accuracy on
-the other hand lead him to say “even when it is present, it cannot
-be regarded as directly atavistic, since it does not represent a
-normal mammalian tendency.” And he adds a gentle but remote
-sugges­tion—“Brooks certainly describes such a muscle in <i>menobranchus</i>
-and <i>hatteria</i>—two rare and remote reptiles!” But, lawful
-and necessary though this be, there must be stages on the path of
-human evolution where such a method must fail and the anatomists
-can do no more than hold aloof from theory or specula­tion, with a
-certain grim enjoyment of the disputes and difficulties of the
-genealogists.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Initiative in Muscles.</h3>
-
-<p>Initiative in the evolution of muscles clearly occurs somewhere
-in the stem, and behind the formed expression of an altered habit
-is the integrating action of the nervous system. This will be by
-some looked at askance as a <i>deus ex machinâ</i> and reckoned as part
-of the argument from ignorance in a way which recalls Weismann’s
-scorn of Lamarckian factors in germinal selection. I submit that
-what he and Osborn call “the unknown factor” of use and habit,
-arising in response to new stimuli meets as no other proposed
-sugges­tion does the formation of new muscles. Given a certain
-fundamental architecture of skeleton and musculature, such as of
-primitive vertebrates, one can, without doing violence to any
-known facts, place the formation of new organs of movement in the
-following <span class="nowrap">order:—</span></p>
-
-<p class="ml2em">1. Neural changes and habits.</p>
-
-<p class="ml2em">2. Muscular modifications.</p>
-
-<p class="ti2em">3. Consequent modifications of bone. It carries the question
-no further to say that these are correlated, however loose may be
-the meaning of that word that is understood. If the prerogatives
-of Selection within the germ, of segrega­tion of unit-characters
-and dominance, and of mutations are not unlimited in the construc­tion
-of organisms, there still remains a sphere of action for the
-initiating power of the nervous system. Bones grow and change
-their form in response to increased or altered muscular action on
-them, and it is necessary to look back a stage further in the story to
-the neural changes however produced. There have been abundant<span class="pagenum" title="203"><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203"></a></span>
-opportunities in the long history of mammalian evolution for
-primitive forms to take a new course of life, and they have done so
-on an extensive scale. The impulses that have led them may have
-been started by some “needs” such as Lamarck taught, some
-change in their surroundings involving new stimuli, or “insults,”
-as Haeckel called them, but the first of the structural stages must
-have been in the cerebral cortex.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Cross-Roads in Evolution.</h3>
-
-<p>The most instructive levels of animal evolution are those where
-two or more great stocks have diverged from a primitive one. There
-may have been several factors leading to the division of the early
-Ungulates into the odd-toed and even-toed groups, of the Carnivora
-into cats, dogs and bears, the Felidæ into the highly-specialised
-genera of that intense family, the early parting of gibbons from the
-common anthropoid stem, and then the division of this line into
-the three great genera with which we are familiar. Whatever may
-have been the unknown factors in the environment such as changes
-of climate and level, geographical isolation, increase of foes, profusion
-or lack of food, to which these diverging stocks became
-adapted in their organs and form, in fact whatever we do <i>not</i> know,
-we know this—that in their measure they acquired more convoluted
-and often larger brains, and the stimuli passing through their
-receptors into their consciousness increased with an everflowing
-tide, in volume, intensity and complexity. Many an archaic habit
-of their race they must unlearn, and it is doubtful if germinal
-selection would avail in this valuable process of economy as it is
-held to do in the case of the human little toe.</p>
-
-<p>It may be taken as granted that increasing complexity of
-brain in their own lines of life did accompany these adventurers
-of small or large groups. It follows that muscular changes from the
-original stock would follow neural changes, for movement and
-activity is inseparable from the animal, and the integrating action
-of the nervous system would constantly initiate, maintain and
-establish fresh habits and these be expressed in new muscular
-structure. Whatever higher uses, as we believe them to be, man
-makes of his brain, as reflec­tion, reasoning, imagina­tion and associa­tion,
-such were not the new properties acquired by these adventurers.
-They were very much concerned with hunger and love, and for them
-“philosophy” did not sustain the structure of their world. But
-more varied movements of head, trunk and limbs, and greater
-agility and strength brought them such prizes as were within their
-reach. This may be only another way of expressing Sir E. Ray<span class="pagenum" title="204"><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204"></a></span>
-Lankester’s concep­tion of educability, which he maintains to be
-the only acquired character the organism inherits, and it may be
-therefore assumed to be under the iron law of selection. This must
-be accepted with the respect due to the high authority from which
-it proceeds. But such a concep­tion, while it removes a false light
-in certain regions, sheds no light on the pathway of animal evolution,
-unless modifications be transmitted, and we can now take it
-that man does not inherit the power to speak which for incalculable
-ages he has been learning, nor to write, even though in the days of
-the early Pyramid-builders and the Sumerians in the plains of
-Chaldea they possessed the power of writing, nor can a musician’s
-child learn to play an instrument without teaching, or indeed man
-perform any of his arts and crafts by second nature: so, negatively,
-this knowledge is valuable, and the neo-Lamarckian must proceed
-on his quest without anything more than educability to aid him—but
-it will serve. The fact is that we do not inherit habits or associations
-as such at all, but the neurones of the grey matter in spine
-and brain which subserve, direct and control them. Though a
-fresh neurone or two in the brain of an early ungulate deliberating,
-so to speak, as to the life he shall take up, whether that of oxen
-or horses, may be trifling in itself as to immediate value to the
-animal, it may be to him as much a matter of fate to acquire those
-microscopic cells as it was to the undifferentiated organism that
-paused before it sealed its fate as plant. Under the free and
-enlightened government of the integrating nervous system liberty
-to express itself to an almost unlimited extent, in accordance with
-progress, is thus open to the hypothetical adventurers.</p>
-
-<p>When considering such an aspect of the organism as the
-“choice” between the career of an odd-toed or even-toed ungulate,
-a cat or dog, a lion or tiger, a gibbon or other of the four anthropoid
-genera which assuredly was presented to certain groups of primitive
-ungulates carnivores, felidæ or apes, as historical beings, the vision
-of the process is sore let and hindered by the limiting force of certain
-expressions which have been sanctioned with the <i>imprimatur</i> of
-fifty years’ high thinking in the realms of high biology. I refer of
-course to the terms Selection and Evolution which, though they
-cannot be replaced by better terms, have the power and sometimes
-have had the effect of impressing on the story of organic existence
-an aspect of <i>determinism</i> which does not allow, for any purposive
-action of the individual, the working out of its own salvation, on
-the part of higher forms at any rate. As among nations self-expression
-has become of late a powerful force in their development,
-and indeed of individuals, so it may be argued by analogy that the<span class="pagenum" title="205"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205"></a></span>
-total experience of an organism, may result in its co-operation in
-the process of its progress towards higher things. Bergson hints
-at such a process in organisms, but appears to allow nothing for the
-individual in his <i>élan vital</i>, where the mass alone counts. So if the
-two binding terms of Selection and Evolution must be granted
-their enormous power over our thoughts, there must be also a loosing
-as well as a binding, and we, as well as certain young ecclesiastics in
-a hurry, may put in a plea for Life and Liberty. Thus is Lamarckism
-immortal, and the integrative action of the nervous system
-supplies the reason.</p>
-
-<p>This well-worn subject is not out of place here, where I am
-trying to show evidence of self-expression in terms of muscular
-modifica­tion arising from fresh activities of the brain.</p>
-
-
-<h3>New Muscles.</h3>
-
-<p>If it can be said without fear of question that “the differentia­tion
-of muscle and nerve is the morphological result of division of
-labour, whereby the unit of protoplasm, in which irritability and
-contractility are combined, has, on the one hand, become modified
-into muscle, which retains the property of contractility, and on the
-other into nerve, which retains that of irritability,<span class="nowrap">”<a id="FNanchor_73" href="#Footnote_73" class="fnanchor">73</a></span> and if Wolff’s
-<i>Law of Bone Transforma­tion</i> teaches that if a normal bone is used
-in a new way its structure and form will change to meet its new
-function, which Sir Charles Bell had more vaguely taught in 1834,
-it cannot well be denied that at certain turning-points in the history
-of animal organisms the sequence of changes which arise is neural
-change, muscular modifica­tion and finally change of bone, whether
-ungulates, carnivores, felidæ, gibbons or big anthropoids or man,
-be the <i>dramatis personæ</i>. The only question is whether selection
-or use and habit initiates the subtle and slow process.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Unstriped Muscles.</h3>
-
-<p>The simplest of the muscular acquirements of mammals is of
-course that great mass of little structures which constitutes the
-unstriped musculature. I must admit that here again I am engaged
-with what the professed biologist may call trifles, but these, like
-some others of a corresponding rank, have a provoking quality of
-persistence, and display, if one may personify them, an insistent
-desire to know whence they come and why they are here. Some of
-these, like the one before us, may be comprehended in the great
-chapter of the Evolution of the Indifferent of which they form a
-page. This world, at any rate in the moral sphere, would be an<span class="pagenum" title="206"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206"></a></span>
-intolerable house of bondage if there were not many <i>things that
-matter not</i> as well as <i>things that matter</i>, and there is reason to
-believe that in the process of the making of man and a vast
-number of forms below him there is a large field of structures,
-parts and organs, where things that matter not are to be found.
-One strange province of this realm is the coloura­tion of animals
-in certain regions where no eye ever can see the colour or can take
-any heed of the markings, treated very fully many years ago by
-Mr. Beddard in <i>Animal Coloura­tion</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Unstriped muscle arises, as the striped variety does, from the
-mesoblastic muscle-plate and appears in nearly all organs, blood-vessels
-and skin, and as trade is said to follow the flag, so a development
-of new unstriped muscles must speedily be found in every new
-structure of the regions where unstriped muscle is found. The
-skin is the simplest, and less complicated by the presence of other
-structures than vessels and organs, where it also exists, but where it
-trespasses too much on the territory of selection for my immediate
-purpose. A small band of this muscle called an <i>arrector</i>, or <i>erector</i>,
-<i>pili</i> is attached to most, if not all, of the third of a million hairs
-which cover the skin of man, and is inserted into that side of each
-hair which forms an obtuse angle with the plane of the skin. This
-tiny structure is endowed with the quality of contracting in response
-to certain stimuli falling on the skin, so that it causes the hair to
-which it is attached to stand erect instead of sloping, and incidentally
-squeezes some of the secretion out of the sebaceous gland which
-lies in each angle. The human skin thus possesses about a third
-of a million minute muscular bands and shows no sign of parting
-with this old gift from a lower hairy stock, and whatever value, if
-any, their function be to their possessor they show a remarkable
-readiness to perform it efficiently. It makes their existence and
-persistence no clearer to call them vestigial, for one only thus
-throws the question of their origin much farther back. Undoubtedly
-they come from afar and were in full development in the earliest
-hair-clad mammals, so an ancestry reaching back to Monotremes
-or Marsupials is not to be lightly set aside. The raw material was
-undoubtedly formed in response to stimuli conveyed to the brain,
-and the earliest appearance of muscles which erected the hairs
-must have been wholly insignificant either upon the survival or
-comfort of the possessors.</p>
-
-
-<h3>A Remarkable Example.</h3>
-
-<p>The <i>arrectores pili</i> exhibit very little evidence of control or
-interference from the action of the brain, but there is one region<span class="pagenum" title="207"><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207"></a></span>
-of one animal, like the Rosetta stone that set Champollion at work,
-where a very simple hieroglyph is recorded. I have been able to
-find no other in all the hairy mammals I have examined than that
-startling pattern which the back of the lion, shown in Fig.&nbsp;<a href="#Fig_37">37</a>,
-sometimes displays. That well-formed patch of reversed hair of
-roughly triangular shape which is frequently found on the back of
-a lion has been described and, as I interpret this strange structure,
-it would seem clear that neural change in some examples of this
-species has led to so persistent contrac­tion of the <i>arrectores pilorum</i>
-over a certain area of skin, and that these have permanently reversed
-the normal and primitive slope of the hair. I have never found it
-present in a lioness, and not in all cases of male lions. It marks
-its possessor with the brand of a fierce and especially savage
-character, and he is not able to screen it from the eye of the Zoologist
-as well as Milady did her brand of shame, until that fatal day
-when D’Artagnan disclosed it. This pattern on a lion’s back is
-strangely reminiscent of the ridge of bristling hair we see on the
-corresponding region of a fierce dog’s back when he is infuriated.
-In the latter it may be said to have selective value, as perhaps also
-is the bristling hair on the head of a gorilla when enraged, much in
-the same way as the Chinese warriors sought to alarm their enemies
-by terrifying grimaces, or those terrifying tones and expressions of
-face which the Tyrant man, really a coward, is said by such as
-Miss Wisk to exercise over the women of his circle. We may present
-all these to the Pan-Selectionist, but inasmuch as the short, bristling
-hairs on the back of a lion are on the one hand hidden by the mane
-from an animal in front, and on the other are so small as to be seen
-quite close if at all, the survival-value of the reversed pattern of
-hair in question is quite outside the province of selection. It is so
-manifestly under the control of cerebral action, that it may be
-compared, as an undesigned experiment, with that of man in
-placing harness upon a horse, as to the power of cerebral action in
-producing structure. Though, as far as I can learn, it stands alone,
-it is difficult to believe that such a thing as a unique example occurs
-in nature, but it is interesting and suggestive from the Lamarckian
-point of view, and even the opposing counsel must admit that it is
-among indifferent structures.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Facial Muscles of Expression.</h3>
-
-<p>This record in terms of hair of personal and ancestral emotions
-has, however, a link with certain more numerous and important
-striated muscles, such as the facial muscles of man and apes,
-modifications of the great platysma-sheet, and which are disposed<span class="pagenum" title="208"><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208"></a></span>
-in two layers, a deep and a superficial. This covers like a hood at
-the third month the head and neck of the embryo, and later assumes
-on the face its specialised form of certain bands which operate
-round the eyes and mouth. As they are of the striated kind these
-muscles can be moved at will, but their main action is much more
-under the government of the mental processes of their possessor.
-As they are fundamentally the same in apes and man very little
-new muscular structure arises in man, and little more than shaping
-or refining takes place.</p>
-
-<p>The facial muscles which operate round the orbit have less
-mental action represented in them than those of the mouth, though
-the action of the special elevator of the upper eyelid is conspicuous
-among the expressions of a vigorous person. Both apes and man
-have muscles on each side which raise or lower the angles of the
-mouth, draw the angles upwards and outwards, and raise the upper
-and depress the lower lip; and, though the muscle of the mouth
-which corresponds to the <i>orbicularis</i> of the eye is not a continuous
-structure, but formed of interrupted bundles of fibres, it is powerful
-in closing the lips and active in the expressions. There are also in
-man scattered oblique fibres in the substance of the lower lip,
-well-developed and closely-set in a sucking child, and these in the
-adult are scattered and less conspicuous.</p>
-
-<p>There is thus a remarkable set of structures in the face of a
-higher primate which convey mental emotion. As they also belong
-to animals with a high degree of convolu­tion of brain, though
-certain are found in lower mammals, their specialisa­tion is only to
-be accounted for by the long-continued involuntary expression of
-mental states existing in the particular form of primate. Professor
-Keith says in the work before referred to: “Muscles supplied by the
-facial nerve are the physical basis into which many mental states
-are reflected, and in which they are realised. Through them mental
-conditions are manifested. It is found that the differentia­tion
-of this sheet into well-marked and separate muscles proceeds
-<i>pari passu</i> with the development of the brain. The more
-highly convoluted the brain of any primate the more highly
-specialised are its facial muscles,<span class="nowrap">”<a id="FNanchor_74" href="#Footnote_74" class="fnanchor">74</a></span> and he points out in a
-smaller <span class="nowrap">work<a id="FNanchor_75" href="#Footnote_75" class="fnanchor">75</a></span> that in the gibbon, and monkeys of the Old and
-New Worlds the facial system becomes simpler and at the same
-time more robust, and he pictures the facial muscles as the
-“servants of the brain.”</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum" title="209"><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209"></a></span></p>
-<p>If an ape can express a good many of the coarser emotions of
-an animal by the action of its facial muscles, and through kindness
-and training exhibit some of the finer ones, there is a wide distance
-between this level of attainment and the multiplied moods and
-unnumbered varieties of expression which give to the human face
-its unique charm. If we can express pleasure, pain, anger, contempt,
-hatred, surprise, affection, sympathy, fear, hope, reflec­tion, perplexity,
-gaiety, melancholy, cunning (and many another can be
-supplied) what a remarkable field of physiology in terms of anatomy
-we have in the facial muscles! There is a very obvious reason
-why none of these emotions have been fixed in an objective form
-in ape or man, as the patch of reversed hair is on the back of a lion,
-for moods and states of feeling in every individual man are subject
-to such endless variations that it would be impossible for them to
-stamp any individual face with a record of even one emotion which
-could be transmitted to descendants, to say nothing of the inconceivably
-great probability that heredity would at once swamp
-any initial modifica­tion.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Three Stages.</h3>
-
-<p>The stages then are but three—mental states, specialisa­tion
-of small muscular bundles from an existing simple sheet of muscle,
-and disuse of the remaining portions, and in this small but highly
-significant field we see structures created independently of will as
-servants of the brain, and without any survival-value in their
-earliest stages. It is more than likely no monkey, ape, or early
-man whose face was covered with thick hair from his eyes downwards,
-ever saved his life or gained a better mate by reason of the
-subtle modifica­tion of a tiny muscle which was proceeding <i>pari
-passu</i> with the growing complexity of his convolutions and their
-manifested emotions. This is not to claim that a more modern
-man or woman would not find sexual selection of value by reason
-of his or her more pleasing or commanding facial expression. That
-the initiative of these alluring modifications was simple and
-Lamarckian cannot be gainsaid, whatever the fruit of the finished
-process may be to-day. We know in our own experience that
-many a handsome person with good features and little expression
-is often unsuccessful in the matrimonial market, when
-another with defective features and a fine, delicate, attractive
-expression takes the prize. So the early story of the formation
-of muscles of expression is seen to be a page in the evolution of
-the indifferent.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" title="210"><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210"></a></span></p>
-
-
-<h3>The Fly-shaker Muscle.</h3>
-
-<p>The panniculus carnosus, of which the facial muscles are part,
-is a great system of musculature found in various animal forms, and
-it furnishes a field for study of the evolution of the indifferent and
-the initial stages of the formation of a muscle. This is a servant
-of the brain in a more indirect manner than the facial muscles,
-but it, too, arises in obedience to the integrative action of the brain.
-The early specialisa­tion of it need not be considered here. It may
-be considered unwarrantable to claim the great Fly-shaker muscle
-of Ungulates as an indifferent structure, but the arguments by
-which the Pan-Selectionist would annex it to his sceptre, as a
-triumph of the minute care of the organism by selection, rest only
-on the assump­tion that he knows how it has become an adapta­tion
-to the life of its possessors. This is now more than it used to be a
-matter of opinion since the publica­tion of Professor Bateson’s
-revolutionary <i>Materials</i>, and others beside he have reserved to
-themselves the liberty of doubting the accepted explanations by
-the tangled path of adapta­tion. The statement of Weismann,
-“Everything is adapted in animated nature” was necessary to
-his theory of germinal selection, but it admits of extensive and
-numerous exceptions in view of the fact that so much of adapta­tion
-is partial and imperfect. If he had said that <i>every organism</i> as a
-being is adapted he would have been nearer the truth, but that
-every tissue and part of an organism is adapted is demonstrably
-untrue. A large number of organisms, themselves apparently
-well adapted, flourish well enough and reproduce their kind in
-spite of faulty and rudimentary tissues and parts. If it were not
-so we should have seen little of progress except what come under
-the laws of genetics,—a distributional matter. Even the super-Geddes
-could not distribute what was not there, for he could not
-deal with raw materials and change them by a fairy wand into
-manufactured articles. In the great field of domesticated plants
-and animals man has to find not only some mutation or some
-dominant strain and breed it to his will, but to cultivate the domestic
-qualities of animals and employ cultural conditions for plants.
-There is doubt expressed as to the length of time or numbers of
-generations during which these cultural conditions can extend, but
-Professor Thiselton Dyer many years ago made the remarkable
-statement as to plants:—“While specific stability under constant
-conditions appears to be the rule in nature, it is widely different
-in cultiva­tion. When a plant is brought under cultural conditions
-it maintains its type for some time unaltered, then gives way
-and becomes practically plastic. From my experience at Kew,<span class="pagenum" title="211"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211"></a></span>
-where I saw the process continually going on, I hazarded the
-generalisa­tion that any species, annually reproduced from seed,
-could be broken down in five years. During that period specific
-stability, though menaced, tends to maintain itself. Darwin
-was well aware of this.<span class="nowrap">”<a id="FNanchor_76" href="#Footnote_76" class="fnanchor">76</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Most biologists from time to time betray the fact that their
-minds can only be relieved from an intolerable burden, in accounting
-for the numberless adaptations in organisms, by the view that
-many of them originate through factors of use and stimuli from
-environment, and at first are entirely indifferent as regards the
-survival or better mating of their possessors. To which the stern
-opponent replies, “What is there to show that in the existing scheme
-of things there is any provision made which will minister relief to
-the burden of your little mind?” To which, “answer came there
-none,” except a subdued reflec­tion that everything we see of living,
-striving nature around us has a most provoking way of speaking to
-us of daily, hourly and incessant action and reaction, stimulus
-and response, and that those who view the process thus do seem
-to bring some order into what would otherwise be chaos—and
-yet all the while someone is being grossly deceived! This “may
-be magnificent but it is not proof,” some will say, and will ask if
-the older observers of the heavenly bodies were not wrong in their
-complete convic­tion that the sun went round the earth. This
-digression introduces the role of the fly-shaker. If I am told
-that this muscular sheet in a cow or horse to-day is a relic of raw
-material inherited from a remote ungulate stock little evolved,
-and that it contributes in hot weather in the time of flies to the
-comfort and better mental state of the cow or horse, that it shall
-be able to keep those enemies at bay, and that the muscle is kept
-well in order by two or three months’ practice in each year I can
-understand in a measure its presence to-day. It has an efficient
-ally in the sweeping tail of a cow and that of a wild horse, and both
-of these weapons are further aided by the mobile ears of cow and
-horse, and the stretching movements of its head and neck. Thus
-the body of a cow, for example, is like a map with four territories
-delimited, that of the fly-shaker, the tail, the ears and the head and
-neck. Between these offensive weapons a cow is better defended
-against flies than a European in India by his punkah, or China
-was by its great wall, or Britain by the wall of <i>Vallum</i> of Hadrian
-or the wall of Severus, which with forts and garrisons was designed
-to protect it. Speaking in allegory the evolving brain of an early<span class="pagenum" title="212"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212"></a></span>
-ungulate occupies the position of an ancient Chinese Emperor or a
-Roman Proconsul in Britain in its provision against “barbarians,”
-either Asiatic or Celtic. The resemblance goes further, for no
-experienced Roman General, whatever the Celestial minds in
-China may have thought, would fear that the loss of a sector of
-his wall would imperil the army of occupa­tion in Britain or the
-fabric of the Roman Empire. But as, in the long run it contributes
-to one’s welfare to be comfortable, and even the domestic ungulate
-is somewhat of a hedonist, a well-developed fly-shaker is maintained,
-the occasional use of which in winter and frequent use in summer
-and the active purposeful switching of tail, twitching of ears and
-jerking of head have their limited value. Here there is ample
-room for diverse opinion and the opponent will ask with some degree
-of force how we know that there is no more benefit to the cow from
-its fly-shaker than a mild degree of comfort, and may assert that
-the possession and use of it may have survival-value by its defence
-against deadly parasites. We do not know, nor does he, but it
-would seem that except for the tsetse fly in Africa the plague of
-flies does little to an ungulate beyond irritating its brain, and if
-he had no fly-shaker, he would still be able to reach a considerable
-distance with his tail, ears and head over the irritated regions.
-The question of survival indeed resolves itself into the vigour and
-energy of his integrating brain.</p>
-
-<p>To this view of the function and origin of the panniculus
-carnosus the busy systematist and student of genetics may refuse
-to listen, and pass to the order of the day, but I submit that in
-stating a position it is useful to put forward a crude example in
-which the issue is plain, and which subsumes an immense number
-of smaller and more subtle cases, and in a region where the most
-hardy rebel will not dispute altogether the sway of <i>personal</i> selection.
-It is a question here of the manner in which, speaking in metaphor,
-the early ungulate first set about making his eolithic or palæolithic
-weapons and fashioned them into what we see to-day. “Forged
-by the incident of use” and habit meets the story of the fly-shaker
-far better than some mutation arising in far back ages or some
-dominant variation, or “useful variation within the germ.” At
-any rate Lamarck finds the raw material to hand, and there are
-supplied adequate noci-cipient stimuli with response, in regions
-where these are most active under the dominating action of the
-brain.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Other Muscles.</h3>
-
-<p>In the skeletal muscles of the primates many muscles offer
-themselves for considera­tion as examples of inherited structures<span class="pagenum" title="213"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213"></a></span>
-arising under the stimuli of altered function, and only a few of
-these will be dealt with. It might appear sufficient to those who
-yield, perhaps too willingly, to authority, if I were here to try and
-prove my point by quoting the statements of one of the greatest
-anatomists of our time and country, and so pass on—but it is to be
-feared authority cannot carry one far in a dispute so important.
-Macalister says, however, “The anatomical arrangement of the
-muscular system is the physical exponent of habitual actions and
-those actions are the chief factors in moulding the bones and in
-regulating the position of the somato-pleural vessels and nerves”—and
-“the locomotory function and consequent utility of the trunk-muscles
-were lost when the early vertebrates became terrestrial.
-In higher vertebrates, and notably in man, the mobility of several
-regions of the vertebral column differs both in degree and kind:
-the outgrowing vertebrate processes show consequent variations,
-and <i>the muscular system is varied accordingly</i>.<span class="nowrap">”<a id="FNanchor_77" href="#Footnote_77" class="fnanchor">77</a></span> Also “as both
-origins and insertions (of muscles) are the creatures of habit, they
-are both equally variable with variation of function; but, as in
-higher animals the kind of work to be done is more constant than
-its degree, so, as a rule, insertions alter less than origins.<span class="nowrap">”<a id="FNanchor_78" href="#Footnote_78" class="fnanchor">78</a></span>
-Macalister, at any rate, held a very clear dynamical rather than
-static view of the making of the muscular system. But as the
-days of authority are in a certain sense gone for ever, and we live
-under the reign of experiment, research and questioning, every
-biologist, within certain limits, does what is right in his own eyes;
-there is no King in these days.</p>
-
-<p>Skeletal muscles are structures in which, if ever, the factors
-of use and habit and disuse would be shown, because muscle is a
-tissue, with highly active metabolism, so that it has been called
-“an expensive tissue” for the animal to maintain.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Muscles of Primates.</h3>
-
-<p>This physiological fact agrees with the anatomical results of
-an extended study in the musculature of primates, especially of
-man, and Hartmann’s book on Anthropoid Apes supplies abundant
-evidence of the variations of the muscles of these animals, which
-are not at all more striking than their differing modes of life would
-suggest. It would be wearisome to quote all these, but a single
-muscle may be given as an example of a special ape’s muscle with
-variable distribu­tion. It is called <i>latissimo-condyloideus</i> and starts
-from the insertion of the <i>latissimus dorsi</i> and passes along the inner<span class="pagenum" title="214"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214"></a></span>
-aspect of the humerus for a variable distance. In the <i>baboon</i> and
-others it goes to be inserted into the inner inter-muscular septum
-and the internal condyle of the humerus, in the <i>orang</i> to the condyle,
-and in the <i>gibbon</i> to the centre of the shaft. As to origin it
-proceeds from the insertion of the <i>latissimus dorsi</i>, but in the <i>gorilla</i>
-from the coracoid process of the scapula and from two portions of
-the <i>pectoralis minor</i>, and is finally attached to the inter-muscular
-septum between the <i>brachialis anticus</i> and the <i>triceps</i>; in the
-<i>chimpanzee</i> it divides into an anterior and posterior portion, the
-former being attached to the inner condyle, the latter to the
-middle and inner head of the <i>triceps</i>; in the <i>orang</i> it divides
-similarly, but in one particular example it had an anterior
-thin portion attached by a slender tendon to the coracoid
-process of the scapula and a posterior portion arose from the
-<i>latissimus dorsi</i>; in the <i>white-handed gibbon</i> it arose from the
-function of tendons from the <i>latissimus dorsi</i> and <i>teres major</i>
-and was inserted into the fascia between the tendon of the <i>biceps</i>
-and the <i>brachialis anticus</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Such a divergence as this within the strict limits of an
-anthropoid muscle, concerned in the various forms of climbing
-action of these apes, can only suggest an origin from a
-divergent set of functions and small details in their respective
-modes of climbing.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Hand and Foot of Man.</h3>
-
-<p>Both the hand and foot of man supply a small muscle for
-considera­tion in the present connec­tion of habit with formation of
-new structure. If man be regarded as of simian origin there are
-not as many entirely new muscles in his equipment as would be
-expected from his departure from the habits of simian ancestors,
-though many muscles are found to be altered in size and shifted
-from the ancestral positions. But the human hand presents one
-suggestive example of a little muscle not found in any other animal,
-the special small extensor of the thumb, arising from the interosseous
-membrane between the radius and ulna, and from the radius, being
-segmented off from the <i>extensor of the metacarpal of the thumb</i>, and
-it accompanies this muscle and tendon to be inserted into the first
-phalanx of the thumb, and is peculiar to man. It can be easily
-seen at the radial border of the well-known “snuff-box” which
-is produced by it when it is fully extended. This is of course a
-muscle of small importance to the functions of the hand, and its
-appearance in man can only be supposed to be a subordinate detail
-easily derived from the <i>greater extensor</i> by reason of the more<span class="pagenum" title="215"><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215"></a></span>
-delicate adjustment to complicated movements of the hand under
-the directing power of higher cerebral development.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Peroneus Tertius.</h3>
-
-<p>The foot of man possesses the small <i>peroneus tertius</i> which was
-referred to as one of the evertors of the foot concerned in the construc­tion
-of his plantar arch. Macalister and Professor Keith both
-speak of it as peculiar to man, and the latter refers to it at some
-length<span class="nowrap">,<a id="FNanchor_79" href="#Footnote_79" class="fnanchor">79</a></span> the whole passage being worth quoting here. “Although
-the evolution of the human method of progression was attended
-by a profound altera­tion in the form and action of every muscle
-and bone with lower limbs, yet this great transforma­tion was
-produced without the appearance of any really new element. One
-new muscle—the <i>peroneus tertius</i>—did appear, and the history of
-its evolution throws an interesting sidelight on the origin of new
-structures. It arises by the outer fibres of the common extensor
-muscles of the toes being separated. In all the anthropoids the
-feet are so articulated at the ankle-joints that the soles are directed
-towards each other, and only the outer edge of the foot comes to
-rest on the ground when the animal tries to stand. The feet have a
-tendency to assume a similar position in children at birth. The
-advantage of a muscle, such as the <i>peroneus tertius</i>, is apparent
-in the human foot, for it tends to raise the outer border of the foot,
-so that the sole is properly applied to the ground. If we examine
-the muscles which, rising from the front of the leg, cross the ankle-joint
-to end on the back of the foot on the toes of fifty men, we shall
-find every stage in the evolution of this muscle. In one man at
-least it will be undeveloped; in two or perhaps three it will be
-represented by a part of the tendon of the extensor muscle of the
-little toe, which in place of ending entirely on the toe sends a part
-to end on the metatarsal bone of the little toe. In only forty of
-the fifty men will the <i>peroneus tertius</i> be found quite isolated from
-the parent muscle—<i>the extensor communis digitorum</i>, and to have
-a distinct origin from the fibula in the leg, and a separate
-insertion to the base of the fifth metatarsal bone in the foot.
-In a series of fifty specimens every stage in the isolation of
-this new muscle will be seen. It has never been found in
-any anthropoid, and is more often absent or undeveloped in
-African than European races.”</p>
-
-<p>To this excellent account I have only to add one comment.
-It can hardly be an accident or without significance that this special<span class="pagenum" title="216"><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216"></a></span>
-human evertor of the foot concerned in the construc­tion of the
-plantar arch is “often absent or undeveloped” in African races,
-which are well-known in some groups to have adapted themselves
-to a form of foot which shows no plantar arch, being normally
-flat-footed. In this small field of observa­tion, a mere plot of
-lentils like that which Shammah defended of old, there is set forth
-a mimic battlefield, and it is not difficult to see that the forces at
-work can owe allegiance to one and one only of various commanders.
-The problem as to the origin of the <i>peroneus tertius</i> would no more
-attract the Mendelian than did the trousseau and approaching
-marriage of Caddie Jellyby attract the far-away gaze of her mother,
-fixed upon the world of Borria-boula-gha, and, for that matter,
-de Vries would hardly pay it more attention—to him it would be
-indifferent; whereas Weismann would have as much to say about
-it as about the little toe of man, which furnished for him and Herbert
-Spencer such fruitful material for debate many years ago. This
-muscle resembles the results of some of Michael Angelo’s first
-attempts at sculpture, thrown aside perhaps in his place of work
-and from time to time taken up, rough-hewn again and again and
-finally shaped into a form far from perfect, but with the value and
-teaching of a failure for him who was some day to outshine all
-modern rivals. If the history of this muscle be not one of initiative
-in evolution through the factor of use and habit the Pan-Selectionist
-must do the best he can with an incalculable number of “trials
-and errors,” and must suppose that, rather than allow this small
-territory to the neo-Lamarckian, a long series of man’s ancestors
-have been making experiments for the benefit of man’s walking
-power under the guidance of selection with an insignificant muscle
-whose only function is that of aiding in the eversion of the foot,
-and that in the rudimentary condition described by Professor Keith
-it had selective value. No one who was not committed to a dominating
-theory could hesitate for a moment which of the two alternative
-views of the origin of the <i>peroneus tertius</i> he would choose.
-Dr. Barclay Smith speaks in the paper referred to above of the
-<i>extensor brevis pollicis</i>, or <i>minor</i>, as a muscle of extremely late
-appearance, and as “peculiarly human,” and says all the evidence
-points to its being a segmenta­tion product of the <i>extensor ossis
-metacarpi pollicis</i>, its appearance being foreshadowed in the anthropoid
-by an extension of that muscle on to the proximal phalanx
-of the thumb.</p>
-
-<p>It is not without interest to the thesis before us to read the
-rather bewildering story of the early life of a very insignificant
-muscle such as the small extensor of the thumb of man.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" title="217"><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217"></a></span></p>
-
-<p>As illustrations of the moulding and pruning of perfected
-muscles it may be remembered that, as Macalister says, “portions
-of muscles may also become detached and degenerated so as to
-act as ligaments,” and “the adult muscular system of man bears
-everywhere traces of earlier cleavings and subsequent fusions,
-partial disappearances and local outgrowths.<span class="nowrap">”<a id="FNanchor_80" href="#Footnote_80" class="fnanchor">80</a></span> This passage
-recalls one in which Huxley says in watching certain phases of
-development you can almost see the hidden artist at work, and
-here the sculptor may be pictured in his chipping, trimming,
-rejecting and finally shaping, some creation of his brain; and from
-a biological point of view a vision of the processes of use and disuse
-may be obtained. Professor Keith also speaks often of the migrations
-of muscular attachments in a way which agrees with the
-passage quoted from Macalister.</p>
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" title="218"><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218"></a></span></p>
-
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XXIII.<br />
-
-INNERVATION OF THE HUMAN SKIN.</h2>
-
-
-<p>For at least seventy years the surface of the human skin has been
-the subject of so much physiological observa­tion and experiment
-that Professor Sherrington considers the literature connected with
-it to be probably greater than in any other branch of physiology.
-Most of this study centres round the skin as a receptive field and
-problems of the nervous system. It is easy to see why this should
-be in the case of an organ so great as the skin, covering all the other
-structures and organs and exposed through ages of evolution to the
-vicissitudes of an inconceivable number of stimuli. And one
-outcome of this study is to show that, metaphorically speaking,
-the skin is a mosaic, and not the confused and blurred produc­tion
-of a child of four years old who has been given a sheet of paper and
-a paint-box. There is order in this field, and even without calling
-in final causes, plan and purpose. Beside the protective function
-exercised by the skin it plays a large part, through its nervous
-endowment, in the processes by which the brain is made aware of
-the surrounding phenomena, thus conveying intelligence to the
-centre of life only less important than that of the special senses.
-It is maintained here that the result of the various physical stimuli,
-of which pain, cold, warmth and touch are the chief, is that certain
-functions and structures of the skin have arisen in response to them.</p>
-
-<p>This is, no doubt, to beg the question of origin, and if the
-balance of evidence be seen to be against this view the order of
-events would need to be stated differently. But the position is
-clear, whether correct or not, and if it be shown to be erroneous
-it will at least have good “lighthouse value.”</p>
-
-
-<h3>Observed Facts.</h3>
-
-<p>Briefly stated the facts of the innerva­tion of the skin are of
-two orders, anatomical and physiological; the former examined
-by the aid of the microscope, the latter by physiological experiments
-of a varied kind. The chief aspect in which these are viewed here
-is the mode of distribution of these two groups of fact, and it is
-held that this strongly suggests without proving it, the alleged
-mode of origin of both.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" title="219"><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219"></a></span></p>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Table I.</span>—<i>Distribution of Touch Corpuscles</i><span class="nowrap">:—</span></p>
-
-<div class="ml315hi">In the deep connective tissue of the dermis there are:—</div>
-<div class="ml2em">In the thumb about 70.</div>
-<div class="ml2em">&nbsp;" " index finger 105.</div>
-<div class="ml2em">&nbsp;" " middle finger 60.</div>
-<div class="ml2em">&nbsp;" " whole hand 500.</div>
-
-<p class="ml315hi">They are numerous over finger joints and front of elbow joint.</p>
-<div class="ml2em">In all 530 about the joints of the upper extremity.</div>
-<div class="ml2em">   317 about those of the lower extremity.</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Table II.</span>—(<i>From Schäfer’s Text Book of Physiology</i>)<span class="nowrap">:—</span></p>
-
-<p class="ml315hi">Average of Meissner’s corpuscles to each square millimetre,
-which is approximately one five hundredth part of a
-square <span class="nowrap">inch:—</span></p>
-
-<table class="ml2em fs100" summary="" border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0">
-<tr><td class="tal">Palmar surface of distal phalanx of index finger</td><td class="tar">21</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tal">Palmar surface of second phalanx of index finger</td><td class="tar">8</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tal">Palmar surface of first phalanx of index finger</td><td class="tar">4</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tal">Palmar surface of metacarpus of little finger</td><td class="tar">2</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tal">Plantar surface of distal phalanx of great toe</td><td class="tar">7</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tal">Middle of sole of foot</td><td class="tar">2</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tal">Flexor surface of forearm in each sq. mm.</td><td class="tar">1</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tal">Distal end of flexor surface of forearm in each sq. mm.:—</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tal">  1 to each 6 sq. mm. approximately.</td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="ml315hi">* Absent from the cornea, and conjunctiva of the upper eyelid
-and from the glans penis.</p>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Table III.</span>—<i>Distribution of Touch Spots</i><span class="nowrap">:—</span></p>
-
-<p class="ml315hi">These must be distinguished, of course, from the touch
-<i>corpuscles</i> of the preceding list and the subjective element
-in the study of them must be borne in mind.</p>
-
-<p class="ml315hi">If an area, as of the calf of the leg, be prepared, by cutting
-short the small hairs, and examined, it is found that there
-are about 15 touch spots in each square centimetre, which
-is about one-fifth of a square inch.</p>
-
-<p class="ml315hi">In another area so treated the hairs are counted and the following
-result is <span class="nowrap">given:—</span></p>
-
-<div class="table">
-<div class="row"><div class="cell tar">1.</div><div class="cell tal pl07">On the dorsal surface of the forearm 78 touch spots are
-found in an area containing 15 hairs.</div></div>
-
-<div class="row"><div class="cell tar">2.</div><div class="cell tal pl07">On the flexor surface of the forearm 147 touch spots are
-found in an area containing 22 hairs.</div></div>
-
-<div class="row"><div class="cell tar">3.</div><div class="cell tal pl07">On the scalp 66 touch spots are found in an area containing
-38 hairs.</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" title="220"><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220"></a></span></p>
-
-<p class="ml315hi">Schäfer says: “An area of the dorsum of the distal phalanx
-of a finger contains about seven times as many touch
-spots as an equal area between the shoulders. Regions
-poor in touch spots are the flexor surface of the upper
-arm, the upper third of the thigh, the leg above the inner
-malleolus, the neck, and in general the skin over subcutaneous
-surfaces of bone.<span class="nowrap">”<a id="FNanchor_81" href="#Footnote_81" class="fnanchor">81</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Table IV.</span>—<i>Distribution of Cold and Warmth Sensations.</i></p>
-
-<p class="ml315hi">The Scale includes twelve grades of sensation in cold, and eight
-in warmth sensations, and commences with the regions
-which yield the maximal intensity of sensation.</p>
-
-<div class="tac"><i>Cold Sensations.</i></div>
-<div class="table2">
-<div class="row"><div class="cell tar">1.</div><div class="cell tal pl07">Tips of fingers and toes, malleoli, ankle.</div></div>
-<div class="row"><div class="cell tar">2.</div><div class="cell tal pl07">Other regions of digits, tip of nose, olecranon.</div></div>
-<div class="row"><div class="cell tar">3.</div><div class="cell tal pl07">Chin, palm, gums, glabella (a small central area just above bridge of nose).</div></div>
-<div class="row"><div class="cell tar">4.</div><div class="cell tal pl07">Occiput, patella, wrist.</div></div>
-<div class="row"><div class="cell tar">5.</div><div class="cell tal pl07">Clavicle, neck, forehead, tongue.</div></div>
-<div class="row"><div class="cell tar">6.</div><div class="cell tal pl07">Buttock, upper eyelid.</div></div>
-<div class="row"><div class="cell tar">7.</div><div class="cell tal pl07">Lower eyelid, popliteal space, sole, cheek.</div></div>
-<div class="row"><div class="cell tar">8.</div><div class="cell tal pl07">Inner aspect of thigh, arm above elbow.</div></div>
-<div class="row"><div class="cell tar">9.</div><div class="cell tal pl07">Intercostal spaces along region of axillary line.</div></div>
-<div class="row"><div class="cell tar">10.</div><div class="cell tal pl07">Areola of mamma.</div></div>
-<div class="row"><div class="cell tar">11.</div><div class="cell tal pl07">Nipple, flank.</div></div>
-<div class="row"><div class="cell tar">12.</div><div class="cell tal pl07">Certain areas of loins and abdomen.</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="tac"><i>Warmth Sensations.</i></div>
-
-<div class="ml315hi">Absent from lower gums, mucosa of cheek at second lower
-molar and cornea.</div>
-
-<div class="table">
-<div class="row"><div class="cell tar">1.</div><div class="cell tal pl07">Tips of fingers and toes, cavity of mouth, conjunctiva, patella.</div></div>
-<div class="row"><div class="cell tar">2.</div><div class="cell tal pl07">Remaining surfaces of digits, middle of forehead, olecranon.</div></div>
-<div class="row"><div class="cell tar">3.</div><div class="cell tal pl07">Glabella, chin, clavicle.</div></div>
-<div class="row"><div class="cell tar">4.</div><div class="cell tal pl07">Palm, buttock, popliteal space.</div></div>
-<div class="row"><div class="cell tar">5.</div><div class="cell tal pl07">Neck.</div></div>
-<div class="row"><div class="cell tar">6.</div><div class="cell tal pl07">Back.</div></div>
-<div class="row"><div class="cell tar">7.</div><div class="cell tal pl07">Lower eyelid, cheek.</div></div>
-<div class="row"><div class="cell tar">8.</div><div class="cell tal pl07">Nipple, loin.</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Table V.</span>—<i>Distribution of Cold and Warmth Spots.</i></p>
-
-<p class="ml315hi">By stimulation of cold or warmth spots there is shown, not
-only the quality and quantity of the stimulus, but the
-locality. When punctiform stimuli are applied to pairs of<span class="pagenum" title="221"><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221"></a></span>
-cold spots and pairs of warmth spots marked “local
-sign” is found. This Goldscheider showed to be higher
-for cold than warmth spots.</p>
-
-<table class="ml35em" summary="" border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0">
-<tr><td class="tac" colspan="2">Cold Spots.</td><td class="tac">Warmth Spots</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tal">Palm</td><td class="tar">.8 mm.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td><td class="tar">Do. 2 mm.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tal pr1">Cheek, Chin and forehead </td><td class="tar">0.8 mm.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td><td class="tar">Do. 5.0 mm.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tal">Upper arm</td><td class="tar">2 mm.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td><td class="tar">Do. 3 mm.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tal">Back of hand, leg, thigh</td><td class="tar">3 mm.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td><td class="tar">Do. 4 mm.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tal">Forearm</td><td class="tar">3 mm.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td><td class="tar">Do. 3 mm.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tal">Back, chest, abdomen</td><td class="tar">2 mm.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td><td class="tar">Do. 5 mm.</td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="ml315hi">Thus on the palm of the hand two pairs of cold spots .8&nbsp;mm.
-apart are distinguished by this punctiform stimula­tion,
-whereas on this surface two pairs of warmth spots are
-only distinguished when they are 2&nbsp;mm. apart on the
-cheek, chin or forehead and cold spots are distinguished
-when .8&nbsp;mm. apart on the same surfaces warmth spots
-when 5&nbsp;mm. apart.</p>
-
-<p class="ml22hi"><span class="smcap">Table VI.</span>—Average lowest distances in millimetres on different
-areas of skin where two points are felt as two or minimal
-distances from which double sensation is obtained.</p>
-
-<table class="ml35em" summary="" border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0">
-<tr><td class="tac">Skin Region.</td><td class="tac">&nbsp;Adult&nbsp;Man.&nbsp;</td><td class="tac">&nbsp;Boy&nbsp;aged&nbsp;Twelve.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tal">Tip of tongue</td><td class="tar pr2 vab">1.1</td><td class="tar pr3 vab">1.1</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tal pl11hi">Palmar surface of tip of finger (index)</td><td class="tar pr2 vab">2.3</td><td class="tar pr3 vab">1.7</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tal">Red surface of lip</td><td class="tar pr2 vab">4.5</td><td class="tar pr3 vab">3.9</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tal pl11hi">Palmar surface of 2nd phalanx of finger</td><td class="tar pr2 vab">4.5</td><td class="tar pr3 vab">3.9</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tal pl11hi">Dorsal surface of 3rd phalanx of finger</td><td class="tar pr2 vab">6.8</td><td class="tar pr3 vab">4.5</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tal">Side of tongue</td><td class="tar pr2 vab">9.0</td><td class="tar pr3 vab">6.8</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tal">Tongue 27&nbsp;mm. from tip</td><td class="tar pr2 vab">9.0</td><td class="tar pr3 vab">6.8</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tal pl11hi">Plantar surface of distal phalanx of great toe</td><td class="tar pr2 vab">11.3</td><td class="tar pr3 vab">6.8</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tal">Surface of palm of hand</td><td class="tar pr2 vab">11.3</td><td class="tar pr3 vab">9.0</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tal pl11hi">Dorsal surface 2nd phalanx of finger</td><td class="tar pr2 vab">11.3</td><td class="tar pr3 vab">9.0</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tal">Forehead</td><td class="tar pr2 vab">22.6</td><td class="tar pr3 vab">18.0</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tal">Back of ankle</td><td class="tar pr2 vab">22.6</td><td class="tar pr3 vab">20.3</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tal">Back of hand</td><td class="tar pr2 vab">31.6</td><td class="tar pr3 vab">22.6<span class="pagenum" title="222"><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222"></a></span></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tal">Forearm and leg</td><td class="tar pr2 vab">40.6</td><td class="tar pr3 vab">36.1</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tal">Dorsal surface of foot</td><td class="tar pr2 vab">40.6</td><td class="tar pr3 vab">36.1</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tal pl11hi">Surface on outer border of sternum</td><td class="tar pr2 vab">45.1</td><td class="tar pr3 vab">38.8</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tal">Back of neck</td><td class="tar pr2 vab">54.1</td><td class="tar pr3 vab">36.1</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tal">Middle of back</td><td class="tar pr2 vab">67.1</td><td class="tac vab">31.6 to 40.6</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tal">Upper arm and thigh</td><td class="tar pr2 vab">67.1</td><td class="tac vab">31.6 to 40.6</td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="ml22hi"><span class="smcap">Table VII.</span>—(<i>According to Weber’s Law.</i>) Average differences in
-different regions of skin of sensation of pressure.</p>
-
-<table class="ml35em" summary="" border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0">
-<tr><td class="tal">Forehead</td><td class="tar pt03" rowspan="5"> <img src="images/81x8br.png" alt="" height="81" width="8" /></td><td class="tal" rowspan="5"> <span class="nowrap"> <span class="fraction"><span class="fnum">1</span><span class="bar">/</span><span class="fden">30</span></span></span> to <span class="nowrap"> <span class="fraction"><span class="fnum">1</span><span class="bar">/</span><span class="fden">40</span></span></span></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tal">Lips</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tal">Dorsum of tongue</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tal">Cheeks</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tal">Temple</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tal">Finger nail</td><td class="tar pt03" rowspan="7"> <img src="images/121x8br.png" alt="" height="121" width="8" /></td><td class="tal" rowspan="7"> <span class="nowrap"> <span class="fraction"><span class="fnum">1</span><span class="bar">/</span><span class="fden">10</span></span></span> to <span class="nowrap"> <span class="fraction"><span class="fnum">1</span><span class="bar">/</span><span class="fden">20</span></span></span></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tal">Dorsal surface of forearm, leg, and thigh</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tal">Dorsal surface of hand</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tal"><span class="ilb">Dorsal surface of 1st and 2nd phalanges of fingers</span></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tal">Palmar surface of finger</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tal">Palmar surface of hand</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tal">Flexor surface of forearm</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tal">Dorsum of foot</td><td class="tar pt03" rowspan="5"> <img src="images/81x8br.png" alt="" height="81" width="8" /></td><td class="tal" rowspan="5"> More&nbsp;than&nbsp;<span class="nowrap"> <span class="fraction"><span class="fnum">1</span><span class="bar">/</span><span class="fden">10</span></span></span></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tal">Dorsal surface of toes</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tal">Plantar surface of toes</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tal">Sole of foot</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tal">Surface of leg and thigh</td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>Thus on the forehead differences of pressure are distinguished
-when they are increased by <span class="nowrap"> <span class="fraction"><span class="fnum">1</span><span class="bar">/</span><span class="fden">30</span></span></span>, whereas on the dorsum of
-the foot they have to be increased by <span class="nowrap"> <span class="fraction"><span class="fnum">1</span><span class="bar">/</span><span class="fden">10</span></span></span> to be distinguished.
-This is carried out by impact of little balls of a light
-substances such as pith.</p>
-
-
-<p>It may be remarked of these tabulated results that on the
-one hand they are the results of work extending over some seventy
-years and numerous observers, and on the other that, broadly
-looked at, <i>they all tell the same story</i> of stimuli in their incidence
-on the skin—those of pain, cold, warmth and touch. There is
-also one thread of origin running through all, and that is that the
-regions most exposed to the four stimuli show the highest development
-of specialised function and structure.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" title="223"><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223"></a></span></p>
-
-
-<h3>Some Aspects of the Nervous System.</h3>
-
-<p>It has been said with some truth that the telephone has struck
-a mortal blow at such serenity of life as the Juggernaut Car of
-modern progress has left us. But if it has done nothing else it has
-furnished the physiologist with a good illustra­tion when he sets
-out to expound the functions and arrangement of the elements
-of the central nervous system and its peripheral expansion. In
-addition to this general light upon a great matter the vivid
-experience of many an Englishman during the recent years of war
-adds point to a subordinate phase of the general story of the telephone,
-for it represents my conten­tion as to the origin or initiative
-of the sensorial areas of the mosaic under considera­tion. Modern
-persons may be divided into two classes, those who want and those
-who do not want the telephone, and the former may be sub-divided
-into A, those who can, and B those who cannot get it (or could not).
-A and B from the present point of view may be termed Receptors,
-though to call the B people by that name is to speak Hibernically.
-With this war-time experience in our minds, we may picture a vast
-period of time during which the stimuli of pain, cold, warmth and
-touch were hammering on the skin both before it began to lose its
-chief hairy covering, and after that process had left man still a
-hairy animal, but with much-diminished amount of his ancient
-heritage. These stimuli fell upon the skin very much as the
-class A, among telephone receptors, spent numerous fruitless
-stimuli on Postmasters-General, Ministers in Parliament and in
-“short” bitter letters to our bright little <i>Daily Pope</i>, and who yet
-found themselves not “connected up,” as the saying goes. There
-is no knowing how long it was before they had enough effect
-on the delicate nerve fibrils struggling up into the epidermis and
-produced receptors or were “connected up” to the exchange or
-central nervous system. I am inclined to liken the pain stimuli
-to the short letters referred to, the cold and warmth stimuli to
-those addressed to the Postmasters-General and the touch stimuli
-to those which fell upon Ministers at question time.</p>
-
-<p>Another comparison of the peripheral portion of the nervous
-system to common things has at times forced itself upon my mind
-when reflecting on the stimuli which are continually assaulting the
-skin, as I have watched on the Needles’ Downs a flock of sheep on a
-summer evening returning to their fold. As the sun begins to set
-they are scattered over the western end of the Downs, still cropping
-the short grass clothing those chalk and flint slopes which from
-immemorial time has alone flourished there. They wander singly
-or in small groups on such parts of the slope as the intrusive golfer<span class="pagenum" title="224"><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224"></a></span>
-still allows, and gradually fall into larger groups which follow
-somewhat indefinite paths. As they move further and further
-towards home they are seen to follow one another in single file on
-some score or more of clearer paths, and finally converge into one
-well-beaten and broad path until they descend the northern slope
-and pass out by a single roadway into which a gate opens, and so
-reach the haven where they would be. Here one has a simple
-picture of the common stimuli of the skin, at first indefinite and
-ineffectual, by their cumulative action producing an individual
-receptor and its nerve connec­tion with the central system.</p>
-
-<p>Professor Leonard <span class="nowrap">Hill<a id="FNanchor_82" href="#Footnote_82" class="fnanchor">82</a></span> also gives a view of the general action
-of the nervous system and compares it to control of the police force.
-He supposes a murder to have been committed in a village, and
-that the local policeman telegraphs to the local town ordering the
-roads to be searched. The policeman is the tactile sense-organ,
-the telegraph wire is the sensory nerve, the telegraph office in the
-local town is the spinal cord, from this office a message is sent to
-the town police-station by another wire and the police are set in
-motion. The police are the muscles, the wire that sets them in
-motion in the motor nerve. The message is also sent to neighbouring
-towns and to London, that is to say, other local offices (parts of the
-spinal cord) and the head office (the brain) are informed of the
-crime or sensory impulse. The central office in London directs
-the operations controlling the local police office. The whole order
-of events need not be here described because it goes beyond my
-immediate purpose, but it is enough to say that attached to the
-head office are the cleverest detectives (higher sense-organs) and
-in these are kept records of past crimes, lines of action of the police,
-and success or non-success of their investigations.</p>
-
-<p>Following on this picture he speaks of the way in which conscious
-actions become automatic and makes a statement to the
-effect that “<i>There is evidence to show that the axons</i> (or processes
-of the nerve-cells which extend unbroken from nerve-cell to its
-termina­tion) <i>become covered with a adulated coat as each new tract
-is formed. Thus the structure, like the habit, becomes fixed</i>”—and—“<i>It
-would appear as if, by repeated experiences, tracts and pathways
-must be beaten through the nervous system</i><span class="nowrap">”<a id="FNanchor_83" href="#Footnote_83" class="fnanchor">83</a></span> (Italics not in original).</p>
-
-<p>Beside this I place a statement from Professor Graham Kerr
-as to his view of the development of peripheral nerve-trunks. He
-is reviewing the “outgrowth” theory of His, the “chain cell”
-theory of Balfour, and the “Primitive Continuity” theory of<span class="pagenum" title="225"><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225"></a></span>
-Hensen, and expresses himself as follows: “<i>It is suggested that the
-development of the actual nerve fibril is simply the coming into view
-of a pathway produced by the repeated passage of nerve impulses
-over a given route.</i><span class="nowrap">”<a id="FNanchor_84" href="#Footnote_84" class="fnanchor">84</a></span> (Italics not in original.)</p>
-
-<p>A passage from Professor McDougall’s <i>Physiological Psychology</i>
-may also be referred to at more length than it was in Chapter III.,
-page&nbsp;<a href="#Page_25">25</a>. Speaking of the automatiza­tion of voluntarily acquired
-actions which have been explained by the view that purely reflex
-actions carried out by mechanisms of the spinal level were also
-originally acquired by our original ancestors as voluntary actions,
-he says, “This view is usually associated with the name of Wundt,
-who has forcibly advocated it. It implies, of course, the assump­tion
-that acquired characters are in some degree transmitted from one
-genera­tion to another, a proposi­tion which most biologists at
-the present time are inclined to deny because they cannot conceive
-how such transmissions can be effected. Nevertheless, the rejection
-of this view leaves us with insuperable difficulties when we attempt
-to account for the evolution of the nervous system, and there are no
-established facts with which it is incompatible. If, therefore, we
-accept this view we shall regard the congenital neural dispositions,
-both those that determine pure reflexes and those that determine
-instinctive actions, as having been acquired and consolidated under
-the guidance of individual experience, with the co-operation, to
-a degree which we cannot determine, of natural selection.<span class="nowrap">”<a id="FNanchor_85" href="#Footnote_85" class="fnanchor">85</a></span></p>
-
-<p>These three statements from a physiologist, a zoologist, and
-a psychologist, all of great eminence, though they differ in particular
-problems studied, tell very strongly in favour of the position here
-put forward as to initiative in the produc­tion of specialised
-innerva­tion of the skin.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Origin of Cold, Warm, Pain and Touch Spots.</h3>
-
-<p>The hair-clad skin of primitive man provided ample raw
-material for the eventual differentia­tion of both end-organs and
-sensorial areas which is found to-day. Not only did he possess
-what is called Common Sensation in his skin but in the individual
-hairs lay a delicate tactile structure, which, though probably
-inferior in delicacy, serves a similar purpose to that of the vibrissæ
-on the muzzle of Felidæ. Each hair, being deeply inserted into
-the skin and supplied with fine nerve fibrils, when it is bent, acts
-as a lever communicating an impulse to an afferent nerve trunk.<span class="pagenum" title="226"><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226"></a></span>
-In an animal covered with thick hair the sensory impulse conveyed
-might be exceedingly delicate, but, from the nature of the case,
-of much more limited range than in one like man in whom the hair
-is so greatly diminished in length and thickness.</p>
-
-<p>It would be fruitless to speculate as to which of these four
-forms of stimuli was the earliest to become effective in
-developing man.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Cold and Pain.</h3>
-
-<p>Two of them, cold and pain, may be termed <i>nocuous</i>; one,
-that of touch, <i>useful</i>, and one, that of warmth, <i>indifferent</i>. If it be
-true, as Professor Scott Elliott states<span class="nowrap">,<a id="FNanchor_86" href="#Footnote_86" class="fnanchor">86</a></span> that man’s earliest home had
-a climate which “lies between the regular tropical, with wet,
-steaming, impassable jungles, and the colder temperate zone, so
-affording chance of acclimatisa­tion in both directions,” the stimuli
-of cold would even then not be wanting, however much they
-increased in severity when he passed through glacial periods; but
-wherever, whenever, and at whatever time he first became man
-he had to tread the Via Dolorosa in the course of his hard and eventful
-life, and must have been well accustomed in all regions of his
-skin to the stimuli of pain, working, as he did, for his living, and
-fighting for it and his mate, with varied and powerful enemies.
-Though it is correct to call both these fundamental stimuli
-“nocuous,” this is all a matter of degree, and both the stimulus of
-moderate cold, raising blood-pressure and activating metabolism,
-and that of minor pains, would do little else than good in his
-education for the higher terrestrial life to which he had descended.
-If he was to learn effectually to take care of himself the discipline
-of both moderate cold and pain would be as valuable to him then as
-in its measure it is to his descendant to-day. The triumphs of
-medicine and surgery could never have appeared if it were not for
-the beneficent warning voice of pain that so generally accompanies
-disease.</p>
-
-<p>Through long ages of exposure to the stimuli of cold and pain
-came response in the form of cold and pain spots, after minute
-struggles between the static conservative tissues of the skin and the
-dynamic force of repeated assaults upon them. In due time then
-receptors appeared and each became connected with the central
-organs, by which means better adapted motor reactions against
-“nocuous” cold and pain became possible. In 1900 Professor
-Sherrington summed up the evidence in Schafer’s work on Physiology
-against the existence <span class="pagenum" title="227"><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227"></a></span>“of separate afferent fibres with their specific
-end-organs entrusted specifically with carrying painful impressions
-to a pain centre,” but Professor Starling in his later work on Human
-Physiology speaks of “a distinct sense of pain,” probably subserved
-by a distinct set of nerve fibres, but for the present purpose it is not
-necessary that agreement on such a problem should be reached, for
-it is alone with pain <i>spots</i> that we are concerned. He also points
-out that on the one hand the cornea is sensitive to only one of
-the four stimuli in question, that is, pain, and on the other
-that the surface of the glans penis is sensitive to cold and
-pain, but tactile sensation and warmth sensations are almost
-entirely absent.</p>
-
-<p><i>Touch.</i>—This form of stimulus and its response can only be
-reckoned as useful to the organism, except that it may be, and often
-must be indifferent. The great number of the touch spots can be
-understood when it is declared by Professor Sherrington that
-almost invariably there are one or more touch spots close to the
-emergence of each hair<span class="nowrap">,<a id="FNanchor_87" href="#Footnote_87" class="fnanchor">87</a></span> and that they are very numerous also
-on the palmar and plantar surfaces of the hand and foot. Of the
-four forms of cutaneous stimuli those of touch are the only kind
-that have so far been proved to have specialised corpuscles, the
-other three having developed the physiological equivalent of cold,
-pain and warmth <i>spots</i>.</p>
-
-<p><i>Warmth spots</i> are decidedly the least numerous of the four,
-those of pain being, as stated by Professor Sherrington, the most
-numerous. It is obvious that unless thermal stimuli become
-somewhat excessive they hardly can be described as “stimuli,”
-being more or less neutral in their action on a warm-blooded animal.
-This cannot be entirely so, because it has been shown quite conclusively
-that warmth spots <i>do</i> exist, though much less numerous
-than others. There is a significant fact as to thermal reaction
-and that is that there are no pure <i>heat</i> spots like those of cold, for
-the stimuli of about 49°&nbsp;C are so associated with those of pain
-that warmth spots alone are distinguished, and among primitive
-man no stimuli of heat could impinge on his skin, until he had
-learned the use of fire, more powerful than those of solar heat.</p>
-
-<p>Such stimuli of heat as the rays of the sun would occasionally
-discharge on the skin would resolve themselves into the general
-stimulus of pain, and in this direction a far shorter initia­tion
-occurred than with any of the four normal cutaneous stimuli. The
-fact, at any rate, of there being no <i>heat</i> spots is to be noted.</p>
-
-<p>It remains now, having quoted three writers eminent in
-physiology, psychology and zoology in support of the modest<span class="pagenum" title="228"><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228"></a></span>
-thesis here put forward for me to appeal to the authority of the
-facts contained in the tables for such evidence as they can give,
-and to give a summary of this.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Summary.</h3>
-
-<p>1. Table I. shows that the structures known as touch corpuscles
-are distributed on those parts of the skin where the stimuli of touch
-fall most and in propor­tion to the degree in which those parts are
-employed in tactile discrimina­tion; thus, most of all on the index
-finger (with the exception of the tip of the tongue) next on the
-thumb and less on the middle finger. There are 530 of these
-corpuscles to the upper and 317 to the lower extremity.</p>
-
-<p>2. Table II. bears out the same conclusion, the average number
-of corpuscles to a square millimetre being twenty-one on the
-terminal, eight on the second and four on the first phalanges of the
-index finger, whereas on the foot there are seven on the great
-toe much exposed to stimuli and only two on the middle of the
-sole of the foot, which is little exposed. The absence of them
-from the cornea and conjunctiva, protected by quick and powerful
-reflexes from such stimuli, and from the (normally) covered glans
-penis is in accordance with the other results.</p>
-
-<p>3. Table III. dealing with touch spots, shows that these are
-nearly twice as numerous on the flexor as the dorsal surface of the
-forearm; and nearly five times as numerous as on the scalp, where
-tactile stimuli are few, and that the distal phalanx of a finger
-contains about seven times as many as an area between the
-shoulders. The regions poor in touch spots are shown to be those
-where relatively few tactile stimuli can fall.</p>
-
-<p>4. Table IV. gives cold and warmth sensations graded according
-to the delicacy with which they are perceived in many regions of
-the skin. The cold sensations are best distinguished on the parts
-normally most exposed to cold, as the tips of fingers, malleoli,
-tip of nose, chin, patella, wrist, and least on the protected areas,
-inner side of thigh, flank, loins and abdomen. The warmth sensations
-are best distinguished on the regions on which the stimuli of warmth
-has most frequently fallen, tips of fingers and toes, cavity of mouth,
-palm of hand, less so on the neck and loin. And the striking fact
-is noted that warmth sensations are not felt in the lower gums,
-the inside of the cheek at a certain level and the cornea, which
-again is protected from these stimuli by its efficient reflex, whereas
-to the gums and inside of the cheek most warmth stimuli have
-not been “stimuli” at all.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" title="229"><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229"></a></span></p>
-
-<p>5. Table V. also gives results of the mode of distribu­tion of
-cold and warmth spots, examined with punctiform stimuli. The
-“local sign” for cold is higher than that for warmth spots, and
-two of these are distinguished as double when only 0.8 millimetres
-apart on the palm, cheek, chin and forehead, whereas on the
-upper arm, back and thigh, they are only distinguished as double
-when separated by two millimetres, and this distance is the minimum
-at which warmth spots are distinguished as two, that is 2&nbsp;mm. on
-the palm, and five on cheek, chin, forehead and back. This tells
-the same story as Table IV., of past stimuli of cold and warmth.</p>
-
-<p>6. Table VI. deals more elaborately than the others with double
-sensation in different areas of the skin, the tip of the tongue being
-the most accurate in this respect of all examined, and the tip of the
-index finger next, which is to the great toe as 2.3 to 11.3, the palmar
-surface of a finger half as accurate again as the dorsal surface,
-the palm of the hand twice as accurate as the surfaces of the forehead
-and back of ankle, nearly four times as much so as the dorsum
-of the foot and six times as the skin of the middle of the back.</p>
-
-<p>There is here a very close relation between the amount of
-exposure of these various regions to tactile stimuli and their present
-equipment of ability to discriminate between two small objects.</p>
-
-<p>7. Table VII. deals with the sensation of pressure in certain
-groups of areas, and shows that change of pressure is perceived
-about three or four times as accurately on the forehead, lips and
-tongue, as on the finger nail, back of forearm, hand, or fingers,
-and more than three or four times on the back of the foot, and sole,
-and surface of leg and thigh. In this group of observations also
-the rule is followed that the greater and more frequent in man’s
-ancestral past have been the exposure of his skin to variations of
-pressure, the greater is his present power of accurate discrimina­tion
-of them.</p>
-
-<p>There are some scattered facts mentioned by Professor
-Sherrington which are in keeping with the line here taken,
-that the formation of receptors in the skin have their origin in
-accumulated stimuli. He refers to the vain endeavours of Goltz to
-evoke the reflex croak of the female frog by applying electrical
-stimuli to the skin, whereas non-nocuous mechanical stimuli were
-the only stimuli that proved effective.</p>
-
-<p>He never was able to elicit the “extensor thrust” in the
-“spinal dog” by any form of <i>electrical</i> stimula­tion, but only by a
-particular kind of mechanical stimulus. This peculiarity was
-also found in the pinna reflex of the cat.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" title="230"><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230"></a></span></p>
-
-<p>As to the scratch reflex in the dog it was only when it was
-<i>easily elicitable</i> that it could be evoked by electrical stimula­tion as
-well as mechanical, and when it was not easily elicitable electrical
-stimuli failed altogether while mechanical stimuli still evoked it.</p>
-
-<p>He describes the receptor as a mechanism “<i>attuned</i> to respond
-specially to a certain one or ones of the agencies that act as
-stimuli to the body,” and points to the fact that <i>electrical</i> stimuli
-are not of common occurrence in nature and no chance for adapta­tion
-to evolve in the organism receptors appropriate for such stimuli
-has been afforded. Such negative facts are at the least suggestive
-in considering the question of the mode of origin of receptors and
-end-organs, electrical stimuli being rare in nature.</p>
-
-<p>The subject of the innerva­tion of the skin and its receptors
-has been treated here in a great measure by the aid of imagina­tion,
-with some evidence, and a good deal of reconstruc­tion has been
-attempted, but perhaps this will be pardoned by those who are
-prepared to carry out a corresponding process with such as Pithecanthropus,
-Eoanthropus and Saurian monsters from somewhat
-scanty osseous remains. Any biological theory of the origin of
-these receptors than the one here put forward is faced with some
-formidable difficulties, which are probably insurmountable.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" title="231"><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231"></a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XXIV.<br />
-
-THE BUILDING OF REFLEX ARCS.</h2>
-
-
-<p>Assuming the foregoing origin of the innerva­tion of the skin, I
-submit that between this rudimentary process and the building
-of sensori-motor arcs in the spinal cord and brain there is a field,
-almost unlimited, for initiative in the construc­tion of new forms
-of animal life. The former is nothing without the latter. To leave
-it without proceeding further is to leave it “in the air” as military
-writers say. The formation of Receptors, then, both in the skin
-field and in the higher sense-organs, leads of necessity to the formation,
-multiplica­tion and co-ordina­tion of reflex arcs. As in an
-imperfectly organised telephone service after many a repeated
-stimuli or “rings” the messages begin to reach their destinations,
-and as by practice the operators better and better learn their
-business, so the impulses passing through receptors and nerve-fibrils
-become organized into more or less efficient systems of arcs,
-and response is secured to them by some effector of gland or muscle.
-It is not true of man alone that practice makes perfect.</p>
-
-<p>A certain feature of higher animals which distinguishes them
-from lower must be remembered, and that is that among them the
-individual becomes increasingly important. Speaking generally,
-the latter are born and die in large groups, and their lives resemble
-those of their group more closely than in the former. The struggle
-of the individual is vividly pictured by Professor Woods Jones in
-his descrip­tion of the baby of the perfected arboreal animals. He
-shows how they and the roaming Ungulates and Pelagic Cetacea
-cannot indulge in large families, and that it is only those forms which
-have a safe retreat for their young which can avoid reduction of the
-size of their families, and how the higher apes still more resemble
-in these respects mankind, as we know it. For the proper study
-of the “synthesis of the individual” organism this essential fact
-must be kept in mind.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Some Illustrations.</h3>
-
-<p>It will be expected of course that for the claim here advanced
-on behalf of the predominant influence of the nervous system in the
-initiative of the evolutionary process some experimental or other<span class="pagenum" title="232"><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232"></a></span>
-evidence should be produced. Before entering upon this, I think
-some analogous facts from the story of man, in accordance with the
-principle laid down in the first chapter should be stated, so as
-to illustrate the line of thought. These will be in the nature of
-analogies, and whether or not the accepted accounts of the chosen
-examples agree precisely with the last word of the critics is
-immaterial, for if not they will equally well serve the purpose of
-illustra­tion.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Abraham.</h3>
-
-<p>When from his Mesopotamian home an opulent and successful
-farmer decided for reasons sufficient to himself that he would leave
-his present prosperity for a promised land, and went out not knowing
-whither he went, it is manifest that the construc­tion and organiza­tion
-of Abraham’s cerebral cortex was the motive power which
-led to this step so fraught with change to himself, his descendants,
-and the world. By his choice he showed the inherited structure
-of his brain, its nature, and perhaps its nurture, to be different
-from those of his family and tribe. Implicit in this venture was
-the introduc­tion of a new group of people into a new environment,
-and their reaction to it through many generations is written before
-our eyes to-day in indelible characters. It was neither stature,
-muscular development, colour of hair, skin or eyes, properties of
-digestive or circulatory organs, keenness of sight, hearing, taste,
-smell, or touch which led to this result even though without a high
-degree of efficiency of these he could never have “arrived” as he did.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Mohammed.</h3>
-
-<p>The conjunc­tion of environment with a certain organized
-complexity of grey matter was hardly ever more important to the
-world than that of Mohammed. The powerful frame, abundant
-black hair, wonderful dark eyes, and great imposing head may
-well have attracted the rich widow who “made his fortune” by
-marrying him, and they stood him in good stead in his later adventurous
-career. But nothing short of a unique arrangement of his
-reflex-arcs, chiefly in the associa­tion-areas of his brain, could have
-opened up to him the world of Asia and Europe.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Columbus.</h3>
-
-<p>Who can doubt that it was ultimately to the inherited structure
-of the convolutions of his brain that Columbus owed his great
-achievement in opening up a New World; or that to the reactionary
-and intense “character” of Philip’s brain the persecutions in the
-Netherlands were due; and on the other hand that to the brain<span class="pagenum" title="233"><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233"></a></span>
-of William of Orange with its liberal and enlightened “character”
-the Seven Provinces that resisted Philip owed their freedom; the
-results in the two cases being the decay of Spain from that time
-forward, and the final success in the struggle for religious liberty.
-In such a view of historical facts it is not necessary either to follow
-Carlyle in his extreme claims for the influence of great men and
-heroes, nor to look upon the hero as an epiphenomenon. It is
-certain that eventually some other great man would have arisen
-to do what the great Genoese did, if he had not done it, and as it
-is claimed that Amerigo di Vespucci did, and it is certain that
-Philip was only the last of the Hapsburg sovereigns who determined
-the fall of Spain, and that Huss, Jerome, Wycliffe and Luther
-in their days initiated the struggle for religious liberty which
-Holland brought to success. But the facts referred to can hardly
-be disputed, and the men and their “characters” did certainly
-determine permanent changes in the world.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Napoleon.</h3>
-
-<p>Among individual men of modern times none strikes the
-imagina­tion as does Napoleon. Without ignoring the tremendous
-outburst of the soul of down-trodden France at the Revolu­tion,
-it cannot be denied that the “character” or grey matter of brain
-of the man of whom it is said “nothing where he had passed was
-as it had been before,” was the dominant and natural fact that
-changed the face of Europe. What physical quality had Napoleon,
-except those of his grey cells, which could have led him to such
-results on the environment into which he was cast?</p>
-
-
-<h3>Migrations.</h3>
-
-<p>Similar results in nations and tribes can easily be supplied
-from the great migrations of the past. The wider movements
-are but due to comparatively small aggregates of adventurous men,
-in other words to the aggrega­tion of many similar central nervous
-systems. The great Western and Southern adventures of the
-Scythian Tribes had many contributing causes on which the
-historian has much to say, and they were physically highly efficient
-for their new career, but, reduced to the simplest elements, it was
-neither their great stature, strong muscles, flaxen hair, nor blue
-eyes, but the cerebral constitu­tion of a comparatively small group
-of them which brought part of the nation to the promised land,
-and left another and large part in their homes beyond and along
-the Danube. The subsequent story of the latter may well be
-compared with the invaders of Gaul and Italy in connec­tion with
-initiative in evolution.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" title="234"><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234"></a></span></p>
-
-<p>The successive invasion of Britain by Low German tribes
-in the fifth century, and the Scandinavian hordes of Swedes, Danes,
-Norwegians, Letts and Finns in the eighth and ninth teach the
-same lesson. The later condition and development of the Northmen
-in France, Italy, Spain, Sicily and Britain have only to be compared
-for a moment with that of their races who remained in Norway,
-Sweden and Denmark and their descendants, to bring clearly
-before one’s mind the profound influence exerted by the cerebral
-constitu­tion of the original Viking hosts on their career in their
-new environments, and, indeed, on the environments themselves;
-as in intermarriage with their conquered foes.</p>
-
-<p>These examples have been chosen for the reason that one
-feature is common to them all, the introduc­tion of an individual
-or group into new environments by reason of the constitu­tion of
-their brains, irrespective of the contributing factors. If these
-be sound analogies they bear closely on the matter of initiative
-in the evolution of new forms of life. The men in question came
-to their task, in their day, with a certain equipment of brain derived
-from many ancestors and much nurture. Unconscious arbiters
-of their fate and that of multitudes who should follow them, they
-initiated a course of physical and cerebral evolution of which we
-can see much revealed before our eyes. The motive power of their
-conduct bears a relation to their physical forms that the engines
-of a motor-car do to its varied forms of body. The latter are
-modified indefinitely to suit convenience, comfort and grace, but
-fundamentally they exist and are energised by the former, just as
-structure is modified for the performance of function.</p>
-
-<p>This fact is occasionally brought vividly to the mind of an
-observer when he first passes a Rolls-Royce car in all its glory and
-magnificence, and then a rough squalid kind of trolly in which the
-engine-parts of a similar future Rolls-Royce are out for trial.
-In principle it is not a long step from these illustrations to the
-diverse environments of animals in which their lot is cast, and
-their reaction to them as to behaviour and structural change.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Some Changes in Habits of Man.</h3>
-
-<p>There are two current views as to the present erect posture
-of man, one which traces it to the adoption of a new posture by a
-pronograde four-footed ancestor, and the other that man’s ancestors
-were “never typically pronograde with four supporting limbs,”
-but derived from an arboreal stock in which the forelimbs were
-mobile rather than stable. Whenever or wherever man became
-orthograde he opened up for himself and his descendants immense<span class="pagenum" title="235"><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235"></a></span>
-regions of structural and functional change and became increasingly
-dominant over his environment. Changes in muscles, joints,
-bones, bursæ, lungs, heart, and vessels occurred through his employing
-in new modes the muscles, joints, bones, bursæ, lungs, heart
-and vessels he already possessed, and the resemblance between
-these structures of man and the great apes has given to the latter
-the name of anthropoid, and this similarity of structures in the
-highest Primates has done much to support in the past that Simian
-origin of man which is at present questioned. The behaviour of
-the apes and early man were sufficiently alike to lead either to
-a parallel or genetic similarity. This point is, perhaps, irrelevant
-in considering the great field for initiative in the formation of new
-physical characters, and chief among these new reflex-arcs which
-have built up the marvellous organ of man’s glory and greatness;
-but no one can dispute the elementary fact that the ancestor of
-man who adopted terrestrial bipedal locomo­tion and became
-orthograde, owed it to his growing brain and the higher integra­tion
-of his organs for that function. But besides the new posture he
-had adopted he learned to talk articulately, to make tools, and to
-use stereoscopic vision. None of these could have been started
-on the upward way without a long process of trial and error in the
-course of his total experience and practice of his powers. The
-results that followed from these three properties of his are inconceivably
-great, and it is unnecessary to enlarge on such a theme
-or to add to the number of examples.</p>
-
-<p>Leaving, then, the immediate ancestor to work out his own
-destiny in his new terrestrial home, we must as before proceed
-backward in the history of animal life in the line of Primate ancestry.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Primate Ancestry.</h3>
-
-<p>It is generally agreed to trace the Primates back to an active
-pioneer animal form which took to the trees, and which arose out
-of the widely-spread Insectivores. This deriva­tion will probably
-satisfy any reasonable genealogist. But, if we may use a parallel
-in human families, this active animal was as different from its
-congeners as Napoleon was from his four brothers who played a
-part in European history, and it is not necessary to say more as to
-the significance of this fact than that the relative importance of
-“chassis” and “body” is again a useful analogy. But we need to
-ask what those congeners did if we are to succeed in understanding
-the Napoleon-like course of him who became our Primate ancestor.
-From the original widely-spread and plastic raw material of the
-Insectivores allied forms took different lines, and their stories are<span class="pagenum" title="236"><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236"></a></span>
-written at great length in one small and the three other great orders
-of Bats, Carnivores, Ungulates, and Rodents. As it has been
-pointed out, Carnivores took to attacking larger prey, including
-their less fortunate relatives, and stepped into the arena as carnivorous
-animals; the Ungulates-to-be became herbivorous and developed
-into two great groups of hoofed animals, relying mainly on
-flight for safety; Rodents took to burrows for defence, ceased to
-trouble much about attack, and became gnawing animals; Bats
-adopted an aerial life—a poor form of it indeed like that of the
-aeroplane—and acquired a degraded fore-limb. Before leaving
-these great orders of animals, whom I do not desire to compare
-unfavourably with poor Louis, Jerome, Joseph or Lucien Bonaparte,
-it is convenient here to refer to a fact which comes to light immediately
-one looks into such a piece of classifica­tion as this of the
-orders arising out of the loins of the early Insectivores, and that is
-the functional concep­tion underlying it. Doubtless pure functional
-“characters” could never supply a whole system of classifica­tion
-in the light of the modern doctrine of descent with modifica­tion,
-and of zoological affinities. This is shown in a change from division
-of six orders of Birds-Running, Swimming, Wading, Climbing,
-Predatory and Perching Birds, to that of a few old-fashioned
-Ratite Birds, and all the rest, one which seems the best that can be
-offered at present.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Insects, Mollusca, Birds.</h3>
-
-<p>The grouping of animals by structural characters, and by
-affinities which are assumed, though based on almost undeniable
-evidence, whether into species, families, classes, phyla or sub-phyla,
-has its apotheosis in Mollusca and Insects. As to the second of these
-immense groups it has always seemed strange that their colourings
-and structural characters should have received such intensive study
-from Weismann to the exclusion of Mollusca, when he set out to
-prove his stupendous negative, and still more that of Vertebrates,
-among which his chief difficulty and desired triumph would seem
-to have lain. Mollusca though invertebrate are held by many to be
-in the line of ancestry of the highest forms of life, and at any rate
-insects are not. They are most fruitful fields indeed in which
-Nature has been able to show what she could do by her stern
-selective powers, but, from the point of view of descent with
-modifica­tion, may be fairly compared to a review of an army in time
-of peace, or the Kriegspiel of a German military staff. He who
-concerns himself with the fundamental difficulties of the problems
-at issue in evolution must make his notes of what experts tell him<span class="pagenum" title="237"><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237"></a></span>
-of such groups as those of Insects, Mollusca and Birds, and pass
-on to the higher forms in which on the one hand function becomes
-the predominant partner, and on the other individual experience
-becomes more and more important. He feels indeed at liberty to
-wish the entomologist and ornithologist all success, and to leave
-him at peace, in his siding, to pursue his delightful and interminable
-studies far from the dust and din of controversy.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Insectivores.</h3>
-
-<p>The critical territory of vertebrate, and still more of Mammalian
-forms, in which the genealogist pictures the five main groups of
-Insectivores, looking about them, if one may so speak, in the
-world around and pondering which of many paths they shall pursue,
-resembles certain centres that may be seen in towns where three,
-four, five, or seven different roads are open to the traveller, each
-with its incalculable effects on his ultimate career. If one may
-change here the metaphor it may be said that the Insectivores are
-the watershed of the Five Rivers of higher life. However much
-the wayfaring insect-feeders have diverged from this broad centre
-in structure, and however much the laws of genetics have widened
-this divergence, the facts of function stare one in the face when such
-descriptions of three of the four orders outside the Primate stock
-are pondered—Flesh-feeders, Herbivorous animals, Burrowers and
-Gnawers. These time-honoured names appealed strongly to older
-zoologists, and in them is implicit a large body of evidence for
-initiative in their evolution by pioneering work on the part of their
-ancestors. Though in these days Prototheria include Monotremes,
-One-vent animals, Metatheria, Marsupials or pouched animals, and
-Eutheria Insect-feeders, and though Mammals derive their indispensable
-name from the function by which they feed their young,
-the most severe of systematists cannot clear his mind from the old
-leaven of function in all these terms. They imply momentous
-potentialities prior to new structures, and the modern fails to ban
-entirely such functional names. I believe there is here no juggling
-with names and words on my part, but a stone in the founda­tion
-of the unambitious building which I am seeking to rear. It is
-ultimately connected with a directive power as well as the formation
-of sensori-motor arcs in the central nervous system.</p>
-
-<p>Is it possible or probable that the factors which led some group
-to the water alone, some to a life in water and on land at different
-parts of their lives, some to a crawling life on land and partly in
-water, some to the air and trees, some to nocturnal, some to hybernating,
-some to burrowing life, some to a diet of flesh, some to one of<span class="pagenum" title="238"><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238"></a></span>
-plants, some to the trees alone, some to the trees and land, some
-to the land by night and trees by day, and some for ever and wholly
-to the land—is it probable that any process of selection of suited
-structures with countless ages of trial and error, could have determined
-these changes of habit and habitat? At least one may
-claim that the balance of probabilities is heavily against that view,
-and that the forging of reflex-arcs, with all it means to the career
-of an individual, affords a more intelligible hypothesis, and that
-this is strongly supported by modern discoveries and doctrines
-arising from the work of physiologists, as will appear later.</p>
-
-
-<h3>The Place of the Nervous System in Evolution.</h3>
-
-<p>The constitu­tion of the nervous system is conditioned by
-conduc­tion, its fundamental and primary function. Its processes
-consist in the transmission of impulses from receptive fields to
-effective reactions through devious paths in a region which, even
-to-day, is a jungle, with many further secrets for physiology to
-reveal. From this point of view the nervous system may be looked
-at as a clearing-house and storehouse of impulses <i>on their way in</i>,
-<i>on their way through</i>, and <i>on their way out</i>. If so, the making of new
-reflex-arcs is a process which has gone on simultaneously with the
-formation of receptors in the skin, the higher sense-organs and such
-deep structures as muscles, and that of effectors of infinite variety—and
-these are called conveniently adaptations. When we hear
-from Professor Sherrington that the afferent fibres with their
-private paths which enter the spinal cord outnumber three times
-those which leave it, and that those of the cranial nerves should
-be added, so that the afferent fibres may be reckoned as five times
-more numerous than the efferent, we get a vivid idea of the fundamental
-importance of the formation and compounding of reflex-arcs
-into systems. Without that the most sensitive receptors and
-the widest range of structures and organs, small and great, would
-be as nothing and things of naught.</p>
-
-<p>A neurone is the anatomical, as the reflex-arc is the functional
-unit of a central nervous system. Just as it is profitless to consider
-apart the engines and body of a motor car, as working machine,
-so is it to picture neurones and reflex-arcs separately in the living
-nervous system except for the purpose of an ideal construc­tion.
-In common with the organs and structures of higher animals they
-have to pass, as historical structures, through the stages of initia­tion,
-repeti­tion of rudimentary function, and selection by trial and error,
-till the “canalizing force of habit” issues in rudimentary and
-increasingly efficient effectors. It is in this final stage where the<span class="pagenum" title="239"><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239"></a></span>
-triumphs of selection have been won, and where their undeniable
-value and interest has led some exponents of the distributional
-laws of genetics to disregard, or accept as data, the early and formative
-stages. Theirs is a mental state which resembles that of
-Darwin, who, for once in a moment of haste, declared the question
-of the origin of life to be rubbish.</p>
-
-<p>In the foregoing considera­tion of the formation of receptors
-of the skin it was assumed that certain common stimuli of the
-environment hammer out for themselves paths in the nerve-fibrils
-of the skin and by ceaseless repeti­tion lay down not only the receptor,
-which may be called the <i>terminus a quo</i>, but also the afferent fibres
-which ultimately find their way into the grey matter of the cord
-and brain. That this is the initial stage of the construc­tion of the
-higher nervous system can hardly be denied. But it carries the
-problem of the synthesis of the organism but a little way unless
-it be coincident with the construc­tion of new reflex-arcs and their
-co-ordina­tion into systems. Till this stage be reached in a rudimentary
-form the most cunning and exact adaptations and structures,
-or, as they may be broadly called effectors, will not advance
-the efficiency of the organism in the smallest degree. If the receptor
-be the <i>terminus a quo</i> the effector is the <i>terminus ad quem</i>. This is
-so obvious that it may be waved aside as a truism not worth the
-notice of a zoologist concerned with the major problems of biology.
-It may seem to challenge in a highly speculative region and manner
-the labours of the biometrician and Mendelian, but, if fairly met
-it no more encroaches on their territory than do the labours of the
-engineers who invented the first and crudest chassis of a motor
-car upon the elaborate and brilliant ingenuity, taste and skill of
-the coachbuilders who turn out the “body” of a sumptuous Rolls-Royce
-of 1920. But the latter would never have “arrived” if the
-former had not made his slow and arduous trials and errors and
-final success. So here, as in many other subjects, a truism has its
-use. If the biometrician and Mendelian will only abstain from
-erecting notice-boards to proclaim “No thoroughfare here,” we
-shall not be put down as trespassers or poachers on their ground
-and may range at large in certain fields of specula­tion.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Some Neural Phenomena.</h3>
-
-<p>Among numerous phenomena of nervous reactions discovered
-by the research of physiologists certain have a close bearing on the
-formation of receptors, afferent fibres and reflex-arcs, especially
-those of Delay, Summation, Fatigue, Block or Resistance, Localiza­tion,
-Facilita­tion and Inhibi­tion.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" title="240"><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240"></a></span></p>
-
-
-<h3>Facilitation.</h3>
-
-<p>But of all these important reactions in nervous tissues none
-bears so closely on the problem of the formation of reflex-arcs as
-that of Facilita­tion. This is equivalent to the Law of Neural Habit
-of the physiological psychologist, and is bound up with the highly
-important Law of Forward Direction, which Professor Starling
-says might as well be spoken of as the Irreciprocal conduc­tion of
-nerve-arcs. The Law of Forward Direction of sensori-motor arcs
-is too well known to need here any descrip­tion. But when this law
-is taken into account the phenomenon of Facilita­tion is seen to
-throw a strong light upon the earliest and rudimentary formation
-of specialized nerve-fibres, reflex-arcs and Final Common Paths
-leading to the effector glands or muscles. Facilita­tion is described
-shortly by Professor Starling as follows. If the passage of a nervous
-impulse across a synapse or series of synapses in the central nervous
-system be too often repeated, fatigue is produced, and there is an
-increase of the block at each synapse. If, however the stimulus
-be not excessive and the impulse not too frequently evoked, the
-effect of a passage of an impulse once is to diminish the resistance,
-so that a second applica­tion of the stimulus provokes the reaction
-more easily, and he adds that the result of summation of stimuli
-is in fact in the direction of removal of block. When an impulse
-has passed once through a certain set of neurones to the exclusion
-of others it will tend, other things being equal, to take the same
-course on a future occasion, and each time it traverses this path
-the resistance in the path will be smaller. Education then is the
-laying down of nerve-channels in the central nervous system, while
-still plastic, by this process of Facilita­tion along fit paths, combined
-with inhibi­tion (by pain) in the other unfit paths. He makes the
-important statement that Facilita­tion is of great interest in connec­tion
-with the development of “long paths” in the central
-nervous system and, <i>more especially with the acquirement of new
-reactions by the higher animals</i>. (Italics not in the original).</p>
-
-
-<h3>Raw Materials of the Central Nervous System.</h3>
-
-<p>The raw materials of higher central nervous systems are
-furnished even in lowly Vertebrates by the neurones and their
-processes, and the pathways into the grey matter by the “canalizing
-force of habit” in the receptors and afferent fibres. Facilita­tion,
-discovered in higher Vertebrates, such as dogs and cats, throws
-backwards a light on the earliest struggles towards success and
-integra­tion among phyla, sub-phyla and smaller groups, and here
-again the well-known may lead to the less-known. We may then<span class="pagenum" title="241"><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241"></a></span>
-frame a legitimate hypothesis, or at least an ideal construc­tion
-of trials and errors and success, if those of lower levels were ever to
-be introduced to the career of progress and achievement. But to
-make good this claim it is necessary that it be based on the important
-doctrine taught by Hughlings Jackson of the three (or more) levels
-of sensori-motor arcs—those of the spinal or lowest, of the sensory
-or intermediate, and those of the third or highest level, in which
-the associa­tion-areas of the Primate brain are at once the means
-and the title to his primacy, or headship of the sentient world.
-The light of this doctrine guides the mind backwards to the frog-stage
-of animal evolution with its highly organized congenital
-system of arcs of the spinal level, so efficient for its life that, even
-when the brain is removed, the frog can execute under certain
-stimuli a purposeful complicated movement such as that of trying
-to wipe away with its foot an irritant drop of acid applied to its
-head or back; or, still more, if touched lightly between the scapulæ,
-will “lower its head at the first touch, and again more so at a
-second, and at a third will, besides lowering the head, draw the
-front half of its trunk slightly backwards; at a fourth the same
-movement with stronger retrac­tion; at a fifth give an ineffectual
-sweep with its hind or fore-foot; at a sixth a stronger sweep; at
-a seventh a feeble jump; at an eighth a free jump, and so on.”
-Probably such an animal as the frog has all its reflexes congenitally
-organized, whereas a dog, reaching the sensory level, has added
-countless reflex-arcs to those inherited from its early ancestors of
-the Insectivores which had long emerged from the spinal level,
-retaining its old, perfecting its new inheritance, and eliminating
-the unfit. Perhaps a faint picture of this long process may be
-afforded by watching an experienced mountain guide ascending
-an ice-slope with the aid of ice-axe, hand and foot.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Integration of Raw Materials.</h3>
-
-<p>Every group of animals in the higher ranks has its own entailed
-property of innate reflexes, for example, the reflexes which subserve
-the reflex functions of the cord: those of locomo­tion, muscular
-and vascular tone, micturi­tion, defæca­tion, impregna­tion and
-parturi­tion. These exist in an animal of the spinal level whether
-or not it remains purely aquatic, partly aquatic, partly terrestrial,
-arboreal or terrestrial. As the progressive groups ascend the ladder
-of life they add to this inalienable heritage, gained we need not here
-ask how, fresh reflex-arcs by response to new initial stimuli, forging
-them by the incident of use. So, the original acquirements in the
-past levels serve as starting points for raising the degree of their<span class="pagenum" title="242"><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242"></a></span>
-nervous integra­tion with growing control over their environments.
-The long story from the simple central nervous system of a fish,
-with a few or no associa­tion-areas, to that of man with his extensive
-frontal, parietal, parieto-occipital associa­tion-areas, could never
-be deciphered, even with the light of the laws of genetics turned
-on full, without a protracted process of construc­tion of fresh arcs.
-A common illustra­tion of such a series of changes and results may
-be seen in the building of a house. Bricks, founda­tion-stones,
-walls and a roof may serve some of the elementary requirements
-of a house and much less than these were of use to early man for
-his shelter. Without them we cannot call any structure a modern
-house; but also without floors, staircases, windows, chimneys,
-division into rooms, some degree of decora­tion by paint or paper,
-and a supply of water, we should refuse in these days the name of
-house to that rough structure, apart from beauty of design, decora­tion,
-within and without, and some addition of modern appliances
-of comfort and convenience. In the history of house-building the
-stages of supply of raw materials, adapta­tion to needs guided by
-selection, initia­tion, trial and error have their counterpart in the
-construc­tion of higher animals.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Evidence.</h3>
-
-<p>It will be asked what evidence there is for the view here put
-forward that such is the order and method of the construc­tion of
-the central nervous system. There are two classes of evidence.
-The first direct, and the second indirect and resting on inference.
-The well-known leads to the less-known and inferred. Direct
-evidence of the founda­tion of new reflex-arcs and their organiza­tion
-is of course small. The conditions, such as the duration of human
-life, preclude any extensive formation under experiment of new
-reflex-arcs, but enough is known to enable one to follow the backward
-way with some confidence. As to the inheritance of these,
-the evidence rests on opinion and tremendous probability, but as
-the only problem with which I am concerned here is that of initiative
-I think it better to leave the matter of transmission to a dispassionate
-considera­tion of the probability of its occurrence.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Direct Evidence.</h3>
-
-<p>The prolonged researches of over twelve years of Professor
-Pawlow and his colleagues on dogs afford a body of evidence as to
-the possibility of producing new reflexes in the life of an individual
-which have never been questioned. In 1913 at Groningen, before
-the International Congress of Physiologists, he gave a brief account<span class="pagenum" title="243"><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243"></a></span>
-of this work. His previous work on the digestive glands carried
-on by delicate operations in which the œsophagus was diverted from
-the stomach and made to open externally, and in which a portion
-of the stomach was diverted from the rest and a new “small
-stomach” was formed, gave him the opportunity of immensely
-important insight into the factors governing the work of the various
-glands of the stomach. The work of others showed similar results
-in the pancreas. I only refer to these because they lead up to the
-special artificial results with new reflexes which he described in
-1913. He states that the nervous system besides the primitive
-function of reproducing innate reflexes, possesses another prime
-function-namely the formation of new reflexes; and that the
-living thing is enabled to respond, by definite and suitable activities
-to agencies to which it was formerly indifferent. His experiments
-on the formation of “conditional reflexes,” as he calls them rather
-than “acquired” as opposed to “innate,” are grouped around the
-feeding of the animal and mainly deal with the salivary glands,
-because they are in direct connec­tion with the external world and
-their reactions are simply and easily observed. An indifferent
-stimulus is chosen for the reflexes which it is desired to build up,
-and this is applied at the same time as food or acid is introduced
-in the mouth. After a few sittings it is found that this indifferent
-stimulus <i>alone</i> is now capable of calling forth a secretion of saliva.
-“The conditional reflex has been formed; the formerly indifferent
-stimulus has now found a path to the requisite part of the central
-nervous system. The reflex-arc has now a different afferent
-neurone.” He gives a good example of this in the result of the
-applica­tion of painful stimuli by a strong electrical current to the
-skin, systematically accompanying each feeding of the animal.
-He finds that the strongest electrical stimuli applied to the skin
-give rise merely to the “feeding reaction,” that is, the secretion
-of saliva, and no indications of any fright or pain appear. “The
-skin of a dog can be subjected to cutting, pinching or burning, and
-the only result we shall obtain will be the manifesta­tion of what,
-judging from our own experience, we should call the symptoms of
-the keenest appetite; the animal follows the experimenter about,
-licks himself, and saliva flows in abundance.” This, it must be
-remembered, occurs in the absence of the offer or sight of food, <i>at
-the time in question</i>. He adds: “In this way we have been able
-to divert the impulses from one path to another according to the
-conditions, and we cannot avoid the conclusion that the diversion
-of an impulse from one path to another represents one of the most
-important functions of the highest parts of the central nervous<span class="pagenum" title="244"><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244"></a></span>
-system.” The presence of certain special conditions, he points out,
-causes the indifferent stimulus, which would otherwise be dispersed
-in the higher centres, to be directed to a particular focus, and
-<i>eventually to lay down for itself a path to that part</i>. A very interesting
-detail of such a building of a new reflex is that “the stimuli from
-which the new reflex is to be worked out shall be rigidly isolated.”
-Therefore to avoid any interference with the certainty of the experiment,
-such matters as a personal bodily odour or kind of movement,
-or even such a slight fact as a change in the mode of breathing
-familiar to the dog on the part of the experimenter, has in the latest
-experiments been removed by the applica­tion of the stimuli by
-mechanical devices worked from another room, with results similar
-to the earlier ones. Conditional reflexes can also be obtained from
-stimuli arising from the locomotor apparatus, as the joints, eliminating
-the stimuli arising from the skin. Also certain parts of the
-frontal lobes were extirpated and “when one part is extirpated the
-reflex is obtained from the flexion of the joint, but not from the
-skin; if a different part be removed we can get the skin-reflex, but
-not the reflex from the joint.” He extirpated in one case the
-greater portion of the posterior part of the brain and the dog lived
-for several years after this in complete health. It was found easy
-to obtain a conditional reflex for various intensities of illumina­tion,
-also for sound, and even a fine differentia­tion of tones. In another
-dog the anterior half of the brain was removed and all the reflexes
-before worked out in this animal disappeared, and yet in this
-helpless condition of the dog he could train it to give that response
-of the salivary glands which he called the “water-reflex,” in which
-first of all an irritating acid was introduced into the mouth and the
-subsequent administra­tion of water provoked an abundant secretion
-of saliva which does not occur when water is poured into the mouth
-of a normal dog. This was confirmed in another example in which
-alone the centre for smell had been spared, and yet it was possible
-in it to train the smell-reflexes also. I add one striking sentence
-from Pawlow’s address which, though an opinion, must be received
-with the respect it deserves from such a source. “It is perhaps
-not rash to think that some of the newly-formed conditional reflexes
-can be transmitted hereditarily and become unconditional thereby.”</p>
-
-
-<h3>Indirect Evidence.</h3>
-
-<p>From these limited but cogent pieces of evidence I turn to the
-larger but confirmatory lines of indirect evidence and inference,
-of which such works as those of Professors Sherrington, Bayliss, and
-Starling, the notable address of Professor Macdonald at Portsmouth<span class="pagenum" title="245"><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245"></a></span>
-in 1911, as well as the recent work of Professor Woods Jones on
-Arboreal Man, are full. Indeed if the construc­tion of new reflexes
-and reflex-arcs in organic evolution “forged by an incident of use”
-as Professor Macdonald puts it, were expunged from these works,
-their treatment of the physiology of the central nervous system
-of higher animals would be emasculated, to say the least of it. And
-yet not one of these eminent men is writing <i>ad hoc</i>, or for the confusion
-of Weismann and his followers. At this point it may perhaps
-gain for the remaining pages a little more considera­tion from
-opponents if I give a few quotations from these writers in support
-of the foregoing statement—perhaps the breeze of authority may
-then carry my little bark a little further on its perilous voyage.
-Professor Sherrington remarks on the first page of his well known
-work, in reference to the cell-theory, “with the progress of natural
-knowledge, biology has passed beyond the confines of the study
-of merely visible form, and is turning more and more to the subtle
-and deeper sciences that are branches of energetics. The cell-theory
-and the doctrine of evolution find their scope more and more,
-therefore, in the problems of function, and have become more and
-more identified with the aim and incorporated among the methods
-of physiology.” Again, “Mere experience can apart from reason
-mould nervous reactions in so far as they are plastic. The ‘bahnung’
-(or facilita­tion) of a reflex exhibits this in germ.” He uses more
-than once the pregnant phrase, “The canalizing force of habit”;
-again, “Progress of knowledge in regard to the nervous system has
-been indissolubly linked with the determina­tion of function in it.”
-Speaking of the receptive-field he says of the central nervous system,
-“To analyse its action we turn to the receptor organs, for to them
-is traceable the initia­tion of the reactions of the centres”; of the
-extero-ceptive field he says, “facing outwards on the general
-environment it feels and has felt for countless ages the full stream
-of the varied agencies for ever pouring upon it from the external
-world,” page&nbsp;20, and “each animal has experience only of those
-qualities of the environment which as stimuli excite its receptors,
-it analyses its environment in terms of them exclusively. The
-integra­tion of the animal associated with these leading segments
-can be briefly with partial justice expressed by saying that the rest
-of the animal, so far as its motor machinery goes, is but the servant,
-of them. Volitional movements can certainly become involuntary,
-and conversely, involuntary movements can sometimes be brought
-under the subjec­tion of the will. From this subjec­tion it is but a
-short step to the acquisi­tion of co-ordinations which express themselves
-as movements newly acquired by the individual,” and,<span class="pagenum" title="246"><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246"></a></span>
-“The integrating power of the nervous system has, in fact, in the
-higher animal more than in the lower, constructed from a mere
-collec­tion of organs and segments a functional unity, an individual
-of more perfected solidarity,” also “a single momentary shock
-produces in the nervous arc a facilitating influence on a subsequent
-stimulus applied even 1400σ later.” I will give but one more
-statement from this work which seems to tell against my humble
-position of initiative in evolution. Professor Sherrington says
-at the end of his book, speaking of the adjustments of nervous
-reactions in the lifetime of the individual: “These adjustments
-though not transmitted to the offspring yet in higher animals
-form the most potent internal condition for enabling the species
-to maintain and increase in sum its dominance over the environment
-in which it is immersed.” A little care in reading the foregoing
-chapters will show that this in no way contradicts the views
-expressed.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Facilitation.</h3>
-
-<p>From Professor Starling’s Principles of Human Physiology
-I may again quote part of his account of Facilita­tion or “Bahnung.”
-“When an impulse has passed through a certain set of neurones
-to the exclusion of others it will tend, other things being equal, to
-take the same course on a future occasion, and each time it traverses
-this path the resistance in the path will be smaller. Education
-is the laying down of nerve-channels in the central nervous system,
-while still plastic, by the process of ‘Bahnung’ along fit paths
-combined with inhibi­tion (by pain) in the other unfit paths. Memory
-itself has the process of facilita­tion for its neural basis,” again,
-“stimula­tion of one anterior root produces no definite movement
-of a group of muscles, but partial contrac­tion of a number of muscles
-which do not normally contract simultaneously. Thus, stimula­tion
-of a sensory nerve may provoke either flexion or extension of a
-limb, not both simultaneously. Stimula­tion of the motor roots
-will cause simultaneous contrac­tion of both flexor and extensor
-muscles. It is <i>this subordina­tion of morphological to physiological
-arrangements</i> in the limbs which has necessitated the founda­tion
-of limb-plexuses.” (Italics not in the original). Professor Graham
-Kerr in his work on Embryology before mentioned says: “In early
-stages of Evolution, whether phylogenetic or ontogenetic, we may
-take it that vital impulses flitted hither and thither in an indefinite
-manner within the living substance and that one of the features of
-progressive evolution has been the gradual more and more precise
-defini­tion of the pathways of particular types of impulse, as well<span class="pagenum" title="247"><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247"></a></span>
-as the transmitting and receiving centres between which they pass.
-We may then regard the appearance of neuro-fibrils within the
-protoplasmic rudiment of the nerve-trunk as the coming into view
-of tracks, along which, owing to their high conductivity, nerve-impulses
-are repeatedly passing. It may be that as each successive
-passer-by causes a jungle-pathway to become more clearly defined
-so each passing impulse makes the way easier for its successors and
-makes it less likely for them to stray into the surrounding substance”
-(p.&nbsp;112).</p>
-
-<p>Professor Macdonald, in the Portsmouth address referred to,
-speaking of the states of the cells under excita­tion, rest, and inhibi­tion,
-says “<i>excita­tion</i> is associated with an increase in pressure of
-certain particles within the cells; in <i>rest</i> these particles are in their
-normal quantity and have their normal number. During <i>inhibi­tion</i>
-they are decreased in number or have a retarded motion. Thus
-it happens that the excited cell tends to grow in size, on the other
-hand the inhibited cell tends to diminish, and the resting cell to
-remain unaltered in the nervous system. Structure is everywhere
-the outcome of function.” Speaking of the relationship of parts
-within the nervous system, “In so far as it is fixed, it is a sign of
-the orderly action of circumstance upon the structures of the body,
-and the result rather than the cause of the monotony of existence.
-I hold it as probable that all the individual structures of the nervous
-system, and so in the brain, have just so much difference from one
-another in size and shape and in function as is the outcome of that
-measure of physical experience to which each one of them has been
-subjected; and that the physiological function of each one of them
-is of the simplest kind. The magnificent utility of the whole system,
-where the individual units have such simplicity, is due to the
-physically developed peculiarities of their arrangement in relation
-to one another, and to the receptive surfaces and motor-organs of
-the body.” As to the lens-system of the eyeball he remarks,
-“Surely there is no escape from the statement that either external
-agency cognisant of light, or light itself has formed and developed
-to such a state of perfec­tion this purely optical mechanism, and that
-natural selection can have done no more than <i>assist</i> in this process.”
-He applies the same conclusion to the formation of the sound-conducting
-and resonant portion of the ear as well as the semi-circular
-canals and to the cerebellum. These statements are not
-strictly associated with this chapter but bear by analogy very
-strongly on the matter at issue. Indeed the whole of this address
-might be utilised by a junior counsel for Lamarck if he rested alone
-on the authority of a leading physiologist. The same may be said<span class="pagenum" title="248"><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248"></a></span>
-of the anatomist whose <i>Arboreal Man</i> has attracted so much
-attention. Speaking of the arboreal habit in the phylogenetic
-history of mammals he asks the question, “How did this factor
-enable that particular stock to acquire supremacy?” and says
-that it will be answered as far as it is possible, by the study of the
-influence of the arboreal habit upon the animal body; which may
-be put in another way as the produc­tion of reflex-arcs suited thereto
-(p.&nbsp;3.) Of the muscle groups of fore and hind limbs he says, “With
-a simple arrangement of anatomical parts a slight shifting of muscular
-origins has turned a perfectly mobile second segment into a
-supporting segment constructed upon very simple lines: that these
-changes are those produced by the demands of support from the
-hind-limbs in tree-climbing seems obvious” (p.&nbsp;6); of the position
-of uprightness upon a flexed thigh of an arboreal man, “It is tree-climbing
-which makes this posture a possibility” (p.&nbsp;63). “But
-it is not to be doubted that the underlying principle is clear enough,
-that the arboreal habit develops the specialised and opposable
-thumb and big toe” (p.&nbsp;71). “Even before the power of grasp
-is developed, we may imagine the dawn stages of educational
-advances initiated by hand-touch” (p.&nbsp;159). “Tactile impressions
-gained through the hand are therefore perpetually streaming into
-the brain of an arboreal animal and new avenues of learning about
-its surroundings are being opened up as additions to the olfactory
-and snout-tactile routes” (p.&nbsp;160). He asks also the pertinent
-question, and says at least a partial answer to it can be given, “Did
-the cerebral advance create the physical adaptations, or did the
-physical adaptations make possible a cerebral advance?” (p.&nbsp;196).
-Two more statements from this chapter show what the answer
-to this question from the <i>anatomist</i> would be—“and again in the
-evolutionary story we are forced back to consider a combina­tion
-of seemingly trivial, and apparently chance associations: in this
-case the dawning possibilities of neo-pallial developments combined
-with the physical adaptations <i>due directly to environmental influences</i>”
-(p.&nbsp;198). I have ventured to underline this passage.</p>
-
-<p>I regret the necessary length of these quotations but, on account
-of them, can the better be suffered to finish this study, when I
-briefly consider certain well-known nervous reactions in the cat
-and dog as to their probable origin. It would be a highly interesting
-thing to hear an exposi­tion by an expert of all the reflexes and reflex-arcs
-of such a system as those which in a cat, dog, ape, or man are
-concerned with the passage of a morsel of food from the mouth
-through all its chequered and varied career till it undergoes metabolism
-and excretion, but I could not do it if I would, and would<span class="pagenum" title="249"><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249"></a></span>
-not here if I could, because of their fundamental fixed and innate
-character, and I think it simpler and safer to refer to such minor
-reflex-arcs as those which govern the scratch-reflex in a dog, the
-pinna reflexes in a cat, and a few smaller ones, on the principle of
-<i>ex uno disce omnes</i>. Such minor nerve-mechanisms as these in a
-pair of well-known domesticated animals will suffice for evidence
-on behalf of initiative in evolution.</p>
-
-
-<h3>The Scratch Reflex.</h3>
-
-<p>The scratch-reflex in the dog, which like the tendon-reflex
-in man was in my youth a subject for schoolboy tricks, has received
-a vast amount of attention and research from physiologists to whom
-it has brought valuable fruit. It is a familiar phenomenon in a
-familiar friend of man. There is a saddle-shaped area on the back
-of the dog over which it was found empirically that even a light
-stimulus when applied rhythmically, produces the “scalptor-reflex”
-or a reflex rhythmical action of the flexor muscles of the
-leg on the same side, calculated to remove the irritating causes
-of the stimulus. This includes a series of receptors in the skin
-leading to a spinal segment in the region of the shoulder, a long
-neurone in the cord, then a motor neurone, the axon from which
-activates the flexor muscles of the leg and produces scratching.
-It is described as an efferent arc from receptor to the motor neurone,
-from which the Final Common Path supplies the motor apparatus
-or effector. Professor Sherrington says that in this reflex a single
-stimulus which is far below threshold intensity is found on its
-fortieth repeti­tion and nearly four seconds after its first applica­tion
-to become effective and provoke the reflex and that its frequency
-is about 4.5 per second. The reflex movement remains rhythmic
-and clonic under the strongest as under weaker stimula­tion. When
-it is easily elicitable the scratch-reflex can be evoked by various
-forms of electrical as well as mechanical stimula­tion, but, when
-not easily elicitable, electrical stimula­tion fails whereas rubbing
-or other mechanical forms of stimuli still evoke it, though less
-vigorously than usual. This reflex can also be set aside by the
-“nociceptive arc from the homonymous foot” or, in other words,
-a nocuous stimulus to the leg of that side produces “interferences
-which amounts to inhibi­tion.” Empirically it is easy to notice
-also that if the “scalptor-reflex” can be elicited on both sides of
-the body, the dog when standing will momentarily lose the power
-in the hind legs.</p>
-
-<p><i>Note.</i>—The rhythm of this reflex act is so special even to the
-layman that lately I had a singular confirma­tion of its stereotyped<span class="pagenum" title="250"><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250"></a></span>
-character, when lying awake at night and being puzzled by a curious
-rhythmical scratching sound coming from my next door neighbour’s
-back yard. It might have been taken by a wakeful person for
-some mechanical work on the part of a burglar, but after listening
-repeatedly to the apparently familiar sound I found that it came
-from the kennel of a fox terrier kept by my neighbour.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Purposes of Reflexes.</h3>
-
-<p>All reflexes being purposive this particular innate reflex is
-acknowledged to have for its purpose the grooming or cleaning of
-the skin over its hereditary territory. This introduces its connec­tion
-with initiative here propounded, and the justifica­tion for
-its introduc­tion is contained in Professor Sherrington’s statement
-that “In the analysis of the animal’s life as a machine in action
-there can be split off from its total behaviour fractional pieces
-which may be treated conveniently, though artificially, apart,
-and among these are the reflexes we have been attempting to
-decipher”—scratch-reflexes and others. There seems to be no
-reason for the existence and stereotyped character of this reflex
-except the need or rather the desire (if one may use a convenient
-but inaccurate term) on the part of the dog to remove an irritant
-which disturbs its comfort when at rest. Some “minor horrors,”
-probably fleas moving across the skin-receptive field of its shoulder
-and back, must be assumed to be the irritant in question. This
-touches the great question of the initiative of this remarkable
-reflex, which seems more fixed and powerful in the dog as we know
-him than that other reflex which leads him to turn tail and flee
-immediately he sees a boy stoop down as if to pick up a stone.
-I dare say a clever advocate on the opposite side might impress a
-jury by building up a case under which an adapta­tion to a protective
-need would be conceived as responsible for the rapid flight at the
-sight of the threatening attitude of the boy. Such a reconstruc­tion
-is not required, for it is perfectly clear that in the history of the
-domesticated dog the selection of such an adapted reflex could have
-no place. The survival-value of this reflex would be nil, for the
-number of dogs killed by a stone or maimed for life would be so
-negligible that the produc­tion of a specialised reflex for the purpose
-by selection or survival of the fittest would not arise. Obviously
-the danger would be intermittent and rare; and dead dogs tell
-no tales. On the other hand it would be highly unpleasant for
-dogs to be hit by stones and educability would lead them to avoid
-the stooping attitude associated with missiles.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" title="251"><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251"></a></span></p>
-
-<p>We are told on high authority that not education but educability
-is transmissible, and yet this humble reflex appears in very
-young dogs that could hardly if ever have known the impact of a
-stone. Incidentally we are compelled to remember how in past
-battles of our youth the aim both of “ourselves and the enemy”
-was deplorably poor, and not from want of practice. This school-boy-stone
-reflex is either an example of educational effects transmitted
-or of a minute bit of the unpacking of an original complexity
-which it would require the brain of a de Quincey to work out. But
-if we suppose the initial stages of such a stimulus as the occasional
-impact of a stone in many generations to be slowly ingrained in the
-skin-receptors, reflex-arcs and receptors we do not need opium
-either for the acceptance of orthodox dogma or to aid us in the
-Mendelian alternative to a very simple ideal construc­tion.</p>
-
-<p>This digression bears on the initiative of the more important
-scratch-reflex, and it is profitable to ask “are not both of these
-reflexes in dogs examples of Evolution of the Indifferent?” Is it
-possible to imagine that from its inception to its fully-formed state,
-with a specialised territory of skin-receptors accurately mapped out,
-with receptor neurones, reflex-arcs and adapted effectors, this
-scratch-reflex can have arisen through Germinal Selection or
-selective processes within the germ? At no stage can anything
-more than a contribu­tion to more or less comfort to the animal be
-held to result from its operation. It is strangely reminiscent of the
-proceedings of an elderly man after lunch on a hot day when he
-protects his head against house-flies with a handkerchief. I am
-aware that it is but one of a large number of reflexes produced for
-the purpose of grooming the trunk head or limbs of animals as low
-down in the scale as the house-fly or grasshopper, many of which
-were beautifully described a few years ago by Miss Frances Pitt
-in the <i>National Review</i> in an article dealing with small mammals,
-chiefly rodents. But I have availed myself here as elsewhere, of
-the liberty of doing what Professor Sherrington says we may do,
-and consider this scratch-reflex as split off from the rest of the
-animal’s behaviour for the purpose of analysis. He also says in
-discussing the subject of parasites moving across the receptive
-surface of the skin that the ulterior purpose may be the removal
-of what “would confuse its function as a receptive surface to more
-significant environmental stimuli.” This statement is hypothetical
-and the problem obscure; but at any rate we know this that the
-removal of the parasite must conduce to the greater comfort of the
-dog without any more recondite purpose. The one suggested by
-Professor Sherrington would in some possible but very vague<span class="pagenum" title="252"><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252"></a></span>
-manner be referable to selection, but, whether the sugges­tion be
-valid or not, it is almost impossible to suppose that a saddle-shaped
-area of the kind described could be under the guidance of selection.
-The law of Parcimony forbids. There is a close similarity between
-this saddle-shaped area in the dog and that on the cow’s trunk
-described in Chapter X. It is difficult to believe that from man
-downwards to grasshoppers relief from mild irritating causes such
-as this is not enjoyable to the particular animal, and yet indifferent
-altogether as to its survival in the struggles of life for food and mates.
-The “scalptor-reflex” only reaches the limits of the receptive
-field of the scratch-reflex and it is contrary to observed facts that
-parasites confine their depredations just to the region where the
-formidable scalptor-reflex can reach. The wicked flea knows better
-than that. The initiative of this reflex can well be pictured as
-taking place in domesticated dogs and their wild ancestors whose
-habitats in prehistoric times were probably infested with these
-irritants to such a degree that no modern mind can conceive, and
-the adequate stimuli, leading to receptors after ages of impact and
-consequent hammering out pathways through certain reflex-arcs
-until the required weapons of offence or effectors were organised
-into a <i>defensive-offensive system</i>—were there in profusion. But a
-great and fundamental principle of the evolutionary process such
-as Selection is not honoured by being dragged in, even for forensic
-purposes, to account for results which owe to the search for
-comfort their perfec­tion of organisa­tion. I have personally seen
-in some professional invalids of the softer sex nearly as perfect
-adaptations to their comfort which in no way contributed to
-their length of life. This may be put aside as irrelevant but it
-is at least suggestive.</p>
-
-<p>I submit the statement as to the scratch-reflex in the dog that
-from beginning to end it is an <i>indifferent</i> mechanism and the probability
-is immense that its initial stages were governed alone by
-repeated stimuli from parasites which produced receptors, conducting
-fibres afferent neurones and efferent neurones, leading
-into the Final Common Path controlling the flexors of the hind
-limb. It would then come under the Law of Subjective or Hedonic
-Selection formulated by Professor Stout in the words: “Lines of
-action, if and so far as they are unsuccessful, tend to be discontinued
-or varied; and those which prove successful to be maintained.
-There is a constant tending to persist in those movements and motor
-attitudes which yield satisfactory experiences, and to renew them
-when similar conditions recur; on the other hand those movements
-and attitudes which yield unsatisfactory experiences tend to be<span class="pagenum" title="253"><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253"></a></span>
-discontinued at the time of their occurrence, and to be suppressed
-on subsequent similar occasions.”</p>
-
-<p>In this connection a statement from Professor McDougall’s
-work may be advantageously quoted. He says that “It is characteristic
-of those (arcs) of the higher or third level that their organisa­tion,
-their interconnections, by means of which the simpler neural
-systems of great complexity, is <i>congenitally determined in a very
-partial degree only</i>, and is principally determined in each individual
-by the course of its experience. The arcs of the higher level thus
-constitute the physiological basis or condition of docility, the power
-of learning by experience.<span class="nowrap">”<a id="FNanchor_88" href="#Footnote_88" class="fnanchor">88</a></span> (My italics)</p>
-
-
-<h3>Scratch Reflex of the Cat.</h3>
-
-<p>There is a notable difference between the scratch-reflex of the
-dog and that of the cat, especially as to the site of its receptive-field.
-That of the dog has been referred to, but it appears to be
-generally accepted that the cat has no such saddle-shaped or indeed
-other area of skin receptive-field on its back or flanks. I have
-repeatedly tried by various mechanical stimuli, applied both
-irregularly and rhythmically, to evoke a scratch-reflex in a cat,
-young or adult, on the surface corresponding to that of the dog,
-and have found no response. This has been tried both when the
-animal was awake and when asleep. But the receptive field of the
-cat’s scratch-reflex has received careful and elaborate attention,
-which is described in a paper by Professor Sherrington in the <i>Journal
-of Physiology</i>, Vol.&nbsp;LI. No. 6. By means of delicate stimuli,
-mechanical and electrical in a decerebrate cat, the receptive-field
-of the scratch-reflex has been accurately delineated in the pinna,
-and several other pure reflexes have been obtained. These are
-protective of the pinna; some, the retrac­tion and folding reflexes
-seem directed against irritant touches, <i>e.g.</i> the settling of fleas—or
-against exposure to injury in fighting; others, the cover and
-head-shake and scratch-reflexes against the ingress of foreign matter,
-such as dust, water, insects, into the meatus and ampulla. The
-threshold for their elicita­tion is extremely low, that is to say, they
-require very gentle stimuli to evoke them, while with the exception
-of the scratch-reflex they are elicited with difficulty and uncertainty
-<i>by electrical stimuli</i> (My italics) to which the animal has been subjected
-in the course of its total experience. He adds that the pinnal
-reflexes are readily obtained in the normal animal, and I may allude
-here to some small observations I made on a normal young cat<span class="pagenum" title="254"><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254"></a></span>
-during profound sleep, recorded in <i>Nature</i>, Vol. 106, Sept. 2, 1920.
-Light mechanical stimuli, applied during this state of deep sleep
-to the internal surface of the pinna, especially close to the meatus,
-produced first, twitching of the facial muscles on the same side;
-second, as this ceased the fore foot was moved irregularly towards
-the ear, and third, as this ceased a rhythmical scratching action
-of the hind foot took its place, the rate of which seemed to be
-exactly the same as that of the scratch-reflex in the dog evoked
-from stimula­tion of the flank and back. I had not then, unfortunately
-read more than an abstract of the above paper, but if the
-full account be followed it will be seen that the various “territories”
-belonging to all the former-reflexes are now known as well as the
-frontiers of a European Kingdom. All I was able to do with this
-unusual opportunity of a heavy sleep in a normal young cat was
-to verify more roughly Professor Sherrington’s observations and
-slightly to extend them <i>in respect of a sleeping animal</i>.</p>
-
-<p>In the course of these observations on a young cat I examined
-the various regions of the back and flanks with mechanical stimuli
-of different degrees of strength. These were applied during sleep
-and I found that it was more often during a moderate than a light
-or deep sleep that the following results were shown—chiefly under
-the stronger stimuli the tail was raised sharply and swept in a
-circular way, and this would be repeated according as the stimulus
-was applied; but at the same time there was shown a strong,
-irregular twitching along the flank, extending forwards to a point
-near the level of the shoulder. This latter reflex would appear to
-be a reaction on the part of the panniculus carnosus. Both the
-reflex of the muscles of the tail and this of the flanks appear to be
-connected in their origin with movements of parasites in their
-respective territories.</p>
-
-<p>In considering the scratch-reflex in the cat a subtle bit of
-adjustment is found. That coarse and simple scratching of its
-ear, which we see so often in the cat, must have often astonished
-us for its vigour and yet its bloodless character. This action is
-of course a purposeful one, for it goes on when the animal is awake.
-Here if anywhere this profoundly hedonistic animal shows that
-for it the laws of comfort are its laws of conduct. It is clear that
-there may be two processes or conditions involved in its bloodless
-violence. On the one hand the reflex retractile mechanism of the
-claws may be kept in abeyance by another reaction which is pre-potent;
-on the other, it is a fact that the hind foot in the cat is
-furnished with claws which are much blunter than those of the
-fore foot. As far as I have been able to examine cats of different<span class="pagenum" title="255"><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255"></a></span>
-ages I have found the claws of the hind foot more like the blunt
-claws of a dog than the familiar sharp claws of the Felidæ. So in
-the violent scratching referred to there may be a double reason
-associated in the process. As to the difference in the sharpness of
-the fore and hind claws it would appear to be remarkably like a
-transmitted bit of adapta­tion initiated and kept in being by use
-and habit in progression, for the hind foot in such animals as the
-cat has a larger share in this action than the fore foot. But here
-it is difficult as so often to assign to selection its possible share of
-the adjustment.</p>
-
-<p>Certain minor but persistent reflexes may be briefly mentioned
-in support of this side of the evolutionary process. In the dog and
-cat, as we know them, the action of the muscles of the tail by which
-it is elevated during the act of defæca­tion is very suggestive of a
-reflex acquired by a very small degree of physical comfort and
-repeated in countless individuals, wild and domesticated. I have
-seen not only this but a few small scratches made by a cat before
-defæca­tion in a kitten as young as three weeks old. It is also
-mentioned in illustra­tion of a vestigial character that a horse will
-paw the ground with no immediate apparent object, the act being
-derived from ancestors which thus cleared away snow from the
-ground. This is claimed, doubtfully I think, as a vestige of a
-formerly <i>useful</i> habit but seems more probably to be one of these
-indifferent reflexes connected with comfort than with survival-value.</p>
-
-<p>It will be observed that in this branch of the case for
-Lamarck <i>v.</i> Weismann the indirect evidence from inference far
-exceeds in amount that of direct experimental evidence, but
-from the nature of the problem under considera­tion this could
-not be otherwise.</p>
-
-<p>If we may again look back in thought over the long series
-of animals, from man downwards, we shall picture those of the
-spinal level striving (with apologies for the use of an anthropomorphic
-word) to reach the sensory level and finding out the fact
-that few there be that enter therein. Again we see in vision the
-higher creatures of the sensory level reaching forwards to the strait
-paths of primate existence, and again finding the difficulty of self-advancement
-that their predecessors found. We see the elect few
-of these, by a happy combina­tion of nature and nurture, uprearing
-to glory and honour the primate stock with its culmina­tion in man.
-A long vista indeed and a vision, but assuredly no mere figment
-of the imagina­tion, as some of the slender facts and arguments
-here would seem to show. With Professor Bateson we personify<span class="pagenum" title="256"><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256"></a></span>
-Nature in the story, with her wonted coyness betraying the fact
-that though she is stern she has her tolerant moods; that she allows
-her children, even that “insurgent son” who calls himself Homo
-Sapiens, a genial liberty to frame new reflex-arcs which make for
-his enjoyment of life in indifferent fields, and <i>that the great neural
-process of Facilita­tion is the leading factor in their constructions and
-probably also in more deeply-based systems of sensori-motor arcs</i>.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" title="257"><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257"></a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>SUMMARY.</h2>
-
-
-<p>Though it be true that <i>dolus latet in generalibus</i>,
-it is a more important truth that “without premature
-generalisations the true generalisa­tion would never
-be arrived at.<span class="nowrap">”<a id="FNanchor_89" href="#Footnote_89" class="fnanchor">89</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Therefore I <span class="nowrap">conclude:—</span></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>1. That Plasto-diēthēsis, or the moulding and
-sifting processes experienced by organisms,
-represents the beginning and end of higher
-animal evolution; and that its wide hyphen
-stands for the provinces where Mendelism,
-Mutationism, Tetraplasty, Orthogenesis, and
-the dynamical work of growth on Form, as
-well as other factors yet to be discovered, can
-range at large.</p>
-
-<p>2. That personal selection is the leading form
-of that process in higher animals, whereas
-among Invertebrates, especially unicellular
-forms, selection of groups is the rule.</p>
-
-<p>3. That Initiative in animal evolution comes by
-stimula­tion, excita­tion, and response in new
-conditions, and is followed by repeti­tion of
-these phenomena until they result in structural
-modifications, transmitted and directed by
-selection and the laws of genetics—a series of<span class="pagenum" title="258"><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258"></a></span>
-events which agree with Neo-Lamarckian
-principles.</p>
-
-<p>4. That undesigned experiments in the arrangement
-of the Mammalian hair, and the
-produc­tion of new bursæ, as well as the
-designed experiments of Pawlow, support the
-foregoing claims, with which agree the converging
-facts of—varieties of epidermis,
-arrangement of the papillary ridges, flexures
-of the palm and sole, the formation of the
-plantar arch, the origin of certain muscles,
-the innerva­tion of the human skin, and the
-building of reflex-arcs.</p>
-
-<p>5. That there is a large place in higher animals
-for the Evolution of the Indifferent through
-the action of use and habit.</p>
-
-<p>6. That the position for Initiative in Evolution
-here advanced is no bar to unlimited research.</p></div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" title="259"><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259"></a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>INDEX.</h2>
-
-
-<p>Adami, Professor. “Medical Contributions to the Study of Evolution,” <a href="#Page_21">21</a>.<br />
-Ancestry, primate, <a href="#Page_235">235</a>, <a href="#Page_236">236</a>.<br />
-Anthropology, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>.<br />
-Ape: Arrangement of hair on forearm of, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>.<br />
-——Papillary ridges on hand and foot of, <a href="#Page_164">164</a>.<br />
-——Bursæ of, <a href="#Page_184">184–186</a>.<br />
-——Muscles of, <a href="#Page_213">213</a>, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>.<br />
-Artists, Evidence from, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>.<br />
-Ass: Hair-patterns of, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Baboon, Chacma, papillary ridges on hand and foot of, <a href="#Page_165">165</a>, <a href="#Page_166">166</a>.<br />
-Bartholinus, Erasmus, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>.<br />
-Bateson, Professor, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>, <a href="#Page_255">255</a>.<br />
-——“Materials for the Study of Variation,” <a href="#Page_9">9–13</a>, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>.<br />
-Bayliss, Professor, <a href="#Page_244">244</a>.<br />
-Bear, Parti-coloured (<i>Æluropus melanoleucus</i>): Hair-patterns of, <a href="#Page_121">121</a>, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>.<br />
-Beddard, Mr., <a href="#Page_118">118</a>.<br />
-——“Animal Colouration67,” <a href="#Page_206">206</a>.<br />
-Bell, Sir Charles, <a href="#Page_205">205</a>.<br />
-Bergson, <a href="#Page_205">205</a>.<br />
-Bongo (<i>Tragelaphus euryceros</i>): Hair-patterns of, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>.<br />
-Bonney, Professor. “The Story of Our Planet,” <a href="#Page_3">3</a>.<br />
-Bower, Professor, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>.<br />
-Brooks, Professor, W.&nbsp;K., <a href="#Page_20">20</a>, <a href="#Page_202">202</a>.<br />
-Bursæ, description of, <a href="#Page_179">179</a>, <a href="#Page_180">180</a>.<br />
-——Human, enumerated, <a href="#Page_180">180–183</a>.<br />
-——Experiments as to, <a href="#Page_186">186–190</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Canidæ: Hair-patterns of, <a href="#Page_98">98–102</a>.<br />
-Capybara, epidermis of, <a href="#Page_151">151</a>.<br />
-Chimpanzee, papillary ridges on hand and foot of, <a href="#Page_164">164</a>, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>.<br />
-——Bursæ of, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>, <a href="#Page_185">185</a>.<br />
-Clark, Sir Andrew, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>.<br />
-Cold and warmth sensations of human skin, <a href="#Page_220">220–230</a>.<br />
-Coote, Captain, <a href="#Page_194">194</a>.<br />
-Correlation, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>.<br />
-Correns, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>.<br />
-Cow, hair and habits of, <a href="#Page_87">87–91</a>.<br />
-——Fly-shaker muscles of, <a href="#Page_90">90</a>, <a href="#Page_211">211</a>, <a href="#Page_212">212</a>.<br />
-Crime, detection of a, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>.<br />
-Cunningham, J.&nbsp;T., <a href="#Page_21">21</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Darwin, <a href="#Page_1">1</a>, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>, <a href="#Page_239">239</a>.<br />
-——“Origin of Species,” <a href="#Page_2">2</a>, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>.<br />
-——“Descent of Man,” <a href="#Page_2">2</a>.<br />
-——Three Blows to, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>.<br />
-——On human eyebrows, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>.<br />
-Darwin, Sir Francis, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>.<br />
-——On Mnemonic theory of Heredity, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>.<br />
-Darwinism, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>.<br />
-Dendy, Professor. “Outlines of Evolutionary Biology,” <a href="#Page_21">21</a>.<br />
-de Vries, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>, <a href="#Page_190">190</a>.<br />
-Dog: Arrangement of hair of, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>, <a href="#Page_100">100–102</a>.<br />
-——Habits of, <a href="#Page_98">98</a>, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>.<br />
-Dyer, Professor Thiselton, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Earth Wolf, epidermis of, <a href="#Page_150">150</a>.<br />
-Echidna, epidermis of, <a href="#Page_151">151</a>.<br />
-Elliott, Professor Scott, <a href="#Page_98">98</a>, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>.<br />
-——“Prehistoric Man and his Story,” <a href="#Page_43">43</a>, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>, <a href="#Page_226">226</a>.<br />
-Environments, Discontinuous, <a href="#Page_31">31–33</a>.<br />
-Epidermis: Varieties of, found in mammals, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>.<br />
-——Stimuli and response, <a href="#Page_145">145–153</a>.<br />
-Eyebrows, hairs of human, <a href="#Page_64">64–73</a>.<br />
-——Interpreted by wrinkles, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Facilitation, <a href="#Page_240">240</a>, <a href="#Page_246">246–248</a>.<br />
-Felidæ: Hair-patterns of, <a href="#Page_92">92–97</a>.<br />
-——Snout of, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>.<br />
-Flexures of hand and foot, description of, <a href="#Page_170">170–172</a>.<br />
-——Chief types of, <a href="#Page_172">172</a>.<br />
-——Meaning of, <a href="#Page_173">173–177</a>.<br />
-Foot of Man, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>, <a href="#Page_156">156</a>.<br />
-——Papillary ridges on, <a href="#Page_159">159</a>, <a href="#Page_160">160</a>.<br />
-——Flexures of, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>.<span class="pagenum" title="260"><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260"></a></span><br />
-Foot of Man, Plantar arch of, <a href="#Page_192">192–194</a>.<br />
-——Muscles of, <a href="#Page_214">214–217</a>.<br />
-Forearm, arrangement of hair on, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Galton, <a href="#Page_157">157</a>; On chiromantic creases, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>.<br />
-Galvani, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>.<br />
-Geikie, Sir Archibald, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>.<br />
-Genealogy, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>.<br />
-Germinal Selection, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>.<br />
-Gibbon, flexures of foot of, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>.<br />
-——Bursæ of, <a href="#Page_185">185</a>.<br />
-Gibbon, Hainan, papillary ridges on hand and foot of, <a href="#Page_164">164</a>, <a href="#Page_165">165</a>.<br />
-Giraffe: Habits of, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>.<br />
-——Hair-patterns of, <a href="#Page_117">117</a>.<br />
-Gorilla, papillary ridges on hand and foot of, <a href="#Page_164">164</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Haeckel: Pithecoid Ancestors of Man, <a href="#Page_1">1</a>.<br />
-Hair-direction, causation of, <a href="#Page_140">140–144</a>.<br />
-——Summary of conclusions with regard to, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>.<br />
-——Phenomena of, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>.<br />
-——Experimental Inquiry into, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>.<br />
-——Steps of Inquiry into, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>.<br />
-Hair-pattern, Dynamics of, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>.<br />
-Hand of Man, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>, <a href="#Page_156">156</a>.<br />
-——Papillary ridges on, <a href="#Page_157">157–159</a>.<br />
-——Flexures of, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>.<br />
-——Muscles of, <a href="#Page_214">214–217</a>.<br />
-Harris, Dr. H. Wilder, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>, <a href="#Page_154">154</a>.<br />
-Harris, Mrs. Wilder. <i>See</i> <a href="#Whipple">Whipple</a>, Miss Inez.<br />
-Hartmann, <a href="#Page_213">213</a>.<br />
-Hedgehog, epidermis of, <a href="#Page_152">152</a>.<br />
-——Papillary ridges on hand and foot of, <a href="#Page_162">162</a>, <a href="#Page_163">163</a>, <a href="#Page_166">166</a>.<br />
-——Flexures on hand and foot of, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>.<br />
-Hepburn, Dr., <a href="#Page_148">148</a>, <a href="#Page_159">159</a>, <a href="#Page_162">162</a>.<br />
-Heredity, Mnemonic theory of, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>.<br />
-Herschel, Sir John, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>.<br />
-Hill, Professor Leonard, <a href="#Page_224">224</a>.<br />
-Historian a biologist, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>.<br />
-Horse: Arrangement of hair on side of neck of, <a href="#Page_51">51–63</a>.<br />
-——Habits of, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>.<br />
-——Hair-patterns of, <a href="#Page_75">75–82</a>.<br />
-——Compared with Zebra, <a href="#Page_83">83–85</a>.<br />
-——Effect of harness upon hair of, <a href="#Page_126">126–136</a>.<br />
-——Fly-shaker muscles of, <a href="#Page_211">211</a>.<br />
-Howes, G.&nbsp;B., <a href="#Page_12">12</a>.<br />
-Hutchinson, Professor Jonathan, <a href="#Page_188">188</a>.<br />
-Hutton, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>.<br />
-Huxley, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>, <a href="#Page_192">192</a>, <a href="#Page_200">200</a>, <a href="#Page_217">217</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Insectivores, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Jackson, Hughlings, <a href="#Page_241">241</a>.<br />
-Jevons, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>.<br />
-Johnston, Sir H.&nbsp;H., <a href="#Page_96">96</a>, <a href="#Page_201">201</a>.<br />
-Jones, Professor Wood, <a href="#Page_230">230</a>.<br />
-——“Arboreal Man,” <a href="#Page_195">195</a>, <a href="#Page_245">245</a>, <a href="#Page_248">248</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Kammerer, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>.<br />
-Keith, Professor, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>, <a href="#Page_188">188</a>, <a href="#Page_189">189</a>, <a href="#Page_190">190</a>, <a href="#Page_195">195</a>, <a href="#Page_196">196</a>, <a href="#Page_208">208</a>, <a href="#Page_215">215</a>, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>, <a href="#Page_217">217</a>.<br />
-——On functions of platysma, <a href="#Page_113">113</a>.<br />
-Kerr, Professor Graham, <a href="#Page_224">224</a>.<br />
-——On Embryology, <a href="#Page_246">246</a>, <a href="#Page_247">247</a>.<br />
-Kiang (Thibetan Wild Ass): Hair-patterns of, <a href="#Page_119">119</a>.<br />
-Kinkajou, epidermis of, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>.<br />
-Kropotkin, Prince, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Lamarck, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>, <a href="#Page_247">247</a>, <a href="#Page_255">255</a>.<br />
-Lamarckian hypothesis of organic evolution, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>, <a href="#Page_138">138</a>, <a href="#Page_205">205</a>.<br />
-Lankester, Sir E. Ray, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>, <a href="#Page_190">190</a>, <a href="#Page_204">204</a>.<br />
-Lemur: Arrangement of hair on forearm of, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>.<br />
-——Hair-pattern of, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>.<br />
-——Papillary ridges on foot of, <a href="#Page_161">161</a>, <a href="#Page_162">162</a>, <a href="#Page_164">164</a>, <a href="#Page_165">165</a>.<br />
-——Black-headed, epidermis of, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>.<br />
-——Ring-tailed, epidermis of, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>.<br />
-——Flexures of foot of, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>.<br />
-Lion: Hair-patterns of, <a href="#Page_92">92–97</a>, <a href="#Page_207">207</a>.<br />
-Livingstone, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>.<br />
-Llama: Hair-patterns of, <a href="#Page_119">119</a>, <a href="#Page_120">120</a>.<br />
-Loris, Slow: epidermis of, <a href="#Page_154">154</a>, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>.<br />
-——Papillary ridges on foot of, <a href="#Page_161">161</a>, <a href="#Page_166">166</a>.<br />
-Lydekker, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>, <a href="#Page_119">119</a>, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>, <a href="#Page_195">195</a>.<br />
-Lyell, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_178">178</a>, <a href="#Page_192">192</a>.<br />
-——“Principles of Geology,” <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Macacus, flexures of hand and foot of, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>.<br />
-Macalister, <a href="#Page_215">215</a>, <a href="#Page_217">217</a>.<br />
-McBride, Professor, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>.<br />
-Macdonald, Professor, <a href="#Page_190">190</a>, <a href="#Page_244">244</a>, <a href="#Page_245">245</a>, <a href="#Page_247">247</a>.<span class="pagenum" title="261"><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261"></a></span><br />
-McDougall, Professor: On Physiological Psychology, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>, <a href="#Page_225">225</a>, <a href="#Page_253">253</a>.<br />
-MacEwen, Sir W., <a href="#Page_188">188</a>.<br />
-McTaggart, Dr., <a href="#Page_142">142</a>.<br />
-Malthus, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>.<br />
-Malus, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>.<br />
-Mammals, palms and soles of, <a href="#Page_150">150–153</a>.<br />
-Man: hair and habits of, <a href="#Page_103">103</a>.<br />
-——Arrangement of hair on back of, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>.<br />
-——Passive habits of, <a href="#Page_106">106</a>, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>.<br />
-——Arrangement of hair on chest of, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>, <a href="#Page_109">109</a>.<br />
-——Palm and sole of, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>, <a href="#Page_156">156</a>.<br />
-——Papillary ridges on hand of, <a href="#Page_157">157–159</a>.<br />
-——Papillary ridges on foot of, <a href="#Page_159">159</a>, <a href="#Page_160">160</a>.<br />
-——Flexures of palm and sole of, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>.<br />
-——Plantar arch of, <a href="#Page_192">192–194</a>.<br />
-——Muscles of hand and foot of, <a href="#Page_214">214–217</a>.<br />
-——Changes in habits of, <a href="#Page_234">234</a>, <a href="#Page_235">235</a>.<br />
-Marmoset, Papillary ridges on foot of, <a href="#Page_161">161</a>.<br />
-Mendel, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>, <a href="#Page_190">190</a>.<br />
-Mercier, Dr.: On Causation, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>, <a href="#Page_142">142</a>.<br />
-Mill, John Stuart, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>, <a href="#Page_142">142</a>.<br />
-Mole, epidermis of, <a href="#Page_150">150</a>.<br />
-Monkey, papillary ridges on hand and foot of, <a href="#Page_164">164</a>.<br />
-Mule: Hair-patterns of, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>.<br />
-Murphy, Dr. John B., <a href="#Page_189">189</a>.<br />
-Muscles: Anatomists’ views of, <a href="#Page_201">201</a>, <a href="#Page_202">202</a>.<br />
-——Initiative in, <a href="#Page_202">202</a>, <a href="#Page_203">203</a>.<br />
-——New, <a href="#Page_205">205</a>.<br />
-——Unstriped, <a href="#Page_205">205</a>, <a href="#Page_206">206</a>.<br />
-——Facial, of expression, <a href="#Page_207">207–209</a>.<br />
-——Fly-shaker, <a href="#Page_210">210–212</a>.<br />
-——Skeletal, <a href="#Page_212">212</a>, <a href="#Page_213">213</a>.<br />
-——Skeletal, of Primates, <a href="#Page_213">213</a>, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Neural phenomena, <a href="#Page_239">239</a>.<br />
-Nervous System: Some aspects of the, <a href="#Page_223">223–225</a>.<br />
-——Place of the, in Evolution, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>, <a href="#Page_239">239</a>.<br />
-——Raw materials of the, <a href="#Page_240">240</a>, <a href="#Page_241">241</a>.<br />
-——Integration of raw materials of the, <a href="#Page_241">241</a>, <a href="#Page_242">242</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Oken, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>.<br />
-Ollier, <a href="#Page_188">188</a>.<br />
-Onager, Hair-patterns of, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>.<br />
-Opossum, American, epidermis of, <a href="#Page_151">151</a>.<br />
-——Azara’s, epidermis of, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>.<br />
-Orang, papillary ridges on hand and foot of, <a href="#Page_164">164</a>.<br />
-——Bursæ of, <a href="#Page_185">185</a>.<br />
-Organic Evolution, consideration of problems of, <a href="#Page_24">24–28</a>.<br />
-——Factors in, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>.<br />
-——Cross-roads in, <a href="#Page_203">203–205</a>.<br />
-Owen, Richard, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>.<br />
-Oxen: Hair-patterns of, <a href="#Page_87">87–91</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Palm, skin of, <a href="#Page_147">147–156</a>.<br />
-——of Man, <a href="#Page_155">155–156</a>.<br />
-Papillary ridges, some undersigned experiments in, <a href="#Page_166">166–169</a>.<br />
-Paterson, Dr. C., <a href="#Page_188">188</a>.<br />
-Pearson, Professor Karl, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>, <a href="#Page_142">142</a>.<br />
-Phalanger, epidermis of, <a href="#Page_152">152</a>.<br />
-Pitt, Miss Frances, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>, <a href="#Page_95">95</a>, <a href="#Page_251">251</a>.<br />
-Plantar arch, of man, <a href="#Page_192">192–194</a>.<br />
-——How it was built, <a href="#Page_194">194</a>, <a href="#Page_195">195</a>.<br />
-——Equipment of, <a href="#Page_196">196</a>, <a href="#Page_197">197</a>.<br />
-——Description of, <a href="#Page_197">197–199</a>.<br />
-Plasto-diēthēsis, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>, <a href="#Page_195">195</a>.<br />
-Platysma, Struggles of the, <a href="#Page_111">111–114</a>.<br />
-Playfair, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>.<br />
-Pocock, Roger, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>.<br />
-Poincaré, Henri, <a href="#Page_157">157</a>.<br />
-——Principles of method, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>.<br />
-Porcupine, Canadian Tree, epidermis of, <a href="#Page_151">151</a>, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>.<br />
-Poulton, Professor: “Essays on Evolution,” <a href="#Page_86">86</a>.<br />
-Prescott’s “Conquest of Peru,” <a href="#Page_120">120</a>.<br />
-Pressure, Examples of the effects of, upon hair-direction, <a href="#Page_127">127–136</a>.<br />
-Primates, epidermis of, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Rabbit, epidermis of, <a href="#Page_151">151</a>.<br />
-Records, Interpretation of, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>.<br />
-Reflex arches, formation of, <a href="#Page_231">231</a>.<br />
-——Some historical illustrations of, <a href="#Page_231">231–234</a>.<br />
-——Of Insects, <a href="#Page_236">236</a>, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>.<br />
-——Of Mollusca, <a href="#Page_236">236</a>, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>.<br />
-——Of Birds, <a href="#Page_236">236</a>, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>.<br />
-——Evidence of production of new, <a href="#Page_242">242–246</a>.<br />
-Reflexes: Stimuli of, <a href="#Page_249">249–256</a>.<br />
-——Scratch, of the dog, <a href="#Page_249">249</a>.<br />
-——Purposes of, <a href="#Page_250">250–253</a>.<br />
-——Scratch, of the cat, <a href="#Page_253">253</a>.<br />
-Rivers, Sources of, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>.<br />
-Romanes: 19, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>.<br />
-——On Weismann, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>, <a href="#Page_18">18</a>.<span class="pagenum" title="262"><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262"></a></span><br />
-Roux, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>.<br />
-Russell, The Hon. Bertrand, <a href="#Page_142">142</a>.<br />
-Russell, E.&nbsp;S. On Lamarck’s theory, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Saint-Hilaire, Geoffrey, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>.<br />
-Sapajou, Brown, papillary ridges on hand and foot of, <a href="#Page_165">165</a>.<br />
-Schafer’s “Text Book of Physiology,” <a href="#Page_219">219</a>, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>, <a href="#Page_226">226</a>.<br />
-Scratch reflex; of the dog, <a href="#Page_249">249</a>.<br />
-——Of the cat, <a href="#Page_253">253</a>.<br />
-Selous, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>.<br />
-Sherrington, Professor, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>, <a href="#Page_226">226</a>, <a href="#Page_229">229</a>, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>, <a href="#Page_244">244</a>, <a href="#Page_245">245</a>, <a href="#Page_249">249</a>, <a href="#Page_250">250</a>, <a href="#Page_251">251</a>, <a href="#Page_253">253</a>, <a href="#Page_254">254</a>.<br />
-Skin, Human: Distribution of Touch Corpuscles, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>.<br />
-——Distribution of Touch Spots, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>.<br />
-——Distribution of Cold and Warmth Sensations, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>.<br />
-——Distribution of Cold and Warmth Spots, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>.<br />
-——Stimuli of pressure, <a href="#Page_222">222</a>, <a href="#Page_226">226–230</a>.<br />
-——Stimuli of cold, <a href="#Page_226">226–230</a>.<br />
-——Stimuli of pain, <a href="#Page_226">226–230</a>.<br />
-——Stimuli of warmth, <a href="#Page_226">226–230</a>.<br />
-Sloth, Two-toed (<i>Cholæpus didactylus</i>): Hair-patterns of, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>.<br />
-Smith, Dr. E. Barclay, <a href="#Page_201">201</a>, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>.<br />
-Sole, skin of, <a href="#Page_147">147–156</a>.<br />
-——Of Man, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>, <a href="#Page_156">156</a>.<br />
-Spencer, Herbert, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>.<br />
-Squirrel, epidermis of, <a href="#Page_152">152</a>.<br />
-——Papillary ridges on hand and foot of, <a href="#Page_162">162</a>, <a href="#Page_166">166</a>.<br />
-——Flexures of hand and foot of, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>.<br />
-Squirrel-monkey, papillary ridges on foot of, <a href="#Page_161">161</a>.<br />
-——Flexures of foot of, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>.<br />
-Starling, Professor, <a href="#Page_227">227</a>, <a href="#Page_244">244</a>.<br />
-——On Facilitation, <a href="#Page_240">240</a>, <a href="#Page_246">246</a>.<br />
-Still-born children, subcutaneous bursæ of two, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>.<br />
-Stimuli, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>.<br />
-——Of touch, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>, <a href="#Page_226">226–230</a>.<br />
-——Of cold, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>, <a href="#Page_226">226–230</a>.<br />
-——Of warmth, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>, <a href="#Page_226">226–230</a>.<br />
-——Of pressure, <a href="#Page_222">222</a>, <a href="#Page_226">226–230</a>.<br />
-Stout, Professor, <a href="#Page_252">252</a>.<br />
-Summary of conclusions arrived at, <a href="#Page_257">257</a>, <a href="#Page_258">258</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Thomson, Professor J. Arthur, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>.<br />
-——On Heredity, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>.<br />
-Touch Corpuscles, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>, <a href="#Page_227">227</a>, <a href="#Page_228">228</a>.<br />
-Touch spots, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>, <a href="#Page_225">225</a>, <a href="#Page_227">227</a>, <a href="#Page_228">228</a>.<br />
-Tschermak, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Ungulates, even-toed, <a href="#Page_86">86–91</a>.<br />
-——odd-toed, <a href="#Page_74">74–85</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Vernon, Dr.: “Variations in Animals and Plants,” <a href="#Page_28">28</a>.<br />
-Vulpine phalanger, flexures of foot of, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Wallace, Professor, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>.<br />
-Weber’s Law, <a href="#Page_222">222</a>.<br />
-Weismann, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>, <a href="#Page_18">18</a>, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>, <a href="#Page_245">245</a>, <a href="#Page_255">255</a>.<br />
-——Twelve points, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>.<br />
-Weismannism, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>, <a href="#Page_18">18</a>, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>.<br />
-Welton, Mr., <a href="#Page_142">142</a>.<br />
-<a id="Whipple"></a>Whipple, Miss Inez (Mrs. Wilder Harris), <a href="#Page_154">154</a>, <a href="#Page_162">162</a>.<br />
-——Criticism of “The Direction of Hair in Animals and Man,” <a href="#Page_137">137–139</a>.<br />
-Wolff, <a href="#Page_189">189</a>: “Law of Bone Transformation,” <a href="#Page_205">205</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Young, Arthur, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Zebra: Comparisons between horse and, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>, <a href="#Page_84">84</a>.</p>
-
-
-<div class="footnotes">
-
-<h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1" href="#FNanchor_1" class="label">1</a>
-Acton. <i>A Lecture on the Study of History</i>, p.&nbsp;19.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_2" href="#FNanchor_2" class="label">2</a>
-<i>Savage Childhood</i>, Dudley Kidd.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_3" href="#FNanchor_3" class="label">3</a>
-The above remark as to the jubilee-volume needs to be explained and
-justified. In it there is an important essay on each of the great provinces of
-Weismann, Mendel and de Vries, and in each of these the highest living exponent
-speaks, Professors Weismann, Bateson and de Vries. Bateson expresses
-admiration for Weismann’s destructive work, but shows plainly that he holds
-it to have failed in its fundamental purpose. Nevertheless, by a neat <i>tour
-d’addresse</i> he adopts Weismann’s uncompromising attitude on the inheritance
-of acquired characters, which happens to agree exceedingly well with his own
-scheme. He has but one insignificant reference to de Vries on p.&nbsp;95 where
-he finds help for his doctrine.
-</p>
-<p>
-Weismann makes no reference to Mendel or de Vries. De Vries makes
-none to Weismann or Mendel, but without stating it in his essay he is known
-to be in opposition to Weismann’s dogma on the inheritance of acquired
-characters. These three eminent biologists would thus seem to have worked
-on diverging lines. The two first agree heartily, Weismann explicitly and
-Bateson by implication, as to the forbidden doctrine, “on the ground that it
-closes the way to deeper insight”—in other words their mutually destructive
-theories. So it stands thus in the book—Weismann throws over Lamarck,
-Mendel and de Vries; Bateson throws over Weismann (as again in 1914)
-and de Vries; de Vries ignores Weismann and Mendel.
-</p>
-<p>
-Dr. Lock in his book on Variation, Heredity and Evolution, 1906, says
-that Weismann practically ignores the evidence of Mendelism in heredity,
-and adds, p.&nbsp;261, “But at the next step the Mendelian parts company with
-Weismann.”
-</p>
-<p>
-One cannot avoid noticing, incidentally, that the vast mass of work of
-the biometricians led by Galton, Weldon and Professor Karl Pearson is
-conspicuously absent from the book. Prof. J. Arthur Thomson says that
-there should be no opposition between Mendelian and Galtonian formulæ,
-“they are correlated, and ultimately they will be seen in complete harmony
-as different aspects of the same phenomena. But it is simply muddleheadedness
-which can find any opposition between a statistical formula applicable
-to averages of successive generations breeding freely, and a physiological
-formula applicable to particular sets of cases where parents with contrasted
-dominant and recessive characters are crossed and their hybrid offspring are
-inbred.”(a) concerning which see the Preface to Bateson’s <i>Mendel’s Principles
-of Heredity</i>, 1902, with remarks on some of the Galtonians.
-</p>
-<p class="ml1em">(a) <i>Heredity</i>, p.&nbsp;374.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_4" href="#FNanchor_4" class="label">4</a>
-<i>Materials for the Study of Variation</i>, p.&nbsp;5.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_5" href="#FNanchor_5" class="label">5</a>
-<i>Op, cit.</i>, p.&nbsp;568.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_6" href="#FNanchor_6" class="label">6</a>
-<i>Op. cit.</i>, p.&nbsp;78.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_7" href="#FNanchor_7" class="label">7</a>
-<i>Nature</i>, 1914.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_8" href="#FNanchor_8" class="label">8</a>
-<i>Op. cit.</i>, Aug. 20th and Aug. 27th, 1914.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_9" href="#FNanchor_9" class="label">9</a>
-<i>Nature</i>, 1914.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_10" href="#FNanchor_10" class="label">10</a>
-<i>Op. cit.</i>, 1914.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_11" href="#FNanchor_11" class="label">11</a>
-<i>Op. cit.</i>, 1914.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_12" href="#FNanchor_12" class="label">12</a>
-<i>Nature</i>, 1914.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_13" href="#FNanchor_13" class="label">13</a>
-<i>Darwin and Modern Science.</i></p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_14" href="#FNanchor_14" class="label">14</a>
-Preface to <i>Germinal Selection</i>, 1895, p. xii.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_15" href="#FNanchor_15" class="label">15</a>
-p.&nbsp;38.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_16" href="#FNanchor_16" class="label">16</a>
-p.&nbsp;43.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_17" href="#FNanchor_17" class="label">17</a>
-p.&nbsp;43.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_18" href="#FNanchor_18" class="label">18</a>
-p.&nbsp;38.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_19" href="#FNanchor_19" class="label">19</a>
-p.&nbsp;15.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_20" href="#FNanchor_20" class="label">20</a>
-p.&nbsp;14.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_21" href="#FNanchor_21" class="label">21</a>
-p.&nbsp;18.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_22" href="#FNanchor_22" class="label">22</a>
-p.&nbsp;40.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_23" href="#FNanchor_23" class="label">23</a>
-p.&nbsp;56.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_24" href="#FNanchor_24" class="label">24</a>
-p.&nbsp;11.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_25" href="#FNanchor_25" class="label">25</a>
-p.&nbsp;17.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_26" href="#FNanchor_26" class="label">26</a>
-Romanes, <i>Examination of Weismannism</i>, p.&nbsp;115.
-</p>
-<p>
-“It is doubtful if anything better as to Weismann’s theory of heredity can
-be said to-day than Romanes said in 1893, and inasmuch as these two latter
-or distinctive postulates are not needed for Weismann’s theory of heredity,
-while they are both essential to his theory of evolution, I cannot but regret
-that he should have thus crippled the former by burdening it with the latter.
-Hence my object throughout has been to display, as sharply as possible, the
-contrast that is presented between the brass (“iron” preferably) and the clay
-in the colossal figure which Weismann has constructed. Hence also my
-emphatic dissent from his theory of evolution does not prevent me from
-sincerely appreciating the great value which attaches to his theory of heredity.
-And although I have not hesitated to say that this theory is, in my opinion,
-incomplete; that it presents not a few manifest inconsistencies, and even
-logical contradictions; that the facts on which it is founded have always
-been facts of general knowledge; that in all its main features it was present
-to the mind of Darwin, and distinctly formulated by Galton; that in so far
-as it has been constituted the basis of a more general theory of organic evolution
-it has proved a failure; such considerations in no way diminish my cordial
-recognition of the services which its distinguished author has rendered to
-science by his speculations upon these topics. For not only has he been
-successful in drawing renewed and much more general attention to the
-important questions touching the transmissibility of acquired characters, the
-causes of variation, and so on; but even those parts of his system which have
-proved untenable are not without such value as temporary scaffoldings present
-in relation to permanent buildings. Therefore, if I have appeared to play
-the <i>role</i> of a hostile critic, this has been only an expression of my desire to
-separate what seems to me the grain of good science from the chaff of bad
-speculation.”</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_27" href="#FNanchor_27" class="label">27</a>
-p.&nbsp;215.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_28" href="#FNanchor_28" class="label">28</a>
-<i>Heredity</i>, 1908, p.&nbsp;240.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_29" href="#FNanchor_29" class="label">29</a>
-I prefer to state the above passage rather than that on page&nbsp;179, which
-is as follows: “The precise question is this: <i>Can a structural change in the
-body, induced by some change in use or disuse, or by a change in surrounding
-influence, affect the germ-cells in such a specific or representative way that the
-offspring will through its inheritance exhibit, even in a slight degree, the modification
-which the parent acquired?</i>” (Italics in original). The question is very
-precise and important, but I employ that given above in preference as lending
-itself better to the line of inquiry followed here.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_30" href="#FNanchor_30" class="label">30</a>
-The term “character” derives both from its etymological origin and
-its application to biology a double-edged quality. This is of great value to the
-study of Mendelism which can only or mainly work with “unit-characters,”
-and it also serves the Weismann dogma well. In both cases the term obliterates
-the conception of initial variation, and while serving the purposes of
-these two great schools of thought it directs attention away from the early
-minute and unimportant stages by which many <i>germinal</i> variations may have
-arisen. If it had been coined for the purpose, which it was not, it would
-have been a remarkable instance of polemic cunning. It will be evident in
-the course of this study of initial variation, that the accredited and general
-use of the term “character” begs the question far too manifestly for the
-general use of biologists. If it be retained for the neo-Darwinian and
-Mendelian provinces there is nothing to say against it, but I adopt here with
-pleasure the alternative term, often used by Professor Thomson, “modification.”
-This is wide enough to include the more clear-cut “character” so
-long as one makes it clear that the latter is one of the germinal variations.
-Further, I hold that his use of the term “transmission” instead of “inheritance”
-is the more useful for a wide range of phenomena. As far as possible
-I shall employ the expression “transmission of modifications,” instead of
-that well-worn but often sophisticated expression “inheritance of acquired
-characters.” This has been subjected by Sir Archdall Reid and Dr. Dixey,
-to say nothing of others such as Mr. George Sandeman, to a somewhat bewildering
-analysis. Thus the former says, “It follows that the so-called “acquirements”
-are innate and “inherited” in precisely the same manner as the
-so-called inborn characters.”* Dr. Dixey admits “that all characters are
-both acquired and innate”** and goes on to say that the accepted meaning
-of the terms was vague, that it led to confusion, and that it ought to be
-dropped. For this remark of Dr. Dixey one may be thankful, but of my
-friend Sir Archdall Reid I would ask what he is doing in this galley?</p>
-
-<p><span style="margin-left: 2em;">* <i>Nature</i>, Vol. 77, Jan. 30th, 1908, p.&nbsp;293.</span></p>
-
-<p><span style="margin-left: 2em;">**<i>Nature</i>, Vol. 77, Feb. 1908, p.&nbsp;392.</span></p>
-
-<p>Sir E. Ray Lankester in a letter in <i>Nature</i>, 21st March, 1912, dissented
-from the mode of treatment of this point by Sir Archdall Reid and presumably
-also by Dr. Dixey in the words “It is not, I think, permissible to say that the
-normal characters which arise in response to normal conditions are with
-equal fitness to be described as ‘acquired.’” As to what is a normal
-character and what are normal conditions there may be much reason for
-difference of opinion, but I have said enough of this discussion to show that
-the terms “acquired” and “character” would afford a biological Pascal
-some such food for criticism as did the term “probable” in his <i>Provincial
-Letters</i>. The less these two terms are employed the less misunderstanding
-there will be of certain problems.</p>
-
-<p>It has been held that “discussing words is often indescribably tiresome,
-but it is better than misunderstanding them,” which is most true.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_31" href="#FNanchor_31" class="label">31</a>
-<i>Physiological Psychology</i>, 1911, p.&nbsp;156.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_32" href="#FNanchor_32" class="label">32</a>
-<i>Op. cit.</i>, p.&nbsp;179.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_33" href="#FNanchor_33" class="label">33</a>
-With the exception perhaps of the highest of all, for since the publication
-of Prof. Woods Jones’ <i>Arboreal Man</i> the question “Who is Man?” has
-received a new answer.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_34" href="#FNanchor_34" class="label">34</a>
-My italics.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_35" href="#FNanchor_35" class="label">35</a>
-p.&nbsp;74.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_36" href="#FNanchor_36" class="label">36</a>
-<i>Op. cit.</i> p.&nbsp;6.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_37" href="#FNanchor_37" class="label">37</a>
-p.&nbsp;5.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<div class="inline"><a id="Footnote_38" href="#FNanchor_38" class="label fs90">38</a>
-<table class="inline" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0">
-<tr>
-<td rowspan="2">From the Greek.</td>
-<td rowspan="2">&nbsp;<img src="images/27x6bl.png" alt="" height="27" width="6" />&nbsp;</td>
-<td><span class="ilb">Πλαστος from verb  Πλαττειν to mould.</span><br />
-διηθειν to strain through.</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-</div></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_39" href="#FNanchor_39" class="label">39</a>
-The twin metaphor here chosen for the name of a complex natural
-process should be cleared a little of a certain obscurity of meaning. A mould
-is familiar to all in domestic and industrial matters, but there are two sides
-to the metaphorical conception. A plastic object may be moulded by the
-hand of man as in his ruder, but more laborious days, or it may be pressed into
-an artificial mould that he has made by means of his hands and tools. One
-of these we know in the rude pottery made by prehistoric man and the vessel
-of the potter described by Jeremiah the prophet. We know also those
-machine-made moulds, so accurate as to be fitted for the coinage of a nation
-and able to puzzle a clever coiner who tries to copy them. We know the
-rough hewing of the stone by the sculptor which follows his moulding of the
-clay. And in Sacred Writ we read of a double process when the Hebrews
-not content with their object of worship took the golden ear-rings of their
-women and Aaron “received them at their hand and fashioned it with a
-graving tool, after he had made it a <i>molten calf</i>.” But as no conception of a
-mould in biological matters, which connotes the rigid accuracy of the coiner’s
-mould, can represent the truth, the rougher and freer meaning of the term
-is here employed. A similar double meaning is implicit in the metaphor
-of the sieve, considered as a human utensil. I believe we owe this idea of a
-sieve to Professor Thomson, but am not sure on this point. But I have not
-been able to find any definition as to the way in which the sieve of natural
-selection is held to act. A sieve is of course for sifting substances, and the
-size of the mesh is adapted by us for the purpose we have in view. We may
-want a sieve to hold back for us the fit or good and allow the unfit or bad to
-pass through, for example wheat and chaff, or we may employ it to separate
-sand for our purposes from fine gravel. The former is of course the most
-common of the purposes for which a sieve is used. So here the comparison
-of personal selection with the action of a sieve agrees with this aspect of a
-sieve, the fit being retained and the unfit allowed to pass through, thus agreeing
-with that view of Spencer’s of the survival of the fittest which is held by
-most authorities to be more accurate than Darwin’s Natural Selection.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_40" href="#FNanchor_40" class="label">40</a>
-Jevons.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_41" href="#FNanchor_41" class="label">41</a>
-British Association of Science 1902. Zoological Section.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_42" href="#FNanchor_42" class="label">42</a>
-<i>Darwin and after Darwin</i>, Vol. 1, p.&nbsp;90.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_43" href="#FNanchor_43" class="label">43</a>
-<i>The Descent of Man</i>, Chap. VI., p, 151.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_44" href="#FNanchor_44" class="label">44</a>
-I may remark that Darwin seems at an earlier date to have made a
-very curious suggestion in this connection, for Hartmann, in his work on
-Anthropoid Apes, p.&nbsp;99, quotes him as saying: “We should, however, bear
-in mind that the attitude of an animal may perhaps be in part determined
-by the direction of the hair; and not the direction of the hair by the attitude,”
-a notion so obviously untenable that it does not appear in the second edition
-of <i>The Descent of Man</i>, 1896.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_45" href="#FNanchor_45" class="label">45</a>
-This was written before the publication of Professor Woods-Jones’
-book <i>Arboreal Man</i>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_46" href="#FNanchor_46" class="label">46</a>
-<i>Prehistoric Man and His Story</i>, p.&nbsp;60</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_47" href="#FNanchor_47" class="label">47</a>
-Blinkers ought long ago to have gone the way of bearing-reins for
-draught horses. If a riding horse does not need them, no more need a draught
-horse be thus insulted, for very little intelligence and patience on the part
-of their drivers would have educated their excellent brains into indifference
-towards startling objects.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_48" href="#FNanchor_48" class="label">48</a>
-<i>Descent of Man</i>, p.&nbsp;19.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_49" href="#FNanchor_49" class="label">49</a>
-<i>Use-Inheritance.</i> A. &amp; C. Black. <i>Direction of Hair.</i></p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_50" href="#FNanchor_50" class="label">50</a>
-<i>Knowledge</i>, January, 1903.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_51" href="#FNanchor_51" class="label">51</a>
-<i>Direction of Hair in Animals and Man.</i></p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_52" href="#FNanchor_52" class="label">52</a>
-<i>Op. cit.</i> <i>Use inheritance.</i></p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_53" href="#FNanchor_53" class="label">53</a>
-<i>Op. cit.</i> <i>Direction of Hair.</i></p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_54" href="#FNanchor_54" class="label">54</a>
-<i>Use-Inheritance.</i></p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_55" href="#FNanchor_55" class="label">55</a>
-<i>Direction of Hair in Animals and Man.</i></p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_56" href="#FNanchor_56" class="label">56</a>
-<i>Direction of Hair</i>, pp.&nbsp;88–93.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_57" href="#FNanchor_57" class="label">57</a>
-<i>Contemporary Review</i>, June 1917.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_58" href="#FNanchor_58" class="label">58</a>
-<i>Prehistoric Man and His Story.</i> G.&nbsp;F. Scott Elliott, 1916, pp.&nbsp;169, 206.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_59" href="#FNanchor_59" class="label">59</a>
-<i>Science</i>, 23rd September, 1904. New York.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_60" href="#FNanchor_60" class="label">60</a>
-Jevons, <i>Principles of Science</i>, p.&nbsp;269.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_61" href="#FNanchor_61" class="label">61</a>
-E. Ray Lankester. <i>Advancement of Science</i>, p.&nbsp;7.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_62" href="#FNanchor_62" class="label">62</a>
-From Arthur Young’s <i>Travels in France during the years</i> 1788, 1789,
-with introduction by M. Betham Edwards.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_63" href="#FNanchor_63" class="label">63</a>
-<i>The Sense of Touch in Mammals and Birds.</i> A. &amp; C. Black, 1907.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_64" href="#FNanchor_64" class="label">64</a>
-<i>Sense of Touch in Mammals and Birds.</i></p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_65" href="#FNanchor_65" class="label">65</a>
-Galton might have referred by way of illustration to an immortal
-woman in <i>Martin Chuzzlewit</i>, who shall be nameless here.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_66" href="#FNanchor_66" class="label">66</a>
-A. Macalister, <i>Palmistry Encycl. Brit.</i>, 11th Edition.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_67" href="#FNanchor_67" class="label">67</a>
-<i>Text Book of Human Anatomy.</i> A. Macalister, 1889, p.&nbsp;48.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_68" href="#FNanchor_68" class="label">68</a>
-Macalister, p.&nbsp;488.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_69" href="#FNanchor_69" class="label">69</a>
-Hunterian Lecture on “The Introduction of the Modem Practice of
-Bone-grafting.” Royal College of Surgeons of England, January, 1918.
-Reported in the <i>Lancet</i>, February 9th and 16th, 1918.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_70" href="#FNanchor_70" class="label">70</a>
-<i>Human Embryology and Morphology.</i></p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_71" href="#FNanchor_71" class="label">71</a>
-It is not sufficiently noticed by some writers how important is Professor
-Keith’s teaching as to the maintenance of the arch by muscular action
-rather than ligamentous union. And it is a very practical matter from my own
-point of view in connection with the prevention of flat-foot in the young. If
-indeed the poor deformed feet of the sufferers can only be corrected by
-attention to the lowly-organised ligaments, and the muscles will not avail,
-I can but add “God help them!”</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_72" href="#FNanchor_72" class="label">72</a>
-Anatomical Society of Great Britain and Ireland, Trans., p.&nbsp;54.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_73" href="#FNanchor_73" class="label">73</a>
-Macalister, <i>op. cit.</i>, p.&nbsp;62.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_74" href="#FNanchor_74" class="label">74</a>
-<i>Embryology.</i></p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_75" href="#FNanchor_75" class="label">75</a>
-<i>The Human Body.</i></p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_76" href="#FNanchor_76" class="label">76</a>
-<i>Nature</i>, November 28th, 1907, p.&nbsp;78.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_77" href="#FNanchor_77" class="label">77</a>
-<i>Op. cit.</i>, p.&nbsp;71. (Italics not in original.)</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_78" href="#FNanchor_78" class="label">78</a>
-<i>Op. cit.</i>, p.&nbsp;73.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_79" href="#FNanchor_79" class="label">79</a>
-<i>The Human Body</i>, p.&nbsp;92.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_80" href="#FNanchor_80" class="label">80</a>
-<i>Op. cit.</i>, p.&nbsp;73</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_81" href="#FNanchor_81" class="label">81</a>
-Schäfer’s <i>Text-Book of Physiology</i>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_82" href="#FNanchor_82" class="label">82</a>
-<i>Manual of Human Physiology.</i> Leonard Hill, p.&nbsp;369.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_83" href="#FNanchor_83" class="label">83</a>
-<i>Op. cit.</i>, p.&nbsp;371.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_84" href="#FNanchor_84" class="label">84</a>
-<i>Text Book of Embryology.</i> Vertebrata with the exception of Mammalia.
-Vol.&nbsp;II., 1919, p.&nbsp;106.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_85" href="#FNanchor_85" class="label">85</a>
-<i>Physiological Psychology.</i> W. McDougall, p.&nbsp;156 (1911).</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_86" href="#FNanchor_86" class="label">86</a>
-<i>Prehistoric Man and His Story</i>, p.&nbsp;92.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_87" href="#FNanchor_87" class="label">87</a>
-<i>Schafer</i>, p.&nbsp;922.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_88" href="#FNanchor_88" class="label">88</a>
-<i>Op. cit.</i> p.&nbsp;21.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_89" href="#FNanchor_89" class="label">89</a>
-Herbert Spencer, <i>Essays</i>, II, 57.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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