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Mr. Darwin's Work, "On The Origin Of Species," In Relation To The Complete Theory Of The Causes Of The Phenomena Of Organic Nature, by Thomas H. Huxley

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Title: A Critical Examination Of The Position Of Mr. Darwin's Work, "On The Origin Of Species," In Relation To The Complete Theory Of The Causes Of The Phenomena Of Organic Nature
       Lecture VI. (of VI.), Lectures To Working Men, at the
              Museum of Practical Geology, 1863, On Darwin's work: "Origin
              of Species"

Author: Thomas H. Huxley

Release Date: January 4, 2009 [EBook #2926]
Last Updated: January 22, 2013

Language: English

Character set encoding: ASCII

*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ON THE ORIGIN OF SPECIES ***




Produced by Amy E. Zelmer, and David Widger






 




A CRITICAL EXAMINATION 
OF THE POSITION
OF MR. DARWIN'S WORK,  
"ON THE ORIGIN OF SPECIES,"  

IN RELATION TO THE COMPLETE THEORY OF THE CAUSES OF THE PHENOMENA OF  ORGANIC NATURE  




Lecture VI. (of VI.), "Lectures To Working Men", at the Museum of  Practical Geology, 1863, On Darwin's work: "Origin of Species".





By Thomas H. Huxley  











IN the preceding five lectures I have endeavoured to give you an account  of those facts, and of those reasonings from facts, which form the data  upon which all theories regarding the causes of the phenomena of organic  nature must be based. And, although I have had frequent occasion to quote  Mr. Darwinas all persons hereafter, in speaking upon these  subjects, will have occasion to quote his famous book on the "Origin of  Species,"you must yet remember that, wherever I have quoted him, it  has not been upon theoretical points, or for statements in any way  connected with his particular speculations, but on matters of fact,  brought forward by himself, or collected by himself, and which appear  incidentally in his book. If a man 'will' make a book, professing to  discuss a single question, an encyclopaedia, I cannot help it.  

Now, having had an opportunity of considering in this sort of way the  different statements bearing upon all theories whatsoever, I have to lay  before you, as fairly as I can, what is Mr. Darwin's view of the matter  and what position his theories hold, when judged by the principles which I  have previously laid down, as deciding our judgments upon all theories and  hypotheses.  

I have already stated to you that the inquiry respecting the causes of the  phenomena of organic nature resolves itself into two problemsthe  first being the question of the origination of living or organic beings;  and the second being the totally distinct problem of the modification and  perpetuation of organic beings when they have already come into existence.  The first question Mr. Darwin does not touch; he does not deal with it at  all; but he saysgiven the origin of organic mattersupposing  its creation to have already taken place, my object is to show in  consequence of what laws and what demonstrable properties of organic  matter, and of its environments, such states of organic nature as those  with which we are acquainted must have come about. This, you will observe,  is a perfectly legitimate proposition; every person has a right to define  the limits of the inquiry which he sets before himself; and yet it is a  most singular thing that in all the multifarious, and, not unfrequently,  ignorant attacks which have been made upon the 'Origin of Species', there  is nothing which has been more speciously criticised than this particular  limitation. If people have nothing else to urge against the book, they say"Well,  after all, you see, Mr. Darwin's explanation of the 'Origin of Species' is  not good for much, because, in the long run, he admits that he does not  know how organic matter began to exist. But if you admit any special  creation for the first particle of organic matter you may just as well  admit it for all the rest; five hundred or five thousand distinct  creations are just as intelligible, and just as little difficult to  understand, as one." The answer to these cavils is two-fold. In the first  place, all human inquiry must stop somewhere; all our knowledge and all  our investigation cannot take us beyond the limits set by the finite and  restricted character of our faculties, or destroy the endless unknown,  which accompanies, like its shadow, the endless procession of phenomena.  So far as I can venture to offer an opinion on such a matter, the purpose  of our being in existence, the highest object that human beings can set  before themselves, is not the pursuit of any such chimera as the  annihilation of the unknown; but it is simply the unwearied endeavour to  remove its boundaries a little further from our little sphere of action.  

I wonder if any historian would for a moment admit the objection, that it  is preposterous to trouble ourselves about the history of the Roman  Empire, because we do not know anything positive about the origin and  first building of the city of Rome! Would it be a fair objection to urge,  respecting the sublime discoveries of a Newton, or a Kepler, those great  philosophers, whose discoveries have been of the profoundest benefit and  service to all men,to say to them"After all that you have  told us as to how the planets revolve, and how they are maintained in  their orbits, you cannot tell us what is the cause of the origin of the  sun, moon, and stars. So what is the use of what you have done?" Yet these  objections would not be one whit more preposterous than the objections  which have been made to the 'Origin of Species.' Mr. Darwin, then, had a  perfect right to limit his inquiry as he pleased, and the only question  for usthe inquiry being so limitedis to ascertain whether  the method of his inquiry is sound or unsound; whether he has obeyed the  canons which must guide and govern all investigation, or whether he has  broken them; and it was because our inquiry this evening is essentially  limited to that question, that I spent a good deal of time in a former  lecture (which, perhaps, some of you thought might have been better  employed), in endeavouring to illustrate the method and nature of  scientific inquiry in general. We shall now have to put in practice the  principles that I then laid down.  

I stated to you in substance, if not in words, that wherever there are  complex masses of phenomena to be inquired into, whether they be phenomena  of the affairs of daily life, or whether they belong to the more abstruse  and difficult problems laid before the philosopher, our course of  proceeding in unravelling that complex chain of phenomena with a view to  get at its cause, is always the same; in all cases we must invent an  hypothesis; we must place before ourselves some more or less likely  supposition respecting that cause; and then, having assumed an hypothesis,  having supposed cause for the phenomena in question, we must endeavour, on  the one hand, to demonstrate our hypothesis, or, on the other, to upset  and reject it altogether, by testing it in three ways. We must, in the  first place, be prepared to prove that the supposed causes of the  phenomena exist in nature; that they are what the logicians call 'vera  causae'true causes;in the next place, we should be prepared  to show that the assumed causes of the phenomena are competent to produce  such phenomena as those which we wish to explain by them; and in the last  place, we ought to be able to show that no other known causes are  competent to produce those phenomena. If we can succeed in satisfying  these three conditions we shall have demonstrated our hypothesis; or  rather I ought to say we shall have proved it as far as certainty is  possible for us; for, after all, there is no one of our surest convictions  which may not be upset, or at any rate modified by a further accession of  knowledge. It was because it satisfied these conditions that we accepted  the hypothesis as to the disappearance of the tea-pot and spoons in the  case I supposed in a previous lecture; we found that our hypothesis on  that subject was tenable and valid, because the supposed cause existed in  nature, because it was competent to account for the phenomena, and because  no other known cause was competent to account for them; and it is upon  similar grounds that any hypothesis you choose to name is accepted in  science as tenable and valid.  

What is Mr. Darwin's hypothesis? As I apprehend itfor I have put it  into a shape more convenient for common purposes than I could find  'verbatim' in his bookas I apprehend it, I say, it is, that all the  phenomena of organic nature, past and present, result from, or are caused  by, the inter-action of those properties of organic matter, which we have  called ATAVISM and VARIABILITY, with the CONDITIONS OF EXISTENCE; or, in  other words,given the existence of organic matter, its tendency to  transmit its properties, and its tendency occasionally to vary; and,  lastly, given the conditions of existence by which organic matter is  surroundedthat these put together are the causes of the Present and  of the Past conditions of ORGANIC NATURE.  

Such is the hypothesis as I understand it. Now let us see how it will  stand the various tests which I laid down just now. In the first place, do  these supposed causes of the phenomena exist in nature? Is it the fact  that in nature these properties of organic matteratavism and  variabilityand those phenomena which we have called the conditions  of existence,is it true that they exist? Well, of course, if they  do not exist, all that I have told you in the last three or four lectures  must be incorrect, because I have been attempting to prove that they do  exist, and I take it that there is abundant evidence that they do exist;  so far, therefore, the hypothesis does not break down.  

But in the next place comes a much more difficult inquiry:Are the  causes indicated competent to give rise to the phenomena of organic  nature? I suspect that this is indubitable to a certain extent. It is  demonstrable, I think, as I have endeavoured to show you, that they are  perfectly competent to give rise to all the phenomena which are exhibited  by RACES in nature. Furthermore, I believe that they are quite competent  to account for all that we may call purely structural phenomena which are  exhibited by SPECIES in nature. On that point also I have already enlarged  somewhat. Again, I think that the causes assumed are competent to account  for most of the physiological characteristics of species, and I not only  think that they are competent to account for them, but I think that they  account for many things which otherwise remain wholly unaccountable and  inexplicable, and I may say incomprehensible. For a full exposition of the  grounds on which this conviction is based, I must refer you to Mr.  Darwin's work; all that I can do now is to illustrate what I have said by  two or three cases taken almost at random.  

I drew your attention, on a previous evening, to the facts which are  embodied in our systems of Classification, which are the results of the  examination and comparison of the different members of the animal kingdom  one with another. I mentioned that the whole of the animal kingdom is  divisible into five sub-kingdoms; that each of these sub-kingdoms is again  divisible into provinces; that each province may be divided into classes,  and the classes into the successively smaller groups, orders, families,  genera, and species.  

Now, in each of these groups, the resemblance in structure among the  members of the group is closer in proportion as the group is smaller.  Thus, a man and a worm are members of the animal kingdom in virtue of  certain apparently slight though really fundamental resemblances which  they present. But a man and a fish are members of the same sub-kingdom  'Vertebrata', because they are much more like one another than either of  them is to a worm, or a snail, or any member of the other sub-kingdoms.  For similar reasons men and horses are arranged as members of the same  Class, 'Mammalia'; men and apes as members of the same Order, 'Primates';  and if there were any animals more like men than they were like any of the  apes, and yet different from men in important and constant particulars of  their organization, we should rank them as members of the same Family, or  of the same Genus, but as of distinct Species.  

That it is possible to arrange all the varied forms of animals into  groups, having this sort of singular subordination one to the other, is a  very remarkable circumstance; but, as Mr. Darwin remarks, this is a result  which is quite to be expected, if the principles which he lays down be  correct. Take the case of the races which are known to be produced by the  operation of atavism and variability, and the conditions of existence  which check and modify these tendencies. Take the case of the pigeons that  I brought before you; there it was shown that they might be all classed as  belonging to some one of five principal divisions, and that within these  divisions other subordinate groups might be formed. The members of these  groups are related to one another in just the same way as the genera of a  family, and the groups themselves as the families of an order, or the  orders of a class; while all have the same sort of structural relations  with the wild rock-pigeon, as the members of any great natural group have  with a real or imaginary typical form. Now, we know that all varieties of  pigeons of every kind have arisen by a process of selective breeding from  a common stock, the rock-pigeon; hence, you see, that if all species of  animals have proceeded from some common stock, the general character of  their structural relations, and of our systems of classification, which  express those relations, would be just what we find them to be. In other  words, the hypothetical cause is, so far, competent to produce effects  similar to those of the real cause.  

Take, again, another set of very remarkable facts,the existence of  what are called rudimentary organs, organs for which we can find no  obvious use, in the particular animal economy in which they are found, and  yet which are there.  

Such are the splint-like bones in the leg of the horse, which I here show  you, and which correspond with bones which belong to certain toes and  fingers in the human hand and foot. In the horse you see they are quite  rudimentary, and bear neither toes nor fingers; so that the horse has only  one "finger" in his fore-foot and one "toe" in his hind foot. But it is a  very curious thing that the animals closely allied to the horse show more  toes than he; as the rhinoceros, for instance: he has these extra toes  well formed, and anatomical facts show very clearly that he is very  closely related to the horse indeed. So we may say that animals, in an  anatomical sense nearly related to the horse, have those parts which are  rudimentary in him, fully developed.  

Again, the sheep and the cow have no cutting-teeth, but only a hard pad in  the upper jaw. That is the common characteristic of ruminants in general.  But the calf has in its upper jaw some rudiments of teeth which never are  developed, and never play the part of teeth at all. Well, if you go back  in time, you find some of the older, now extinct, allies of the ruminants  have well-developed teeth in their upper jaws; and at the present day the  pig (which is in structure closely connected with ruminants) has  well-developed teeth in its upper jaw; so that here is another instance of  organs well-developed and very useful, in one animal, represented by  rudimentary organs, for which we can discover no purpose whatsoever, in  another closely allied animal. The whalebone whale, again, has horny  "whalebone" plates in its mouth, and no teeth; but the young foetal whale,  before it is born, has teeth in its jaws; they, however, are never used,  and they never come to anything. But other members of the group to which  the whale belongs have well-developed teeth in both jaws.  

Upon any hypothesis of special creation, facts of this kind appear to me  to be entirely unaccountable and inexplicable, but they cease to be so if  you accept Mr. Darwin's hypothesis, and see reason for believing that the  whalebone whale and the whale with teeth in its mouth both sprang from a  whale that had teeth, and that the teeth of the foetal whale are merely  remnantsrecollections, if we may so sayof the extinct whale.  So in the case of the horse and the rhinoceros: suppose that both have  descended by modification from some earlier form which had the normal  number of toes, and the persistence of the rudimentary bones which no  longer support toes in the horse becomes comprehensible.  

In the language that we speak in England, and in the language of the  Greeks, there are identical verbal roots, or elements entering into the  composition of words. That fact remains unintelligible so long as we  suppose English and Greek to be independently created tongues; but when it  is shown that both languages are descended from one original, the  Sanscrit, we give an explanation of that resemblance. In the same way the  existence of identical structural roots, if I may so term them, entering  into the composition of widely different animals, is striking evidence in  favour of the descent of those animals from a common original.  

To turn to another kind of illustration:If you regard the whole  series of stratified rocksthat enormous thickness of sixty or  seventy thousand feet that I have mentioned before, constituting the only  record we have of a most prodigious lapse of time, that time being, in all  probability, but a fraction of that of which we have no record;if  you observe in these successive strata of rocks successive groups of  animals arising and dying out, a constant succession, giving you the same  kind of impression, as you travel from one group of strata to another, as  you would have in travelling from one country to another;when you  find this constant succession of forms, their traces obliterated except to  the man of science,when you look at this wonderful history, and ask  what it means, it is only a paltering with words if you are offered the  reply,'They were so created.'  

But if, on the other hand, you look on all forms of organized beings as  the results of the gradual modification of a primitive type, the facts  receive a meaning, and you see that these older conditions are the  necessary predecessors of the present. Viewed in this light the facts of  palaeontology receive a meaningupon any other hypothesis, I am  unable to see, in the slightest degree, what knowledge or signification we  are to draw out of them. Again, note as bearing upon the same point, the  singular likeness which obtains between the successive Faunae and Florae,  whose remains are preserved on the rocks: you never find any great and  enormous difference between the immediately successive Faunae and Florae,  unless you have reason to believe there has also been a great lapse of  time or a great change of conditions. The animals, for instance, of the  newest tertiary rocks, in any part of the world, are always, and without  exception, found to be closely allied with those which now live in that  part of the world. For example, in Europe, Asia, and Africa, the large  mammals are at present rhinoceroses, hippopotamuses, elephants, lions,  tigers, oxen, horses, etc.; and if you examine the newest tertiary  deposits, which contain the animals and plants which immediately preceded  those which now exist in the same country, you do not find gigantic  specimens of ant-eaters and kangaroos, but you find rhinoceroses,  elephants, lions, tigers, etc.,of different species to those now  living,but still their close allies. If you turn to South America,  where, at the present day, we have great sloths and armadilloes and  creatures of that kind, what do you find in the newest tertiaries? You  find the great sloth-like creature, the 'Megatherium', and the great  armadillo, the 'Glyptodon', and so on. And if you go to Australia you find  the same law holds good, namely, that that condition of organic nature  which has preceded the one which now exists, presents differences perhaps  of species, and of genera, but that the great types of organic structure  are the same as those which now flourish.  

What meaning has this fact upon any other hypothesis or supposition than  one of successive modification? But if the population of the world, in any  age, is the result of the gradual modification of the forms which peopled  it in the preceding age,if that has been the case, it is  intelligible enough; because we may expect that the creature that results  from the modification of an elephantine mammal shall be something like an  elephant, and the creature which is produced by the modification of an  armadillo-like mammal shall be like an armadillo. Upon that supposition, I  say, the facts are intelligible; upon any other, that I am aware of, they  are not.  

So far, the facts of palaeontology are consistent with almost any form of  the doctrine of progressive modification; they would not be absolutely  inconsistent with the wild speculations of De Maillet, or with the less  objectionable hypothesis of Lamarck. But Mr. Darwin's views have one  peculiar merit; and that is, that they are perfectly consistent with an  array of facts which are utterly inconsistent with and fatal to, any other  hypothesis of progressive modification which has yet been advanced. It is  one remarkable peculiarity of Mr. Darwin's hypothesis that it involves no  necessary progression or incessant modification, and that it is perfectly  consistent with the persistence for any length of time of a given  primitive stock, contemporaneously with its modifications. To return to  the case of the domestic breeds of pigeons, for example; you have the  Dove-cot pigeon, which closely resembles the Rock pigeon, from which they  all started, existing at the same time with the others. And if species are  developed in the same way in nature, a primitive stock and its  modifications may, occasionally, all find the conditions fitted for their  existence; and though they come into competition, to a certain extent,  with one another, the derivative species may not necessarily extirpate the  primitive one, or 'vice versa'.  

Now palaeontology shows us many facts which are perfectly harmonious with  these observed effects of the process by which Mr. Darwin supposes species  to have originated, but which appear to me to be totally inconsistent with  any other hypothesis which has been proposed. There are some groups of  animals and plants, in the fossil world, which have been said to belong to  "persistent types," because they have persisted, with very little change  indeed, through a very great range of time, while everything about them  has changed largely. There are families of fishes whose type of  construction has persisted all the way from the carboniferous rock right  up to the cretaceous; and others which have lasted through almost the  whole range of the secondary rocks, and from the lias to the older  tertiaries. It is something stupendous thisto consider a genus  lasting without essential modifications through all this enormous lapse of  time while almost everything else was changed and modified.  

Thus I have no doubt that Mr. Darwin's hypothesis will be found competent  to explain the majority of the phenomena exhibited by species in nature;  but in an earlier lecture I spoke cautiously with respect to its power of  explaining all the physiological peculiarities of species.  

There is, in fact, one set of these peculiarities which the theory of  selective modification, as it stands at present, is not wholly competent  to explain, and that is the group of phenomena which I mentioned to you  under the name of Hybridism, and which I explained to consist in the  sterility of the offspring of certain species when crossed one with  another. It matters not one whit whether this sterility is universal, or  whether it exists only in a single case. Every hypothesis is bound to  explain, or, at any rate, not be inconsistent with, the whole of the facts  which it professes to account for; and if there is a single one of these  facts which can be shown to be inconsistent with (I do not merely mean  inexplicable by, but contrary to) the hypothesis, the hypothesis falls to  the ground,it is worth nothing. One fact with which it is  positively inconsistent is worth as much, and as powerful in negativing  the hypothesis, as five hundred. If I am right in thus defining the  obligations of an hypothesis, Mr. Darwin, in order to place his views  beyond the reach of all possible assault, ought to be able to demonstrate  the possibility of developing from a particular stock by selective  breeding, two forms, which should either be unable to cross one with  another, or whose cross-bred offspring should be infertile with one  another.  

For, you see, if you have not done that you have not strictly fulfilled  all the conditions of the problem; you have not shown that you can  produce, by the cause assumed, all the phenomena which you have in nature.  Here are the phenomena of Hybridism staring you in the face, and you  cannot say, 'I can, by selective modification, produce these same  results.' Now, it is admitted on all hands that, at present, so far as  experiments have gone, it has not been found possible to produce this  complete physiological divergence by selective breeding. I stated this  very clearly before, and I now refer to the point, because, if it could be  proved, not only that this 'has' not been done, but that it 'cannot' be  done; if it could be demonstrated that it is impossible to breed  selectively, from any stock, a form which shall not breed with another,  produced from the same stock; and if we were shown that this must be the  necessary and inevitable results of all experiments, I hold that Mr.  Darwin's hypothesis would be utterly shattered.  

But has this been done? or what is really the state of the case? It is  simply that, so far as we have gone yet with our breeding, we have not  produced from a common stock two breeds which are not more or less fertile  with one another.  

I do not know that there is a single fact which would justify any one in  saying that any degree of sterility has been observed between breeds  absolutely known to have been produced by selective breeding from a common  stock. On the other hand, I do not know that there is a single fact which  can justify any one in asserting that such sterility cannot be produced by  proper experimentation. For my own part, I see every reason to believe  that it may, and will be so produced. For, as Mr. Darwin has very properly  urged, when we consider the phenomena of sterility, we find they are most  capricious; we do not know what it is that the sterility depends on. There  are some animals which will not breed in captivity; whether it arises from  the simple fact of their being shut up and deprived of their liberty, or  not, we do not know, but they certainly will not breed. What an astounding  thing this is, to find one of the most important of all functions  annihilated by mere imprisonment!  

So, again, there are cases known of animals which have been thought by  naturalists to be undoubted species, which have yielded perfectly fertile  hybrids; while there are other species which present what everybody  believes to be varieties 1which are more or less infertile  with one another. There are other cases which are truly extraordinary;  there is one, for example, which has been carefully examined,of two  kinds of sea-weed, of which the male element of the one, which we may call  A, fertilizes the female element of the other, B; while the male element  of B will not fertilize the female element of A; so that, while the former  experiment seems to show us that they are 'varieties', the latter leads to  the conviction that they are 'species'.  

When we see how capricious and uncertain this sterility is, how unknown  the conditions on which it depends, I say that we have no right to affirm  that those conditions will not be better understood by and by, and we have  no ground for supposing that we may not be able to experiment so as to  obtain that crucial result which I mentioned just now. So that though Mr.  Darwin's hypothesis does not completely extricate us from this difficulty  at present, we have not the least right to say it will not do so.  

There is a wide gulf between the thing you cannot explain and the thing  that upsets you altogether. There is hardly any hypothesis in this world  which has not some fact in connection with it which has not been  explained, but that is a very different affair to a fact that entirely  opposes your hypothesis; in this case all you can say is, that your  hypothesis is in the same position as a good many others.  

Now, as to the third test, that there are no other causes competent to  explain the phenomena, I explained to you that one should be able to say  of an hypothesis, that no other known causes than those supposed by it are  competent to give rise to the phenomena. Here, I think, Mr. Darwin's view  is pretty strong. I really believe that the alternative is either  Darwinism or nothing, for I do not know of any rational conception or  theory of the organic universe which has any scientific position at all  beside Mr. Darwin's. I do not know of any proposition that has been put  before us with the intention of explaining the phenomena of organic  nature, which has in its favour a thousandth part of the evidence which  may be adduced in favour of Mr. Darwin's views. Whatever may be the  objections to his views, certainly all others are absolutely out of court.  

Take the Lamarckian hypothesis, for example. Lamarck was a great  naturalist, and to a certain extent went the right way to work; he argued  from what was undoubtedly a true cause of some of the phenomena of organic  nature. He said it is a matter of experience that an animal may be  modified more or less in consequence of its desires and consequent  actions. Thus, if a man exercise himself as a blacksmith, his arms will  become strong and muscular; such organic modification is a result of this  particular action and exercise. Lamarck thought that by a very simple  supposition based on this truth he could explain the origin of the various  animal species: he said, for example, that the short-legged birds which  live on fish had been converted into the long-legged waders by desiring to  get the fish without wetting their bodies, and so stretching their legs  more and more through successive generations. If Lamarck could have shown  experimentally, that even races of animals could be produced in this way,  there might have been some ground for his speculations. But he could show  nothing of the kind, and his hypothesis has pretty well dropped into  oblivion, as it deserved to do. I said in an earlier lecture that there  are hypotheses and hypotheses, and when people tell you that Mr. Darwin's  strongly-based hypothesis is nothing but a mere modification of Lamarck's,  you will know what to think of their capacity for forming a judgment on  this subject.  

But you must recollect that when I say I think it is either Mr. Darwin's  hypothesis or nothing; that either we must take his view, or look upon the  whole of organic nature as an enigma, the meaning of which is wholly  hidden from us; you must understand that I mean that I accept it  provisionally, in exactly the same way as I accept any other hypothesis.  Men of science do not pledge themselves to creeds; they are bound by  articles of no sort; there is not a single belief that it is not a bounden  duty with them to hold with a light hand and to part with it cheerfully,  the moment it is really proved to be contrary to any fact, great or small.  And if, in course of time I see good reasons for such a proceeding, I  shall have no hesitation in coming before you, and pointing out any change  in my opinion without finding the slightest occasion to blush for so  doing. So I say that we accept this view as we accept any other, so long  as it will help us, and we feel bound to retain it only so long as it will  serve our great purposethe improvement of Man's estate and the  widening of his knowledge. The moment this, or any other conception,  ceases to be useful for these purposes, away with it to the four winds; we  care not what becomes of it!  

But to say truth, although it has been my business to attend closely to  the controversies roused by the publication of Mr. Darwin's book, I think  that not one of the enormous mass of objections and obstacles which have  been raised is of any very great value, except that sterility case which I  brought before you just now. All the rest are misunderstandings of some  sort, arising either from prejudice, or want of knowledge, or still more  from want of patience and care in reading the work.  

For you must recollect that it is not a book to be read with as much ease  as its pleasant style may lead you to imagine. You spin through it as if  it were a novel the first time you read it, and think you know all about  it; the second time you read it you think you know rather less about it;  and the third time, you are amazed to find how little you have really  apprehended its vast scope and objects. I can positively say that I never  take it up without finding in it some new view, or light, or suggestion  that I have not noticed before. That is the best characteristic of a  thorough and profound book; and I believe this feature of the 'Origin of  Species' explains why so many persons have ventured to pass judgment and  criticisms upon it which are by no means worth the paper they are written  on.  

Before concluding these lectures there is one point to which I must  advert,though, as Mr. Darwin has said nothing about man in his  book, it concerns myself rather than him;for I have strongly  maintained on sundry occasions that if Mr. Darwin's views are sound, they  apply as much to man as to the lower mammals, seeing that it is perfectly  demonstrable that the structural differences which separate man from the  apes are not greater than those which separate some apes from others.  There cannot be the slightest doubt in the world that the argument which  applies to the improvement of the horse from an earlier stock, or of ape  from ape, applies to the improvement of man from some simpler and lower  stock than man. There is not a single facultyfunctional or  structural, moral, intellectual, or instinctive,there is no faculty  whatever that is not capable of improvement; there is no faculty  whatsoever which does not depend upon structure, and as structure tends to  vary, it is capable of being improved.  

Well, I have taken a good deal of pains at various times to prove this,  and I have endeavoured to meet the objections of those who maintain, that  the structural differences between man and the lower animals are of so  vast a character and enormous extent, that even if Mr. Darwin's views are  correct, you cannot imagine this particular modification to take place. It  is, in fact, easy matter to prove that, so far as structure is concerned,  man differs to no greater extent from the animals which are immediately  below him than these do from other members of the same order. Upon the  other hand, there is no one who estimates more highly than I do the  dignity of human nature, and the width of the gulf in intellectual and  moral matters, which lies between man and the whole of the lower creation.  

But I find this very argument brought forward vehemently by some.You say  that man has proceeded from a modification of some lower animal, and you  take pains to prove that the structural differences which are said to  exist in his brain do not exist at all, and you teach that all functions,  intellectual, moral, and others, are the expression or the result, in the  long run, of structures, and of the molecular forces which they exert.It  is quite true that I do so.  

"Well, but," I am told at once, somewhat triumphantly, "you say in the  same breath that there is a great moral and intellectual chasm between man  and the lower animals. How is this possible when you declare that moral  and intellectual characteristics depend on structure, and yet tell us that  there is no such gulf between the structure of man and that of the lower  animals?"  

I think that objection is based upon a misconception of the real relations  which exist between structure and function, between mechanism and work.  Function is the expression of molecular forces and arrangements no doubt;  but, does it follow from this, that variation in function so depends upon  variation in structure that the former is always exactly proportioned to  the latter? If there is no such relation, if the variation in function  which follows on a variation in structure, may be enormously greater than  the variation of the structure, then, you see, the objection falls to the  ground.  

Take a couple of watchesmade by the same maker, and as completely  alike as possible; set them upon the table, and the function of eachwhich  is its rate of goingwill be performed in the same manner, and you  shall be able to distinguish no difference between them; but let me take a  pair of pincers, and if my hand is steady enough to do it, let me just  lightly crush together the bearings of the balance-wheel, or force to a  slightly different angle the teeth of the escapement of one of them, and  of course you know the immediate result will be that the watch, so  treated, from that moment will cease to go. But what proportion is there  between the structural alteration and the functional result? Is it not  perfectly obvious that the alteration is of the minutest kind, yet that  slight as it is, it has produced an infinite difference in the performance  of the functions of these two instruments?  

Well, now, apply that to the present question. What is it that constitutes  and makes man what he is? What is it but his power of languagethat  language giving him the means of recording his experiencemaking  every generation somewhat wiser than its predecessor,more in  accordance with the established order of the universe?  

What is it but this power of speech, of recording experience, which  enables men to be menlooking before and after and, in some dim  sense, understanding the working of this wondrous universeand which  distinguishes man from the whole of the brute world? I say that this  functional difference is vast, unfathomable, and truly infinite in its  consequences; and I say at the same time, that it may depend upon  structural differences which shall be absolutely inappreciable to us with  our present means of investigation. What is this very speech that we are  talking about? I am speaking to you at this moment, but if you were to  alter, in the minutest degree, the proportion of the nervous forces now  active in the two nerves which supply the muscles of my glottis, I should  become suddenly dumb. The voice is produced only so long as the vocal  chords are parallel; and these are parallel only so long as certain  muscles contract with exact equality; and that again depends on the  equality of action of those two nerves I spoke of. So that a change of the  minutest kind in the structure of one of these nerves, or in the structure  of the part in which it originates, or of the supply of blood to that  part, or of one of the muscles to which it is distributed, might render  all of us dumb. But a race of dumb men, deprived of all communication with  those who could speak, would be little indeed removed from the brutes. And  the moral and intellectual difference between them and ourselves would be  practically infinite, though the naturalist should not be able to find a  single shadow of even specific structural difference.  

But let me dismiss this question now, and, in conclusion, let me say that  you may go away with it as my mature conviction, that Mr. Darwin's work is  the greatest contribution which has been made to biological science since  the publication of the 'Regne Animal' of Cuvier, and since that of the  'History of Development' of Von Baer. I believe that if you strip it of  its theoretical part it still remains one of the greatest encyclopaedias  of biological doctrine that any one man ever brought forth; and I believe  that, if you take it as the embodiment of an hypothesis, it is destined to  be the guide of biological and psychological speculation for the next  three or four generations.  


1 (return)
 [ And as I conceive with very  good reason; but if any objector urges that we cannot prove that they have  been produced by artificial or natural selection, the objection must be  admitted ultrasceptical as it is. But in science, scepticism is a  duty.]  











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