登陆注册
18991700000051

第51章

Those who rate Lamarck no higher than did Huxley in his contemptuous phrase "buccinator tantum," will scarcely deny that the sound of the trumpet had carried far, or that its note was clear. If then there were few who had already turned to evolution with positive conviction, all scientific men must at least have known that such views had been promulgated; and many must, as Huxley says, have taken up his own position of "critical expectancy." (See the chapter contributed to the "Life and Letters of Charles Darwin" II. page 195. I do not clearly understand the sense in which Darwin wrote (Autobiography, ibid. I. page 87): "It has sometimes been said that the success of the "Origin" proved 'that the subject was in the air,' or 'that men's minds were prepared for it.' I do not think that this is strictly true, for I occasionally sounded not a few naturalists, and never happened to come across a single one who seemed to doubt about the permanence of species." This experience may perhaps have been an accident due to Darwin's isolation. The literature of the period abounds with indications of "critical expectancy." A most interesting expression of that feeling is given in the charming account of the "Early Days of Darwinism" by Alfred Newton, "Macmillan's Magazine", LVII. 1888, page 241.

He tells how in 1858 when spending a dreary summer in Iceland, he and his friend, the ornithologist John Wolley, in default of active occupation, spent their days in discussion. "Both of us taking a keen interest in Natural History, it was but reasonable that a question, which in those days was always coming up wherever two or more naturalists were gathered together, should be continually recurring. That question was, 'What is a species?' and connected therewith was the other question, 'How did a species begin?'...Now we were of course fairly well acquainted with what had been published on these subjects." He then enumerates some of these publications, mentioning among others T. Vernon Wollaston's "Variation of Species"--a work which has in my opinion never been adequately appreciated.

He proceeds: "Of course we never arrived at anything like a solution of these problems, general or special, but we felt very strongly that a solution ought to be found, and that quickly, if the study of Botany and Zoology was to make any great advance." He then describes how on his return home he received the famous number of the "Linnean Journal" on a certain evening. "I sat up late that night to read it; and never shall Iforget the impression it made upon me. Herein was contained a perfectly simple solution of all the difficulties which had been troubling me for months past...I went to bed satisfied that a solution had been found.")Why, then, was it, that Darwin succeeded where the rest had failed? The cause of that success was two-fold. First, and obviously, in the principle of Natural Selection he had a suggestion which would work. It might not go the whole way, but it was true as far as it went. Evolution could thus in great measure be fairly represented as a consequence of demonstrable processes. Darwin seldom endangers the mechanism he devised by putting on it strains much greater than it can bear. He at least was under no illusion as to the omnipotence of Selection; and he introduces none of the forced pleading which in recent years has threatened to discredit that principle.

For example, in the latest text of the "Origin" ("Origin", (6th edition (1882), page 421.) we find him saying:

"But as my conclusions have lately been much misrepresented, and it has been stated that I attribute the modification of species exclusively to natural selection, I may be permitted to remark that in the first edition of this work, and subsequently, I placed in a most conspicuous position--namely, at the close of the Introduction--the following words: 'I am convinced that natural selection has been the main but not the exclusive means of modification.'"But apart from the invention of this reasonable hypothesis, which may well, as Huxley estimated, "be the guide of biological and psychological speculation for the next three or four generations," Darwin made a more significant and imperishable contribution. Not for a few generations, but through all ages he should be remembered as the first who showed clearly that the problems of Heredity and Variation are soluble by observation, and laid down the course by which we must proceed to their solution. (Whatever be our estimate of the importance of Natural Selection, in this we all agree. Samuel Butler, the most brilliant, and by far the most interesting of Darwin's opponents--whose works are at length emerging from oblivion--in his Preface (1882) to the 2nd edition of "Evolution, Old and New", repeats his earlier expression of homage to one whom he had come to regard as an enemy: "To the end of time, if the question be asked, 'Who taught people to believe in Evolution?' the answer must be that it was Mr. Darwin. This is true, and it is hard to see what palm of higher praise can be awarded to any philosopher.") The moment of inspiration did not come with the reading of Malthus, but with the opening of the "first note-book on Transmutation of Species." ("Life and Letters", I. pages 276 and 83.) Evolution is a process of Variation and Heredity. The older writers, though they had some vague idea that it must be so, did not study Variation and Heredity.

Darwin did, and so begat not a theory, but a science.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 核武器科技知识(下)

    核武器科技知识(下)

    不论什么武器,都是用于攻击的工具,具有威慑和防御的作用,自古具有巨大的神秘性,是广大军事爱好者的最爱。
  • 快穿之争夺男配之战

    快穿之争夺男配之战

    (⊙o⊙)哈!这素什么鬼?系统?那又素什么鬼?由于最近女主光环严重,女配们怨气缭绕,怨气太重导致系统濒临崩溃,需要拯救系统。纳尼?那为什么是我?我做了什么好事吗?你说,我改就是。啊!我才不要去那个什么系统世界哩...555...我要回家...偶要回家...me要回家....
  • 根参大道

    根参大道

    大道艰难,根骨为最。极品有仙根、神根。上品有灵根、道根。中品有金木水火土五行自然根……你根骨太差?没关系!就算你是白菜萝卜根,信我,也能把它炼成以上任选N种根。什么?你根本就没根!神迹啊——无根胜有根!十个铜板,拿去炼炼,或许你能炼出一条独一无二的根!本书标签:样板废柴流——废柴精华,熔为一炉,炼成奇书,娱乐大众,完本保证,童叟无欺。
  • 暗裔主宰

    暗裔主宰

    一个大陆的故事,一个少年的传奇,一段血脉的传承。
  • 六十种曲赠书记

    六十种曲赠书记

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 我在北京有张床

    我在北京有张床

    四川某小城青年戈海洋,大学毕业后变成了专业倒霉蛋,先后失去教职(干部身份)、下岗、失恋、生意破产、痛失家父……内外夹击,濒临崩溃之际,靠写作虚荣灵魂……世纪之交,戈海洋以三千块钱和一部书稿,像外省人于连去巴黎一样来到京城,以卑微之躯,做最后一搏。北漂族的残酷生活远超想象,竞争的惨烈,体制的阻击,猝不及防的遭际,使北漂的壮士们步履维艰。戈海洋遵循鲁迅“要韧性地战斗”的斗争精神,以我不入地狱谁出地狱的乐观态度,折腾了八年,除了一张床垫、几段爱情、半腔叹息和一桩“不成功”的罪名外,一无所有。正当戈海洋嗷嗷抓狂之际,赶上了夜场奇缘,戏剧人生为他量身打造了新的命运……
  • 地藏菩萨像灵验记

    地藏菩萨像灵验记

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 电视新闻

    电视新闻

    本书分为六章,介绍了电视新闻的概念、分类、发展历程以及新闻学的基本理论,并逐一介绍了新闻策划、新闻采访、新闻拍摄、新闻编辑等内容。
  • 琼楼吟稿节钞

    琼楼吟稿节钞

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 梦想造物

    梦想造物

    灵能是奇迹,张云阳掌握了自己的奇迹。以造物主的力量,他在未来的星际时代高歌自己的存在。任何不可思议的东西,都能被他所创造出来。能够自动答出试卷答案的“自动答题签字笔”。无论怎么躲藏,只要知道名字能够一眼看到在哪个地方的“抓人地图”。戴在手上,就能够拥有10倍力量的“重击全套”。穿戴在身上能够让人获得神奇力量的“圣衣”。空白的卡片,能够收纳凶猛的星际怪兽,并且为己所用。梦想创造世界,这并不仅仅只是一句空话,而是真的可以创造世界!他是星际时代的造物主!