Delphi complete works of.., p.188
Delphi Complete Works of Samuel Butler, page 188
This resolves itself into the effect of the mutual interaction of mind on body and of body on mind. Thus he writes: —
“The physical and the mental are to start with undoubtedly one and the same thing; this fact is most easily made apparent through study of the organization of the various orders of known animals. From the common source there proceeded certain effects, and these effects, in the outset hardly separated, have in the course of time become so perfectly distinct, that when looked at in their extremest development they appear to have little or nothing in common.
“The effect of the body upon the mind has been already sufficiently recognized; not so that of the mind upon the body itself. The two, one in the outset though they were, interact upon each other more and more the more they present the appearance of having become widely sundered, and it can be shown that each is continually modifying the other and causing it to vary.”
And again, later: —
“I shall show that the habits by which we now recognize any creature are due to the environment (circonstances) under which it has for a long while existed, and that these habits have had such an influence upon the structure of each individual of the species as to have at length” (that is to say, through many successive slight variations, each due to habit engendered by the wishes of the animal itself), “modified this structure and adapted it to the habits contracted.”
These quotations must suffice, for the reader has already had Lamarck’s argument sufficiently put before him.
Variation, and consequently modification, are, according to Lamarck, the outward and visible signs of the impressions made upon animals and plants in the course of their long and varied history, each organ chronicling a time during which such and such thoughts and actions dominated the creature, and specific changes being the effect of certain long-continued wishes upon the body, and of certain changed surroundings upon the wishes. Plants and animals are living forms of faith, or faiths of form, whichever the reader pleases.
Mr. Darwin, on the other hand, repeatedly avows ignorance, and profound ignorance, concerning the causes of those variations which, or nothing, must be the fountain-heads of species. Thus he writes of “the complex and little known laws of variation.” “There is also some probability in the view propounded by Andrew Knight, that variability may be partly connected with excess of food.” “Many laws regulate variation, some few of which can be dimly seen.” “The results of the unknown, or but dimly understood, laws of variation are infinitely complex and diversified.” “We are profoundly ignorant of the cause of each slight variation or individual difference.” “We are far too ignorant to speculate on the relative importance of the several known and unknown causes of variation.” He admits, indeed, the effects of use and disuse to have been important, but how important we have no means of knowing; he also attributes considerable effect to the action of changed conditions of life — but how considerable again we know not; nevertheless, he sees no great principle underlying the variations generally, and tending to make them appear for a length of time together in any definite direction advantageous to the creature itself, but either expressly, as at times, or by implication, as throughout his works, ascribes them to accident or chance.
In other words, he admits his ignorance concerning them, and dwells only on the accumulation of variations the appearance of which for any length of time in any given direction he leaves unaccounted for.
Lamarck, again, having established his principle that sense of need is the main direct cause of variation, and having also established that the variations thus engendered are inherited, so that divergences accumulate and result in species and genera, is comparatively indifferent to further details. His work is avowedly an outline. Nevertheless, we have seen that he was quite alive to the effects of the geometrical ratio of increase, and of the struggle for existence which thence inevitably follows.
Mr. Darwin, on the other hand, comparatively indifferent to, or at any rate silent concerning the causes of those variations which appeared so all-important to Lamarck, inasmuch as they are the raindrops which unite to form the full stream of modification, goes into very full detail upon natural selection, or the survival of the fittest, and maintains it to have been “the most important but not the exclusive means of modification.”
It will be readily seen that, according to Lamarck, the variations which when accumulated amount to specific and generic differences, will have been due to causes which have been mainly of the same kind for long periods together. Conditions of life change for the most part slowly, steadily, and in a set direction; as in the direction of steady, gradual increase or decrease of cold or moisture; of the steady, gradual increase of such and such an enemy, or decrease of such and such a kind of food; of the gradual upheaval or submergence of such and such a continent, and consequent drying up or encroachment of such and such a sea, and so forth. The thoughts of the creature varying will thus have been turned mainly in one direction for long together; and hence the consequent modifications will also be mainly in fixed and definite directions for many successive generations; as in the direction of a warmer or cooler covering; of a better means of defence or of attack in relation to such and such another species; of a longer neck and longer legs, or of whatever other modification the gradually changing circumstances may be rendering expedient. It is easy to understand the accumulation of slight successive modifications which thus make their appearance in given organs and in a set direction.
With Mr. Darwin, on the contrary, the variations being accidental, and due to no special and uniform cause, will not appear for any length of time in any given direction, nor in any given organ, but will be just as liable to appear in one organ as in another, and may be in one generation in one direction, and in another in another.
In confirmation of the above, and in illustration of the important consequences that will follow according as we adopt the old or the more recent theory, I would quote the following from Mr. Mivart’s ‘Genesis of Species.’
Shortly before maintaining that two similar structures have often been developed independently of one another, Mr. Mivart points out that if we are dependent upon indefinite variations only, as provided for us by Mr. Darwin, this would be “so improbable as to be practically impossible.” The number of possible variations being indefinitely great, “it is therefore an indefinitely great number to one against a similar series of variations occurring and being similarly preserved in any two independent instances.” It will be felt (as Mr. Mivart presently insists) that this objection does not apply to a system which maintains that in case an animal feels any given want it will gradually develop the structure which shall meet the want — that is to say, if the want be not so great and so sudden as to extinguish the creature to which it has become a necessity. For if there be such a power of self-adaptation as thus supposed, two or more very widely different animals feeling the same kind of want might easily adopt similar means to gratify it, and hence develop eventually a substantially similar structure; just as two men, without any kind of concert, have often hit upon like means of compassing the same ends. Mr. Spencer’s theory — so Mr. Mivart tells us — and certainly that of Lamarck, whose disciple Mr. Spencer would appear to be, admits “a certain peculiar, but limited power of response and adaptation in each animal and plant” — to the conditions of their existence. “Such theories,” says Mr. Mivart, “have not to contend against the difficulty proposed, and it has been urged that even very complex extremely similar structures have again and again been developed quite independently one of the other, and this because the process has taken place not by merely haphazard, indefinite variations in all directions, but by the concurrence of some other internal natural law or laws co-operating with external influences and with Natural Selection in the evolution of organic forms.
“It must never be forgotten that to admit any such constant operation of any such unknown natural cause is to deny the purely Darwinian theory which relies upon the survival of the fittest by means of minute fortuitous indefinite variations.
“Among many other obligations which the author has to acknowledge to Professor Huxley, are the pointing out of this very difficulty, and the calling his attention to the striking resemblance between certain teeth of the dog, and of the thylacine, as one instance, and certain ornithic peculiarities of pterodactyles as another.”
In brief then, changed distribution of use and disuse in consequence of changed conditions of the environment is with Lamarck the main cause of modification. According to Mr. Darwin natural selection, or the survival of favourable but accidental variations, is the most important means of modification. In a word, with Lamarck the variations are definite; with Mr. Darwin indefinite.
CHAPTER XX.
NATURAL SELECTION CONSIDERED AS A MEANS OF MODIFICATION. THE CONFUSION WHICH THIS EXPRESSION OCCASIONS.
When Mr. Darwin says that natural selection is the most important “means” of modification, I am not sure that I understand what he wishes to imply by the word “means.” I do not see how the fact that those animals which are best fitted for the conditions of their existence commonly survive in the struggle for life, can be called in any special sense a “means” of modification.
“Means” is a dangerous word; it slips too easily into “cause.” We have seen Mr. Darwin himself say that Buffon did not enter on “the causes or means” of modification, as though these two words were synonymous, or nearly so. Nevertheless, the use of the word “means” here enables Mr. Darwin to speak of Natural Selection as if it were an active cause (which he constantly does), and yet to avoid expressly maintaining that it is a cause of modification. This, indeed, he has not done in express terms, but he does it by implication when he writes, “Natural Selection might be most effective in giving the proper colour to each kind of grouse, and in keeping that colour when once acquired.” Such language, says the late Mr. G. H. Lewes, “is misleading;” it makes “selection an agent.”
It is plain that natural selection cannot be considered a cause of variation; and if not of variation, which is as the rain drop, then not of specific and generic modification, which are as the river; for the variations must make their appearance before they can be selected. Suppose that it is an advantage to a horse to have an especially hard and broad hoof, then a horse born with such a hoof will indeed probably survive in the struggle for existence, but he was not born with the larger and harder hoof because of his subsequently surviving. He survived because he was born fit — not, he was born fit because he survived. The variation must arise first and be preserved afterwards.
Mr. Darwin therefore is in the following dilemma. If he does not treat natural selection as a cause of variation, the ‘Origin of Species’ will turn out to have no raison d’être. It will have professed to have explained to us the manner in which species has originated, but it will have left us in the dark concerning the origin of those variations which, when added together, amount to specific and generic differences. Thus, as I said in ‘Life and Habit,’ Mr. Darwin will have made us think we know the whole road, in spite of his having almost ostentatiously blindfolded us at every step in the journey. The ‘Origin of Species’ would thus prove to be no less a piece of intellectual sleight-of-hand than Paley’s ‘Natural Theology.’
If, on the other hand, Mr. Darwin maintains natural selection to be a cause of variation, this comes to saying that when an animal has varied in an advantageous direction, the fact of its subsequently surviving in the struggle for existence is the cause of its having varied in the advantageous direction — or more simply still — that the fact of its having varied is the cause of its having varied.
And this is what we have already seen Mr. Darwin actually to say, in a passage quoted near the beginning of this present book. When writing of the eye he says, “Variation will cause the slight alterations;” but the “slight alterations” are the variations; so that Mr. Darwin’s words come to this — that “variation will cause the variations.”
There does not seem any better way out of this dilemma than that which Mr. Darwin has adopted — namely, to hold out natural selection as “a means” of modification, and thenceforward to treat it as an efficient cause; but at the same time to protest again and again that it is not a cause. Accordingly he writes that “Natural Selection acts only by the preservation and accumulation of small inherited modifications,” — that is to say, it has had no share in inducing or causing these modifications. Again, “What applies to one animal will apply throughout all time to all animals — that is, if they vary, for otherwise natural selection can effect nothing”; and again, “for natural selection only takes advantage of such variations as arise” — the variations themselves arising, as we have just seen, from variation.
Nothing, then, can be clearer from these passages than that natural selection is not a cause of modification; while, on the other hand, nothing can be clearer, from a large number of such passages, as, for instance, “natural selection may be effective in giving and keeping colour,” than that natural selection is an efficient cause; and in spite of its being expressly declared to be only a “means” of modification, it will be accepted as cause by the great majority of readers.
Mr. Darwin explains this apparent inconsistency thus: — He maintains that though the advantageous modification itself is fortuitous, or without known cause or principle underlying it, yet its becoming the predominant form of the species in which it appears is due to the fact that those animals which have been advantageously modified commonly survive in times of difficulty, while the unmodified individuals perish: offspring therefore is more frequently left by the favourably modified animal, and thus little by little the whole species will come to inherit the modification. Hence the survival of the fittest becomes a means of modification, though it is no cause of variation.
It will appear more clearly later on how much this amounts to. I will for the present content myself with the following quotation from the late Mr. G. H. Lewes in reference to it. Mr. Lewes writes: —
“Mr. Darwin seems to imply that the external conditions which cause a variation are to be distinguished from the conditions which accumulate and perfect such variation, that is to say, he implies a radical difference between the process of variation and the process of selection. This I have already said does not seem to me acceptable; the selection I conceive to be simply the variation which has survived.”
Certainly those animals and plants which are best fitted for their environment, or, as Lamarck calls it, “circonstances” — those animals, in fact, which are best fitted to comply with the conditions of their existence — are most likely to survive and transmit their especial fitness. No one would admit this more readily than Lamarck. This is no theory; it is a commonly observed fact in nature which no one will dispute, but it is not more “a means of modification” than many other commonly observed facts concerning animals.
Why is “the survival of the fittest” more a means of modification than, we will say, the fact that animals live at all, or that they live in successive generations, being born, continuing their species, and dying, instead of living on for ever as one single animal in the common acceptation of the term; or than that they eat and drink?
The heat whereby the water is heated, the water which is turned into steam, the piston on which the steam acts, the driving wheel, &c., &c., are all one as much as another a means whereby a train is made to go from one place to another; it is impossible to say that any one of them is the main means. So (mutatis mutandis) with modification. There is no reason therefore why “the survival of the fittest” should claim to be an especial “means of modification” rather than any other necessary adjunct of animal or vegetable life.
I find that the late Mr. G. H. Lewes has insisted on this objection in his ‘Physical Basis of Mind.’ I observe, also, that in the very passage in which he does so, Mr. Lewes appears to have been misled by Mr. Darwin’s use of that dangerous word “means,” and, at the same time, by his frequent treatment of natural selection as though it were an active cause; so that Mr. Lewes supposes Mr. Darwin to have fallen into the very error of which, as I have above shown, he is evidently struggling to keep clear — namely, that of maintaining natural selection to be a “cause” of variation. Mr. Lewes then continues: —
“He [Mr. Darwin] separates Natural Selection from all the primary causes of variation either internal or external — either as results of the laws of growth, of the correlations of variation, of use and disuse, &c., and limits it to the slow accumulation of such variations as are profitable in the struggle with competitors. And for his purpose this separation is necessary. But biological philosophy must, I think, regard the distinction as artificial, referring only to one of the great factors in the production of species.”
The fact that one in a brood or litter is born fitter for the conditions of its existence than its brothers and sisters, and, again, the causes that have led to this one’s having been born fitter — which last is what the older evolutionists justly dwelt upon as the most interesting consideration in connection with the whole subject — are more noteworthy factors of modification than the factor that an animal, if born fitter for its conditions, will commonly survive longer in the struggle for existence. If the first of these can be explained in such a manner as to be accepted as true, or highly probable, we have a substantial gain to our knowledge. The second is little — if at all — better than a truism. Granted, if it were not generally the case that those forms are most likely to survive which are best fitted for the conditions of their existence, no adaptation of form to conditions of existence could ever have come about. “The survival of the fittest” therefore, or, perhaps better, “the fertility of the fittest,” is thus a sine quâ non for modification. But, as we have just insisted, this does not render “the fertility of the fittest” an especial “means of modification,” rather than any other sine quâ non for modification.
