1105 lines
60 KiB
D
1105 lines
60 KiB
D
|
17 page printout
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Reproducible Electronic Publishing can defeat censorship.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
This disk, its printout, or copies of either
|
|||
|
are to be copied and given away, but NOT sold.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Bank of Wisdom, Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|||
|
**** ****
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Pamphlets by Charles Watts, Vol. I.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
EVOLUTION AND SPECIAL CREATION.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
by
|
|||
|
Charles Watts
|
|||
|
Vice-President of the National Secular Society
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Watts & Co. 17, Johnson's Court, Fleet Street.
|
|||
|
London, England.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
1880?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
**** ****
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
EVOLUTION AND SPECIAL CREATION.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
TAKING a retrospective view of the dark and unenlightened
|
|||
|
past, when the mighty forces of nature were almost entirely hidden
|
|||
|
from the human gaze; contemplating the sad spectacle of our
|
|||
|
forefathers being sunken in gross superstition, ere the light of
|
|||
|
to-day had arisen above the horizon of mental ignorance, and
|
|||
|
contrasting the then limitation of knowledge with the extensive
|
|||
|
educational acquirements now existing, what a pleasing contrast the
|
|||
|
intellectual advancement presents to the modern observer!
|
|||
|
Recognizing the glories of nature, and finding ourselves possessed
|
|||
|
of an amazing amount of information respecting the laws of nature
|
|||
|
and the phenomena with which these laws are connected -- such
|
|||
|
information being for ages unknown to the great masses of the
|
|||
|
people -- we are prompted to inquire what has produced this
|
|||
|
marvelous transformation, and to what agency we are indebted for
|
|||
|
this grand and stupendous revolution of the nineteenth century.
|
|||
|
Whatever may be the reply of the theologian, whose intellect is too
|
|||
|
often clouded with dreamy imaginations, the answer of the patient
|
|||
|
and unfettered student of nature will be that it is to science we
|
|||
|
owe the magic power which has substituted for the dense darkness of
|
|||
|
the past the brilliant light of the present. The marvels of
|
|||
|
astronomy, the revelations of geology, the splendors of botany, the
|
|||
|
varieties of zoology, the wonders of anatomy, the useful
|
|||
|
discoveries of physiology, and the rapid strides which have been
|
|||
|
made in the development of the mental sciences, all combine to
|
|||
|
unravel the once mysterious operations of mind and matter. While
|
|||
|
each of the modern sciences has corrected long-cherished errors and
|
|||
|
opened new paths of investigation, one or two of them have
|
|||
|
especially tended to unfold to our view the nature, affinity, and
|
|||
|
development of man, and the wonderful universe to which he belongs.
|
|||
|
For instance, without the science of geology we should, in all
|
|||
|
probability, forever have remained in ignorance of the various
|
|||
|
changes which had taken place on the earth previous to the
|
|||
|
appearance of man, and the different forms of animal and vegetable
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Bank of Wisdom
|
|||
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|||
|
1
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
EVOLUTION AND SPECIAL CREATION.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
life that were then distributed over its surface. We now examine
|
|||
|
the various strata of the earth, and there discover the fossil
|
|||
|
remains of animals and plants which existed in the ages that rolled
|
|||
|
by when no historian lived to pen the mighty transactions of nature
|
|||
|
and hand them down to future generations. The science of
|
|||
|
electricity, too, still only in its infancy, promises to confer an
|
|||
|
amount of benefit upon mankind too vast to be conceived. We hear
|
|||
|
the thunder roar, and behold the vivid flash of lightning darting
|
|||
|
before our eyes like an arrow from the bow of the archer; but while
|
|||
|
we regard this phenomenon we have learned not to look upon it with
|
|||
|
dread as the vengeance of an angry God, but as a natural result of
|
|||
|
the operation of known forces. It was for Dr. Watts to sing: --
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"There all his stores of lightning lie
|
|||
|
Till vengeance darts them down."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
But it remained for a Franklin and a Priestley to inform us that
|
|||
|
tempests were not to be beheld as indicating the wrath of an
|
|||
|
offended God, but as the effect of an unequal diffusion of the
|
|||
|
electric fluid. Thus science has been, and is, our benefactor, our
|
|||
|
enlightener, our improver, and our redeemer. Without its aid we
|
|||
|
should still have been in a state of mental darkness and physical
|
|||
|
degradation. Deprived of its discoveries, we should still have been
|
|||
|
bound down with the ties of superstition, ignorance, and
|
|||
|
fanaticism. As Pope observes : --
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"Lo! the poor Indian, whose untutored mind
|
|||
|
Sees God in clouds, or hears him in the wind;
|
|||
|
His soul proud Science never taught to stray
|
|||
|
Far as the solar walk or milky way."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Perhaps there is no domain of human thought where the advantages of
|
|||
|
scientific investigation are more clear and pronounced than in
|
|||
|
connection with what is termed " Evolution " -- a word which,
|
|||
|
within the last few years, has become very popular as representing
|
|||
|
a theory of man and the universe opposed to the old orthodox notion
|
|||
|
of special creation and supernatural government. There are, of
|
|||
|
course, some professedly religious people who avow their belief in
|
|||
|
Evolution, and who maintain that it is what they call God's mode of
|
|||
|
working; and there are those who even go so far as to say that the
|
|||
|
power and wisdom of God are seen more thoroughly displayed in the
|
|||
|
process of Evolution than in the method, so long believed in, of
|
|||
|
special and supernatural creation. But the number of these is
|
|||
|
comparatively small, and, consequently, the great mass of those who
|
|||
|
accept the word in its legitimate signification may be looked upon
|
|||
|
as of a skeptical turn of mind. It will not be difficult to
|
|||
|
demonstrate that the popular theological idea of creation finds no
|
|||
|
support in the theory of Evolution, which, if not a demonstrated
|
|||
|
thesis, has, at least, in its favor the "science of probabilities
|
|||
|
" -- an advantage that cannot fairly be claimed for the Biblical
|
|||
|
account of the origin of phenomena.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The term "evolution" may be defined as an unfolding, opening
|
|||
|
out, or unwinding; a disclosure of something which was not
|
|||
|
previously known, but which existed before in a more condensed or
|
|||
|
hidden form. 'There is no new existence called into being, but a
|
|||
|
making conspicuous to our eyes that which was previously concealed.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Bank of Wisdom
|
|||
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|||
|
2
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
EVOLUTION AND SPECIAL CREATION.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"Evolution teaches that the universe and man did not always exist
|
|||
|
in their present form; neither are they the product of a sudden
|
|||
|
creative act, but rather the result of innumerable changes from the
|
|||
|
lower to the higher, each step in advance being an evolution from
|
|||
|
a preexisting condition." On the other hand, the special creation
|
|||
|
doctrine teaches that, during a limited period, God created the
|
|||
|
universe and man, and that the various phenomena are not the result
|
|||
|
simply of natural law, but the outcome of supernatural design.
|
|||
|
According to Mr. Herbert Spencer, the whole theory of Evolution is
|
|||
|
based upon three principles -- namely, that matter is
|
|||
|
indestructible, motion continuous, and force persistent. Two
|
|||
|
contending processes will be seen everywhere in operation in the
|
|||
|
physical universe, the one antagonistic to the other, each one for
|
|||
|
a time triumphing over its opposite. These are termed "evolution"
|
|||
|
and "dissolution." Spencer remarks that "Evolution, under its
|
|||
|
simplest aspect, is the integration of matter and the dissipation
|
|||
|
of motion, while dissolution is the absorption of motion and the
|
|||
|
concomitant disintegration of matter." Thus it will be seen that
|
|||
|
Herbert Spencer regards evolution as the concentration or
|
|||
|
transition of matter from a diffused to a more condensed and
|
|||
|
perceptible form. This change he traces in the systems of the
|
|||
|
stars; in the geological history of the earth; in the growth and
|
|||
|
development of plants and animals; in the history of language and
|
|||
|
the fine arts, and in the condition of civilized states. Briefly,
|
|||
|
the theory is that the matter of which the universe is composed has
|
|||
|
progressed from a vague, incoherent, and, perhaps, all but
|
|||
|
homogeneous nebula of tremendous extent, to complete systems of
|
|||
|
suns, worlds, comets, sea, and land, and countless varieties of
|
|||
|
living things, each composed of many very different parts, and of
|
|||
|
complex organizations.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Coming to the organic bodies, there may be included under the
|
|||
|
term "evolution" many different laws, some of which we may not even
|
|||
|
know as yet, and a great number of processes, acting sometimes in
|
|||
|
unison and often in antagonism, the one to the other. This,
|
|||
|
however, in no way weakens the theory of evolution, which, beyond
|
|||
|
doubt, is the process by which things have been brought to their
|
|||
|
present condition. It will tend, perhaps, to elucidate this truth
|
|||
|
the more readily and clearly if a brief exposition of the theory be
|
|||
|
given under the chief divisions of this extensive subject.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The Formation of Worlds. -- According to Evolution, the
|
|||
|
present cosmos began its development at an immeasurably remote
|
|||
|
date, and any attempt to comprehend the periods that have rolled by
|
|||
|
since would paralyse our highest intellectual powers. When the
|
|||
|
matter which is now seen shaped into suns and stars of vast
|
|||
|
magnitude, and of incompressible number, was diffused over the
|
|||
|
whole of the space in which those bodies are now seen moving -- of
|
|||
|
extreme variety, and, perhaps, of nearly homogeneous character --
|
|||
|
the human mind is unable to comprehend. This matter, by virtue of
|
|||
|
the very laws now seen in operation in the physical universe, would
|
|||
|
in time shape itself into bodies with which the heavens are
|
|||
|
strewed, shining with a glory that awes while it charms. What is
|
|||
|
called in these days the nebular cosmogony may be said to have
|
|||
|
arisen with Sir William Herschel, who discovered with his telescope
|
|||
|
what seemed to be worlds and systems in course of formation -- that
|
|||
|
is, they were in various states which appeared to mark different
|
|||
|
degrees of condensation.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Bank of Wisdom
|
|||
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|||
|
3
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
EVOLUTION AND SPECIAL CREATION.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
M. Laplace, without any knowledge of Herschel's speculations,
|
|||
|
arrived at a similar idea upon a totally different ground --
|
|||
|
namely, the uniformity of the heavenly bodies. He showed that, if
|
|||
|
matter existed in such a different state as the nebular theory
|
|||
|
assumed, and if nuclei existed in it, they would become centers of
|
|||
|
aggregation in which a rotary motion would increase as the
|
|||
|
agglomeration proceeded. Further, Laplace urged that at certain
|
|||
|
intervals the centrifugal force acting in the rotating mass would
|
|||
|
overcome the force of agglomeration, and the result would be a
|
|||
|
series of rings existing apart from the mass to which they
|
|||
|
originally adhered, each of which would retain the motion which it
|
|||
|
possessed at the moment of separation. These rings would again
|
|||
|
break up into spherical bodies, and hence come what are termed
|
|||
|
primary bodies and their satellites. This Laplace showed to be at
|
|||
|
least possible, and the results, in the case of our solar system,
|
|||
|
are just what would have been expected from the operations of this
|
|||
|
law. For example, everyone knows that the rapidity of the motions
|
|||
|
in the planets is in the ratio of their nearness to the sun.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Many facts seem to support this theory, such as the existence
|
|||
|
of the hundred and more small bodies, called asteroids, observed
|
|||
|
between Mars and Jupiter, which doubtless indicate a zone of
|
|||
|
agglomeration at several points, and the rings of Saturn give an
|
|||
|
example of zones still preserved intact. This theory has been held
|
|||
|
by some of the most aminate astronomers, and is most ably advocated
|
|||
|
by the late Professor Nicol in his "Architecture of the Heavens."
|
|||
|
Some experiments have also been tried -- as, for example, that of
|
|||
|
Plateau on a rotating globe of oil -- which showed the operation of
|
|||
|
the law by which the suns, planets, and their moons were formed.
|
|||
|
Such is the evolution of worlds, and it is unnecessary to point out
|
|||
|
how diametrically it is opposed to the special creation described
|
|||
|
in Genesis, where the heavens and the earth are called suddenly
|
|||
|
into being by the fiat of God, and the sun stated to be created
|
|||
|
four days afterwards. Which theory should, in these days of
|
|||
|
thought, commend itself to a rational mind?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The Beginning of Life upon the Earth. -- Evolution has been
|
|||
|
subjected to many severe attacks at this point. Those who contend
|
|||
|
for special creation have maintained, with a dogmatism which but
|
|||
|
ill accords with the knowledge they possess upon the subject, that
|
|||
|
nothing but the hypothesis of the supernatural origin of things is
|
|||
|
sufficient to account for the first appearance of life upon the
|
|||
|
earth, that evolution completely breaks down here, and that all the
|
|||
|
experiments which have been conducted with a view to lend it
|
|||
|
support have turned out positive failures. Such is the allegation
|
|||
|
of orthodox opponents. Let us see what grounds they have for these
|
|||
|
reckless and dogmatic statements. The two views of the origin of
|
|||
|
living beings have been called respectively Biogenesis and
|
|||
|
Abiogenesis, the first meaning that life can spring only from prior
|
|||
|
life, and the latter that life may sometimes have its origin in
|
|||
|
dead matter. Dr. Charlton Bastian, whose experiments will be
|
|||
|
hereafter referred to, substitutes for Abiogenesis another word,
|
|||
|
Archebiosis.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Now, it is well known and admitted on all hands that there was
|
|||
|
a time when no life existed on the earth. Not the most minute
|
|||
|
animal, or the most insignificant plant, found a place on the
|
|||
|
surface of what was probably at that time a globe heated up to a
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Bank of Wisdom
|
|||
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|||
|
4
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
EVOLUTION AND SPECIAL CREATION.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
temperature at which no living thing could exist. The life,
|
|||
|
therefore, that did afterwards appear could not have sprung from
|
|||
|
germs of prior living bodies. True, the whimsical theory was put
|
|||
|
forward by an eminent scientific man, some years ago, that the
|
|||
|
first germs that found their way to the earth were probably thrown
|
|||
|
off with meteoric matter from some other planet. But on the face of
|
|||
|
it this is absurd, because such matter would be of too high a
|
|||
|
temperature to admit of the existence upon it of living bodies of
|
|||
|
any kind; and, besides, were it otherwise, it would explain
|
|||
|
nothing. It would only transfer the difficulty from this world to
|
|||
|
some other, For life must have had a beginning somewhere, and the
|
|||
|
question is as to that beginning somewhere. The supernaturalist
|
|||
|
seeks to get out of the difficulty rather by cutting the Gordian
|
|||
|
knot than by untying it, and falls back upon a special creation,
|
|||
|
thereby avoiding any further trouble about the matter, But the
|
|||
|
evolutionist thinks that he can see his way clearly in what must
|
|||
|
necessarily be to some extent a labyrinth, because no one lived at
|
|||
|
that time to observe and record what was taking place. One thing is
|
|||
|
plain, which is, that living things were made or came into
|
|||
|
existence -- whatever the mode may have been, or the power by which
|
|||
|
it occurred -- out of non-living matter. Even the believers in
|
|||
|
special creation will not deny this. The only question is,
|
|||
|
therefore, whether the process occurred in accordance with natural
|
|||
|
law, and whether the forces by which it was brought about were
|
|||
|
those which exist, or, at all events, which did exist, in material
|
|||
|
nature. For it does not follow that, if such phenomena do not occur
|
|||
|
to-day, they could never have taken place in the past. The
|
|||
|
conditions of the earth were different then from what they are now;
|
|||
|
and forces may have been in operation that are now quiescent.
|
|||
|
Professor Huxley, who thinks that no instance has occurred in
|
|||
|
modern times of the evolution of a living organism from dead
|
|||
|
matter, and that the experiments which have been conducted on the
|
|||
|
subject are inconclusive -- who, in fact, ranks himself on the side
|
|||
|
of the advocates of Bio-genesis -- yet says that, if we could go
|
|||
|
back millions of years to the dawn of life, we should, no doubt,
|
|||
|
behold living bodies springing from non-living matter.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
But, of course, it will be argued that, if it happened then,
|
|||
|
it might take place now and although, as I have said, this is not
|
|||
|
conclusive, yet to some it has much weight. What Nature has done
|
|||
|
once, it is insisted, she can do again. Quite so; but, then, all
|
|||
|
the conditions must be the same. Dr. Bastian himself asks the
|
|||
|
question: "If such synthetic processes took place then, why should
|
|||
|
they not take place now? Why should the inherent molecular
|
|||
|
properties of various kinds of matter have undergone so much
|
|||
|
alteration?" ("Beginnings of life"). And the question is likely to
|
|||
|
be repeated, with, to say the least of it, some show of reason.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
It must never be forgotten, as Tyndall has very ably pointed
|
|||
|
out, that the matter of which the organic body is built up "is that
|
|||
|
of inorganic nature. There is no substance in the animal tissues
|
|||
|
that is not primarily derived from the rocks, the water, and the
|
|||
|
air." And the forces operating in the one are those which we see
|
|||
|
working in the other, vitality only excepted, which is probably but
|
|||
|
another manifestation of the one great force of the universe.
|
|||
|
Indeed, Professor Huxley does not make an exception even in the
|
|||
|
case of vitality, which, he maintains, has no more actual existence
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Bank of Wisdom
|
|||
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|||
|
5
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
EVOLUTION AND SPECIAL CREATION.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
than the imaginary aquosity of water. Mr. Herbert Spencer thinks
|
|||
|
that life, under all its forms, has arisen by an unbroken
|
|||
|
evolution, and through natural causes alone; and this view accords
|
|||
|
with the highest reason and philosophy.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Nor have the experiments performed with a view to solve the
|
|||
|
problem been so conclusive as would appear to some. At all events,
|
|||
|
the question is an open one as to whether the origin of living
|
|||
|
things in non-living matter has not been experimentally
|
|||
|
demonstrated. The old doctrine of "spontaneous generation" can, in
|
|||
|
its new form and under its recent name of Abiogenesis, or
|
|||
|
Archebiosis, claim the support of men of great eminence in the
|
|||
|
scientific world at the present time, Pouchet, a very illustrious
|
|||
|
Frenchman, performed a large number of experiments, and in all or
|
|||
|
most of them he succeeded, according to his own opinion, in
|
|||
|
producing living things. The objection that there were germs in the
|
|||
|
air, or water, or the materials that he employed, he met by
|
|||
|
manufacturing artificial water out of oxygen and hydrogen, and
|
|||
|
submitting the whole of the material employed to a temperature
|
|||
|
above boiling-water point, which would certainly destroy any living
|
|||
|
germ, either of an animal or vegetable character. Then, in England
|
|||
|
a series of experiments have been performed by Dr. Bastian, one of
|
|||
|
the leading scientists of our time; and the results have been given
|
|||
|
to the world in some voluminous and masterly books. "These
|
|||
|
volumes," says an opponent -- Dr. Elam -- "are full of the records
|
|||
|
of arduous, thoughtful, and conscientious work, and must ever
|
|||
|
retain a conspicuous place in the literature of biological
|
|||
|
science." Dr. Bastian maintains that he has succeeded, in
|
|||
|
innumerable instances, in producing living organisms from non-
|
|||
|
living matter. Hence the doctrine of Evolution, which is in
|
|||
|
accordance with true philosophy, finds its support in that physical
|
|||
|
science where we should expect to meet with it, and to which it
|
|||
|
really belongs.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The Origin of Man. -- It has already been stated that the
|
|||
|
remains of man are met with only in the most recent geological
|
|||
|
deposits. On this point there will be no dispute. No doubt human
|
|||
|
beings have been in existence for a much longer period than is
|
|||
|
generally supposed; the short term of six thousand years, which our
|
|||
|
fathers considered to cover man's entire history, pales into
|
|||
|
insignificance before the vast periods which we know to have rolled
|
|||
|
their course since human life began. But that fact in no way
|
|||
|
affects the question before us. Man was certainly the last animal
|
|||
|
that appeared, as he was the highest. If it be asked, Why highest
|
|||
|
as well as last? the answer is, Because, by the process of
|
|||
|
evolution, the highest must come last. This is the law that we have
|
|||
|
seen operating all through the physical universe, so far as that
|
|||
|
universe has disclosed to us its mighty secrets, hidden for ages,
|
|||
|
but now revealed to scientific observation and experiment. Man
|
|||
|
came, as other organic bodies came, by no special creation, but by
|
|||
|
the great forces of nature, which move always in the same
|
|||
|
direction, and work to the same end. As far as the physical powers
|
|||
|
are concerned, it will not be difficult to conceive the same laws
|
|||
|
operating in his production as originated the various other forms
|
|||
|
of organic beings. His body is built up of the same materials, upon
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Bank of Wisdom
|
|||
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|||
|
6
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
EVOLUTION AND SPECIAL CREATION.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
precisely the same plan: during life he is subject to the same
|
|||
|
growth and decay, the same building up and pulling down of tissues;
|
|||
|
and it is but reasonable to suppose that the same forces originated
|
|||
|
his beginning, as we know they will some day terminate his
|
|||
|
existence.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Mr. Darwin made a bold stroke when he gave the world his
|
|||
|
"Descent of Man." In 1859 he had published the first edition of his
|
|||
|
work on "The Origin of Species," which fell like a thunderbolt into
|
|||
|
the religious camp. The commotion it caused was tremendous, and the
|
|||
|
effect can to-day hardly be imagined; so tolerant have we grown of
|
|||
|
late, and such a change has passed over the scene within the past
|
|||
|
quarter of a century. The most violent opposition raged against the
|
|||
|
new views; ridicule, denunciation, and abuse were hurled at the
|
|||
|
head of the man who had propounded so preposterous a theory as that
|
|||
|
all organic things had sprung from a few simple living forms very
|
|||
|
low down in the scale of being. Then came a larger work, entitled
|
|||
|
"Animals and Plants under Domestication," brimful of facts of a
|
|||
|
most startling character, supporting the theory advanced in the
|
|||
|
previous book, and challenging refutation on all hands. In the face
|
|||
|
of these facts, the public mind cooled down a little, opposition
|
|||
|
became milder, some adversaries were converted, and others
|
|||
|
manifested indifference. The major part of those who still adhered
|
|||
|
to the supernatural and special creations held that, even if the
|
|||
|
theory of Evolution turned out to be true, it would not apply to
|
|||
|
man, who was a being possessed of an immortal soul, and, therefore,
|
|||
|
belonged to a different order of creatures from any other animals,
|
|||
|
and that Mr. Darwin never intended to include human beings in the
|
|||
|
organic structures thus originated.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
ln this state the controversy remained until 1872, when Mr.
|
|||
|
Darwin took the bull by the horns, and at one stroke swept away the
|
|||
|
last stronghold of special creation by showing that humanity was no
|
|||
|
exception to the great law of evolution; for man, like other
|
|||
|
animals, had originated in natural selection. The facts given in
|
|||
|
the book on "The Descent of Man" are both powerful and pertinent.
|
|||
|
This, however, is not the place to dwell upon natural selection,
|
|||
|
and it is only referred to so far as it supports evolution. The
|
|||
|
difficulties that have been placed in the way of the application of
|
|||
|
this principle to man have not had much reference to his bodily
|
|||
|
organs, but mainly to his mental and moral powers, his social
|
|||
|
faculties, and the emotional side of his nature. True, a
|
|||
|
controversy raged for a short time between Huxley and Owen as to
|
|||
|
whether there was a special structure in the human brain not to be
|
|||
|
found in the next animals lower in the scale of being; But this
|
|||
|
contention has long since died out, and to-day no anatomist of any
|
|||
|
note will be found contending for the existence of any such organ.
|
|||
|
That the human brain differs considerably from the brain of any
|
|||
|
lower animal no one who is at all acquainted with the subject will
|
|||
|
deny; but this is difference in degree, and not arising from the
|
|||
|
presence of any special structure in the one which is absent in the
|
|||
|
other. Man, therefore, must look for his origin just where he seeks
|
|||
|
for that of the inferior creatures.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The science of embryology, which is now much more carefully
|
|||
|
studied, and, consequently, much better known than at any period in
|
|||
|
the past, lends very powerful support to evolution, though,
|
|||
|
perhaps, little to natural selection. "The primordial germs," says
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Bank of Wisdom
|
|||
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|||
|
7
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
EVOLUTION AND SPECIAL CREATION.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Huxley, "of a man, a dog, a bird, a fish, a beetle, a snail, and a
|
|||
|
polyp are in no essential structural respects distinguishable"
|
|||
|
("Lay Sermons"). Each organism, in fact, commences its individual
|
|||
|
career at the same point -- that is, in a single cell. These cells
|
|||
|
are of the same chemical composition, approximately of the same
|
|||
|
size, and appear to be in all respects identical. Yet the one
|
|||
|
develops into a fish, another into a reptile, a third into a bird,
|
|||
|
a fourth into a dog, and a fifth into a man. The process is the
|
|||
|
same in all up to a certain point. First, the cell divides into
|
|||
|
two, then into four, eight, sixteen, and so on, until a particular
|
|||
|
condition is reached, called by Haeckel morula, when a totally
|
|||
|
different set of changes occur. In the case of the higher animals
|
|||
|
the development of the embryo exhibits, up to a very late period,
|
|||
|
a remarkable resemblance to that of man.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The Diversity of Living Things. -- A mere glance at the
|
|||
|
geological records will show at once that the order in which
|
|||
|
animals and plants have appeared on the earth is that which accords
|
|||
|
with evolution. The lowest came first, the highest last, and a
|
|||
|
regular gradation between the two extremes,. In the early rocks in
|
|||
|
which life appears we meet with polyps, coral, sea-worms, etc., and
|
|||
|
no trace of land animals or plants. Then, passing upwards, we come
|
|||
|
upon fishes, then reptiles, afterwards birds, subsequently mammals,
|
|||
|
and, last of all, man. These are undisputed facts, as the most
|
|||
|
elementary works on geology, whether written by a professing
|
|||
|
Christian or an unbeliever, will clearly show.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The only objection, perhaps, of any weight that can be urged
|
|||
|
against the changes which evolution asserts to have taken place, is
|
|||
|
the fact that we do not see them occur. But this, in the first
|
|||
|
place, is hardly correct, since we see the tadpole -- which is a
|
|||
|
fish breathing through gills, and living in the water -- pass up
|
|||
|
into a reptile, the frog, which is a land animal breathing through
|
|||
|
lungs, and inhaling its oxygen from the atmosphere. Secondly, the
|
|||
|
fact that we do not see a change actually occur, which took
|
|||
|
millions of years to become effected, can surely amount to little.
|
|||
|
An ephemeral insect, whose life only lasts for a day, might object,
|
|||
|
if able to reason, that an acorn could not grow into an oak tree,
|
|||
|
because it had not seen it occur. But the evidence would be there
|
|||
|
still in the numerous gradations that might be seen between the
|
|||
|
acorn and the sturdy old tree that had weathered the storms of a
|
|||
|
century. And in this case we see all the gradations between a monad
|
|||
|
and a man in the rocks which furnish us with the history of the
|
|||
|
past, although, as our lives are so short, we are not able to see
|
|||
|
the whole change effected. Plants were not all suddenly called into
|
|||
|
existence at one particular period, and then animals at another and
|
|||
|
later time. This we know, because the remains of plants and animals
|
|||
|
are found side by side throughout all the rocks. If there be an
|
|||
|
exception, it is an unfortunate one for the Christian
|
|||
|
supernaturalist, since it shows that animals were first; for
|
|||
|
certain it is that animal remains are met with in the oldest rocks.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The objection to evolution, that no transformation of one
|
|||
|
species into another has been seen within recorded history, is
|
|||
|
entirely groundless, and betrays utter carelessness on the part of
|
|||
|
the objectors. The truth is, such transformations have taken place,
|
|||
|
as mentioned above in reference to the tadpole. Professor Huxley
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Bank of Wisdom
|
|||
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|||
|
8
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
EVOLUTION AND SPECIAL CREATION.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
and other scientists have proved this to be the case. It should,
|
|||
|
however, be remembered that in most instances these great changes
|
|||
|
are the work of time. As Dr. David Page observes: "It is true that,
|
|||
|
to whatever process we ascribe the introduction of new species, its
|
|||
|
operation is so slow and gradual that centuries may pass away
|
|||
|
before its results become discernible. But, no matter how slow,
|
|||
|
time is without limit; and, if we can trace a process of variation
|
|||
|
at work, it is sure to widen in the long run into what are regarded
|
|||
|
as specific distinctions. It is no invalidation of this argument
|
|||
|
that science cannot point to the introduction of any new species
|
|||
|
within the historic era; for till within a century or so science
|
|||
|
took no notice of either the introduction or extinction of species,
|
|||
|
nor was it sufficiently acquainted with the flora and fauna of the
|
|||
|
globe to determine the amount of variation that was taking place
|
|||
|
among their respective families. Indeed, influenced by the belief
|
|||
|
that the life of the globe was the result of one creative act, men
|
|||
|
were unwilling to look at the long past which the infant science of
|
|||
|
paleontology was beginning to reveal, and never deigned to doubt
|
|||
|
that the future would be otherwise than the present. Even still
|
|||
|
there are certain minds who ignore all that geology has taught
|
|||
|
concerning the extinction of old races and the introduction of
|
|||
|
newer ones, and who, shutting their eyes to the continuity of
|
|||
|
nature, cannot perceive that the same course of extinction and
|
|||
|
creation must ever be in progress" ("Man: Where, Whence, and
|
|||
|
Whither?").
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Let us now apply a test to the creative theory with a similar
|
|||
|
demand, and what will be the result? An utter failure on the part
|
|||
|
of the creationists to substantiate their dogmatic pretensions.
|
|||
|
Suppose we exclaimed, "Show us a single creative act of one species
|
|||
|
within recorded history." It would be impossible for them to do so,
|
|||
|
for there is not a shadow of evidence drawn from human experience
|
|||
|
in favor of what theologians call creation. "We perceive a certain
|
|||
|
order and certain method in nature; we see that under new
|
|||
|
conditions certain variations do take place in vegetable and animal
|
|||
|
structures, and by an irresistible law of our intellect we
|
|||
|
associate the variations with the conditions in the way of cause
|
|||
|
and effect. Of such a method we can form some notion, and bring it
|
|||
|
within the realm of reason; of any other plan, however it may be
|
|||
|
received, we can form no rational conception."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"The whole analogy of natural operations," says Professor
|
|||
|
Huxley, "furnishes so complete and crushing an argument against the
|
|||
|
intervention of any but what are called secondary causes in the
|
|||
|
production of all the phenomena of the universe that, in view of
|
|||
|
the intimate relations between man and the rest of the living
|
|||
|
world, and between the forces exerted by the latter and all other
|
|||
|
forces, I can see no excuse for doubting that all are coordinated
|
|||
|
terms of nature's great progression, from the formless to the
|
|||
|
formed, from the inorganic to the organic, from blind force to
|
|||
|
conscious intellect and will." The most that can be said of the
|
|||
|
creative theory is that it is a question of belief; but of
|
|||
|
knowledge never.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Dr. Page observes: "We may believe in a direct act of
|
|||
|
creation; but we cannot make it a subject of research. Faith may
|
|||
|
accept, but reason cannot grasp it. On the other hand, a process of
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Bank of Wisdom
|
|||
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|||
|
9
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
EVOLUTION AND SPECIAL CREATION.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
derivation by descent is a thing we can trace as of a kind with
|
|||
|
other processes; and, though unable to explain, we can follow it as
|
|||
|
an indication, at least, of the method which Nature has adopted in
|
|||
|
conformity with her ordinary and normal course of procedure. We can
|
|||
|
admit possibilities, but must reason from probabilities, and the
|
|||
|
probable can only be judged of from what is already known. Than
|
|||
|
this there is clearly no other course for philosophy. Everywhere in
|
|||
|
nature it sees nothing but processes, means, and results, causes
|
|||
|
and effects, and it cannot conceive, even if it wished, of anything
|
|||
|
being brought about unless through the instrumentality of means and
|
|||
|
processes."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
To me it has always been a difficulty to understand how an
|
|||
|
infinite being could possibly have been the creator of all things.
|
|||
|
For this reason: if he is infinite, he is everywhere if everywhere,
|
|||
|
he is in the universe; if in the universe now, he was always there.
|
|||
|
If he were always in the universe, there never was a time when the
|
|||
|
universe was not; therefore, it could never have been created.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
If it be said that this being was not always in the universe,
|
|||
|
then there must have been a period when he occupied less space than
|
|||
|
he did subsequently. But "lesser" and "greater" cannot be applied
|
|||
|
to that which is eternally infinite. Further before we can
|
|||
|
recognize the soundness of the position taken by the advocates of
|
|||
|
special creation, we have to think of a time when there was no time
|
|||
|
-- of a place where there was no place. Is this possible? If it
|
|||
|
were, it would be interesting to learn where an infinite God was at
|
|||
|
that particular period, and how, in "no time," he could perform his
|
|||
|
creative act. Besides, if a being really exists who created all
|
|||
|
things, the obvious question at once is, "Where was this being
|
|||
|
before anything else existed?" "Was there a time when God over all
|
|||
|
was God over nothing? Can we believe that a God over nothing began
|
|||
|
to be out of nothing, and to create all things when there was
|
|||
|
nothing?" Moreover, if the universe was created, from what did it
|
|||
|
emanate? From nothing? But "from nothing, nothing can come." Was it
|
|||
|
created from something that already was? If so, it was no creation
|
|||
|
at all, but only a continuation of that which was in existence.
|
|||
|
Further, "creation needs action; to act is to use force; to use
|
|||
|
force implies the existence of something upon which that force can
|
|||
|
be used. But if that 'something' were there before creation, the
|
|||
|
act of creating was simply the reforming of preexisting materials."
|
|||
|
Here three questions may be put to the opponents of evolution who
|
|||
|
affirm the idea of special creation: -- (1) Is it logical to affirm
|
|||
|
the existence of that of which nothing is known, either of itself
|
|||
|
or by analogy? Now, it cannot be alleged that anything is known of
|
|||
|
the supposed supernatural power of creation. On the other hand,
|
|||
|
sufficient is known of the facts of evolution to prevent the
|
|||
|
careful student of Nature from attempting to rob her of that force
|
|||
|
and life-giving principle which undoubtedly belongs to her. (2) Is
|
|||
|
it logical to ascribe events to causes the existence of which is
|
|||
|
unknown, and more particularly when such events can be reasonably
|
|||
|
explained upon natural principles with the aid of the science of
|
|||
|
probabilities"? Dr. Page forcibly remarks "Man has his natural
|
|||
|
history relations -- of that there can be no gainsaying -- and we
|
|||
|
merely seek to apply to the determination of these the same methods
|
|||
|
of research which by common consent are applied to the
|
|||
|
determination of the relations of other creatures ... Scientific
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Bank of Wisdom
|
|||
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|||
|
10
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
EVOLUTION AND SPECIAL CREATION.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
research must abide by scientific methods; scientific convictions
|
|||
|
must rest on scientific investigations." To assert that life is
|
|||
|
associated with something that is immaterial and immortal, and that
|
|||
|
this force could only have been brought into existence by a special
|
|||
|
act of "the one great creator," is to prostrate reason and
|
|||
|
experience before the assumptions of an over-satisfied theology. To
|
|||
|
once more use the words of Dr. Page: "Science knows nothing of life
|
|||
|
save through its manifestations. With the growth of physical
|
|||
|
organization it comes; with the decay of organization it
|
|||
|
disappears. While life endures, mind is its accompaniment; when
|
|||
|
life ceases, mental activity comes to a close. Thus far we can
|
|||
|
trace; beyond this science is utterly helpless. No observation from
|
|||
|
the external world; no analogy, however plausible; no analysis,
|
|||
|
however minute, can solve the problem of an immaterial and immortal
|
|||
|
existence." (3) Is it logical to urge the theory of special
|
|||
|
creation when science proclaims the stability of natural law, and
|
|||
|
its sufficiency for the production of all phenomena? Professor
|
|||
|
Tyndall, in his lecture on "Sound," remarks that, if there is one
|
|||
|
thing that science has demonstrated more clearly than another, it
|
|||
|
is the stability of the operations of the laws of nature. We feel
|
|||
|
assured from experience that this is so, and we act upon such
|
|||
|
assurance in our daily life. The same eminent scientist, in his
|
|||
|
Belfast address, says: "Now, as science demands the radical
|
|||
|
extirpation of caprice, and the absolute reliance upon law in
|
|||
|
nature, there grew with the growth of scientific notions a desire
|
|||
|
and determination to sweep from the field of theory this mob of
|
|||
|
gods and demons, and to place natural phenomena on a basis more
|
|||
|
congruent with themselves." Again: "Is there not a temptation to
|
|||
|
close to some extent with Lucretius when he affirms that 'Nature is
|
|||
|
seen to do all things spontaneously of herself without the meddling
|
|||
|
of the gods,' or with Bruno when he declares that Matter is not
|
|||
|
'that mere empty capacity which philosophers have pictured her to
|
|||
|
be, but the universal mother who brings forth all things as the
|
|||
|
fruit of her own womb ... By an intellectual necessity I cross the
|
|||
|
boundary of the experimental evidence, and discern in that matter
|
|||
|
which we, in our ignorance of its latent powers, and
|
|||
|
notwithstanding our professed reverence for its creator, have
|
|||
|
hitherto covered with opprobrium, the promise and potency of all
|
|||
|
terrestrial life."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Psychical Powers. -- This is the great stronghold of the
|
|||
|
opponents of evolution. They maintain that, whatever may have taken
|
|||
|
place with regard to physical powers and bodily organs, it is clear
|
|||
|
that the higher intellectual faculties of man could not so have
|
|||
|
originated; that those, at least, must be the result of a special
|
|||
|
creation, and must have been called into existence by some
|
|||
|
supernatural power when human beings first appeared upon the stage
|
|||
|
of life. Such persons further urge that, even if it could be shown
|
|||
|
beyond doubt that the marvelously constructed body of man, with its
|
|||
|
beautifully adjusted parts of bone and muscle, nerve and brain,
|
|||
|
skin and mucous membrane, had its origin in evolution, yet no light
|
|||
|
whatever would be thrown upon the source of the wondrous powers of
|
|||
|
judgment and memory, understanding and will, perception and
|
|||
|
conception. This argument, no doubt, to some at first appears
|
|||
|
specious; but the question is, Is it sound? The assumption seems to
|
|||
|
be that we meet with these powers now for the first time, and that,
|
|||
|
therefore, it is here that a special creation must be called in to
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Bank of Wisdom
|
|||
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|||
|
11
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
EVOLUTION AND SPECIAL CREATION.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
account for their origin, their character being so different from
|
|||
|
anything that has previously crossed our path in this
|
|||
|
investigation, But assuredly this is not correct. Some of these
|
|||
|
powers are certainly to be met with in the lower animals -- a few
|
|||
|
of them low down in the scale -- and for the rest the difference
|
|||
|
will be one of degree more than of quality.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
It will not surely be maintained that perception is peculiar
|
|||
|
to man it must exist wherever there are organs of sense, and these
|
|||
|
extend in some form or other to the lowest phase of animal life.
|
|||
|
Volition is also met with in all the higher animals; and memory may
|
|||
|
be observed in the dog, horse, elephant, cat, camel, and numerous
|
|||
|
other mammals, with whose habits every-day life makes us familiar.
|
|||
|
Even judgment in the form of comparison is often displayed by the
|
|||
|
domestic animals, the dog in particular. Dr. H. Bischoff, in his
|
|||
|
"Essay on the Difference between Man and Brutes," says, "It is
|
|||
|
impossible to deny the animals, qualitatively and quantitatively,
|
|||
|
as many mental faculties a as we find in man. They possess
|
|||
|
consciousness. They feel, think, and judge; they possess a will
|
|||
|
which determines their actions and motions. Animals possess
|
|||
|
attachment; they are grateful, obedient, good-natured and, again,
|
|||
|
false treacherous, disobedient, revengeful, jealous, etc. Their
|
|||
|
actions frequently evince deliberation and memory. It is in vain to
|
|||
|
derive such actions from so-called instinct, which unconsciously
|
|||
|
compels them so to act." Max Maller also, in his "Science of
|
|||
|
Language," admits that brutes have five senses like ourselves; that
|
|||
|
they have sensations of pain and pleasure; that they have memory;
|
|||
|
that they are able to compare and distinguish; have a will of their
|
|||
|
own, show signs of shame and pride, and are guided by intellect as
|
|||
|
well as by instinct.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
With such facts as these before us, what reason have we for
|
|||
|
supposing that these psychical powers are not as likely to have
|
|||
|
been evolved as the bodily organs? There is no break whatever to be
|
|||
|
seen in the chain at the point of their appearance in man. If the
|
|||
|
mental powers of the lower animals have come by evolution, there is
|
|||
|
not a shadow of reason for supposing that those of man arose in any
|
|||
|
other way, for they are all of the same quality, differing only in
|
|||
|
degree. No doubt, as Mr. Darwin says, "the difference between the
|
|||
|
mind of man and that of the highest ape is immense." And yet, as he
|
|||
|
also remarks, "great as it is, it is certainly one of degree, and
|
|||
|
not of kind." The highest powers of which man can boast -- memory,
|
|||
|
judgment, love, attention, curiosity, imitation, emotion -- may all
|
|||
|
be met with in an incipient form in lower animals. Let any man
|
|||
|
analyze his mental faculties one by one -- not look at them in a
|
|||
|
state of combination, for that will be calculated to mislead -- and
|
|||
|
then say which of them is peculiar to man as man, and not to be
|
|||
|
found in a smaller degree much lower in the scale of being. Even
|
|||
|
the capacity for improvement -- in other words, for progress -- is
|
|||
|
not peculiar to man, as Mr. Darwin has shown by innumerable
|
|||
|
examples of great force and beauty.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The emotions have often been spoken of as being peculiar to
|
|||
|
man, but evidently with no regard to accuracy. Terror exists in all
|
|||
|
the highest of the lower animals as surely as it does in man, and
|
|||
|
shows itself in the same way. it causes the heart to palpitate, a
|
|||
|
tremor to pass along the muscles, and even the hair to undergo that
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Bank of Wisdom
|
|||
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|||
|
12
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
EVOLUTION AND SPECIAL CREATION.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
change which is called "standing on end," in the horse, the dog,
|
|||
|
and other animals, as in the human species. "Courage and timidity,"
|
|||
|
observes Darwin, "are extremely variable qualities in the
|
|||
|
individuals of the same species, as is plainly seen in our dogs.
|
|||
|
Some dogs and horses are ill-tempered and easily turn sulky; others
|
|||
|
are good-tempered; and these qualities are certainly inherited.
|
|||
|
Everyone knows how liable animals are to furious rage, and how
|
|||
|
plainly they show it." The love of the dog for his master is
|
|||
|
proverbial; indeed, this noble animal has been known to lick the
|
|||
|
hand of the vivisector while undergoing at his hands (he severest
|
|||
|
torture. And revenge is often manifested by the lowest animals --
|
|||
|
not simply the sudden impulse which revenges itself at the moment
|
|||
|
for pain inflicted but long, or wrongs done, but long brooding
|
|||
|
feeling, which may smoulder for months, waiting for the opportunity
|
|||
|
for manifesting itself, and, when that comes, bursting out into a
|
|||
|
flame violent and hateful. There are thousands of cases on record
|
|||
|
in which this has happened, especially in the case of monkeys which
|
|||
|
have been kept tame. And, perhaps, the personal experience of most
|
|||
|
persons can furnish an example of the truth of this allegation.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The social instincts are plainly seen in many of the lower animals;
|
|||
|
not, of course, in that perfect form in which they are met with in
|
|||
|
man; but the difference here again is one of degree only. Many
|
|||
|
animals experience pleasure in the company of their fellows, and
|
|||
|
are unhappy at a Separation being effected. They will show sympathy
|
|||
|
one for another, and even perform services for each other's
|
|||
|
benefit. Some animals lie together in large numbers, and never
|
|||
|
separate except for a very short time, and then only for a purpose
|
|||
|
which they clearly understand. This is the case with sheep, rats,
|
|||
|
American monkeys, and also with rooks, jackdaws, and starlings.
|
|||
|
Darwin observes: "Everyone must have noticed how miserable horses,
|
|||
|
dogs, sheep, etc., are when separated from their companions, and
|
|||
|
what affection the two former kind will show on their re-union. It
|
|||
|
is curious to speculate upon the feelings of a dog who will rest
|
|||
|
peacefully for hours in a room with his master or any of the family
|
|||
|
without the least notice being taken of him, but who, if left for
|
|||
|
a short time by himself, barks and howls dismally." Here we find
|
|||
|
the origin of the social faculty in man. It is very easy to imagine
|
|||
|
the course of development which this must have taken in order to
|
|||
|
have culminated in the highest form as we see it in the human
|
|||
|
species. The psychical powers appear first in an incipient form,
|
|||
|
and then gradually develop through a long course of ages, until
|
|||
|
they attain their height in humanity. Other influences, such as the
|
|||
|
power of language, further the development, these powers themselves
|
|||
|
being the result of the process of evolution. The question how far
|
|||
|
language is confined to man is one of great interest to the student
|
|||
|
of evolution. In replying to the inquiry, "What is the difference
|
|||
|
between the brute and man?" Max Maller says: "Man speaks, and no
|
|||
|
brute has ever uttered a word. Language is our Rubicon, and no
|
|||
|
brute has ever crossed it." Referring to this statement, Dr. Page
|
|||
|
remarks: "Are not these powers of abstraction and language a matter
|
|||
|
of degree rather than of kind? Do not the actions of many of the
|
|||
|
lower animals sufficiently indicate that they reason from the
|
|||
|
particular to the general? And have they not the power of
|
|||
|
communicating their thoughts to one another by vocal sounds which
|
|||
|
cannot be otherwise regarded than as language? No one who has
|
|||
|
sufficiently studied the conduct of our domestic animals but must
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Bank of Wisdom
|
|||
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|||
|
13
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
EVOLUTION AND SPECIAL CREATION.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
be convinced of this power of generalization; no one who has
|
|||
|
listened attentively to the various calls of mammals and birds can
|
|||
|
doubt they have the power of expressing their mental emotions in
|
|||
|
language. Their powers of abstraction may be limited, and the range
|
|||
|
of their language restricted; but what shall we say of the mental
|
|||
|
capacity of the now extinct Tasmanian, which could not carry him
|
|||
|
beyond individual conceptions, or of the monosyllabic click-cluck
|
|||
|
of the Bushman, as compared with the intellectual grasp and the
|
|||
|
inflectional languages of modern Europe? If it shall be said that
|
|||
|
these are matters merely of degree, then are the mental processes
|
|||
|
and languages of the lower animals, as compared with those of man,
|
|||
|
also matters of degree -- things that manifest themselves in the
|
|||
|
same way and by the same organs, but differing in power according
|
|||
|
to the perfection of the organs through which they are manifested."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The Doctor's view of this matter receives a striking
|
|||
|
corroboration from the following excerpt from the introduction to
|
|||
|
Agassiz's "Contributions to the Natural History of the United
|
|||
|
States": "The intelligibility of the voice of animals to one
|
|||
|
another, and all their actions connected with such calls, are also
|
|||
|
a strong argument of their perceptive power, and of their ability
|
|||
|
to act spontaneously and with logical sequence in accordance with
|
|||
|
these perceptions. There is a vast field open for investigation in
|
|||
|
the relations between the voice and the actions of animals, and a
|
|||
|
still more interesting subject of inquiry in the relationship
|
|||
|
between the cycle of intonations which different species of animals
|
|||
|
of the same family are capable of uttering, and which, so far as I
|
|||
|
have yet been able to trace them, stand to one another in the same
|
|||
|
relations as the different, so-called , families of languages."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The moral powers of man have been evolved in a manner similar
|
|||
|
to that in which the other forces belonging to the human race were
|
|||
|
evolved. All that we see in the evolution of human conduct is the
|
|||
|
result of the great and potent law of evolution. "it is said,"
|
|||
|
writes M.J. Savage in his suggestive book, "The Morals of
|
|||
|
Evolution," "that there can be no permanent and eternal law of
|
|||
|
morality unless we believe in a God and a future life. But I
|
|||
|
believe that this moral law stands by virtue of its own right, and
|
|||
|
would stand just the same without any regard to the question of
|
|||
|
immortality or the discussion between Theism and Atheism. If there
|
|||
|
be no God at all, am I not living? Are there not laws according to
|
|||
|
which my body is constructed -- laws of health, laws of life, laws
|
|||
|
that I must keep in order to live and in order to be well? If there
|
|||
|
be no God at all, are you not existing? Have I right to steal your
|
|||
|
property, to injure you, to render you unhappy, because, forsooth,
|
|||
|
I choose to doubt whether there is a God, or because you choose to
|
|||
|
doubt whether there is a God? Are not the laws of society existing
|
|||
|
in themselves, and by their own nature? Suppose all the world
|
|||
|
should suddenly lose its regard for truth and become false through
|
|||
|
and through, so that no man could depend upon his brother, would
|
|||
|
not society become disintegrated, disorganized? Would not all
|
|||
|
commercial and social life suddenly become impossible? Would not
|
|||
|
humanity become a chaos and a wreck, and that without any sort of
|
|||
|
regard to the question as to whether men believed in a God or did
|
|||
|
not believe in one? These laws are essential in the nature of
|
|||
|
things; and they stand, and you live by keeping them, and die by
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Bank of Wisdom
|
|||
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|||
|
14
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
EVOLUTION AND SPECIAL CREATION.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
breaking them, whether there is a God or not." These are the
|
|||
|
accurate and ennobling views of existence born of minds which
|
|||
|
evolution has raised from the ignorant depths of the past to the
|
|||
|
intellectual heights of the present.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
On all sides the candid and impartial observer may behold
|
|||
|
undoubted evidence in favor of the doctrine of evolution. We see it
|
|||
|
in the various changes of the solar system, There are (1) fire
|
|||
|
mists; (2) globes of gas; (3) condensed oceans; (4) crust
|
|||
|
formation; (5) mountains and rivers, and (6) its present phenomena.
|
|||
|
What is this but evolution? Is it not a manifestation of changes
|
|||
|
from the lower to the higher, from the simple to the complex, and
|
|||
|
from the chaotic to the consolidated? The same principle is
|
|||
|
illustrated, as before indicated, by the science of embryology,
|
|||
|
with its clearly-marked stages of development -- the fish, reptile,
|
|||
|
bird, quadruped, and, finally, the human form. The relationship of
|
|||
|
the species gives its proof in favor of the evolution theory. The
|
|||
|
different types of to-day had their one starting point, the
|
|||
|
variations now seen having been produced by altered conditions.
|
|||
|
Moreover, we find that in the process of evolution some organs in
|
|||
|
animals become useless, while others change their use, thus proving
|
|||
|
that the animal kingdom possess structural affinities, and that the
|
|||
|
subsequent differentiation depends upon the opportunity afforded
|
|||
|
for evolution. Then, again, man's ability to divert animal
|
|||
|
instincts and intelligence from their original sphere, as shown in
|
|||
|
the training of certain of the lower animals; of improving the eye
|
|||
|
as an optical instrument; of rendering less antagonistic the
|
|||
|
natures and instincts we discover in different species constantly
|
|||
|
at war with each other, all point to one process -- that of
|
|||
|
evolution.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
There is the old sentimental objection to this theory, that it
|
|||
|
is humiliating to think that we have evolved from forms lower down
|
|||
|
in the scale of animal life. But, as Dr. Page points out, there is
|
|||
|
nothing in this view necessarily degrading "If, in virtue of some
|
|||
|
yet unexplained process, man has derived his descent from any of
|
|||
|
the lower orders, he is clearly not of them -- his higher
|
|||
|
structural adaptations and improvable reason defining at once the
|
|||
|
specialty of his place, and the responsibility of his functions. It
|
|||
|
can be no degradation to have descended from some antecedent form
|
|||
|
of life, any more than it can be an exaltation to have been
|
|||
|
fashioned directly from the dust of the earth. There can be nothing
|
|||
|
degrading or disgusting in the connection which nature has
|
|||
|
obviously established between all that lives, and those who employ
|
|||
|
such phrases must have but a poor and by no means very reverent
|
|||
|
conception of the scheme of creation. The truth is, there is
|
|||
|
nothing degrading in nature save that which, forgetful of its own
|
|||
|
functions, debases and degrades itself. The jibing and jeering at
|
|||
|
the idea of an 'ape-ancestry,' so often resorted to by the
|
|||
|
ignorant, has in reality no significance to the mind of the
|
|||
|
philosophic naturalist. There is evidently one structural plan
|
|||
|
running throughout the whole of vitality, after which its myriad
|
|||
|
members have been ascensively developed, just as there is one great
|
|||
|
material plan pervading the planetary system; and science merely
|
|||
|
seeks to unfold that plan, and to determine the principles upon
|
|||
|
which it is constructed. If there be no generic connection between
|
|||
|
man and the order that stands next beneath him, there is at all
|
|||
|
events a marvelous similarity in structural organization, and this
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Bank of Wisdom
|
|||
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|||
|
15
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
EVOLUTION AND SPECIAL CREATION.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
similarity is surely suggestive of something more intimate than
|
|||
|
mere coincidence." Evolution, therefore, although unable to supply
|
|||
|
the solution to every problem presented to the student of nature,
|
|||
|
is, so far as can be discovered at the present day, the truest
|
|||
|
theory of man and the universe, and is sufficient for all practical
|
|||
|
purposes. Further, it satisfies the intellect as no other theory
|
|||
|
does, and is assuredly more reasonable than that of special
|
|||
|
creation.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
One question of great importance will probably suggest itself
|
|||
|
to those who have given the theory of evolution much consideration.
|
|||
|
It is this: What is to be the position of things, and especially of
|
|||
|
man, in the future? Will there be evolved higher beings after him,
|
|||
|
as he is higher than those who preceded him? He stands now as the
|
|||
|
lord of creation; but so stood many mighty reptiles of the past in
|
|||
|
their day and generation. Could they have reasoned, would they not
|
|||
|
have concluded that they were the final end of creation, and that
|
|||
|
all that had gone before was simply to prepare for their entrance
|
|||
|
into the world? In that they would have erred; and it may be asked,
|
|||
|
Shall we not equally err if we hastily decide that no higher being
|
|||
|
than man can ever come on earth -- that he is, and will ever
|
|||
|
remain, the highest of organic existences? Now, the cases are not
|
|||
|
quite analogous, as a little reflection will show. The earlier
|
|||
|
animals were entirely the creatures of evolution; man is largely
|
|||
|
the director of the process. He can, by his intellect, control the
|
|||
|
law itself, just as he bends gravitation to his will, though, in a
|
|||
|
sense, he is as much subject to its power as the earth on which he
|
|||
|
treads. Before man arose, the animals and plants then existing were
|
|||
|
molded by the great power operating upon them from within and
|
|||
|
without; hence the form they took and the functions they performed.
|
|||
|
When they had to contend with an unfortunate environment they
|
|||
|
became modified; or, failing that, they disappeared. Now man, by
|
|||
|
his mental resource, can supply natural deficiencies, and thus not
|
|||
|
defeat evolution, but direct its current into a new channel. He can
|
|||
|
bring his food from a distance, and thus avoid scarcity in the
|
|||
|
country where he dwells; he can successfully contend against
|
|||
|
climate, disease, and a thousand other destructive agencies which
|
|||
|
might otherwise sweep him away. It is, therefore, no longer a
|
|||
|
contest between physical powers, but between physical and mental.
|
|||
|
No higher physical development is likely to occur, because it would
|
|||
|
not meet the case, since, however perfect it might be, it could not
|
|||
|
hold its own in the struggle for existence against man with his
|
|||
|
intellect. The development in the future must be one of mind, not
|
|||
|
of body. We do not, consequently, look forward to the time when
|
|||
|
organized beings, higher and more perfect physically than man,
|
|||
|
shall take his place on the earth; but we do believe that a period
|
|||
|
will arrive when the intellectual powers shall be refined,
|
|||
|
expanded, and exalted beyond anything of which at present we can
|
|||
|
form a conception. The future of man is a topic of all-absorbing
|
|||
|
interest, and it needs no prophetic insight to enable us to form
|
|||
|
some dim and vague idea of what it will be. Mind will grapple with
|
|||
|
the great forces of nature, making them subservient to man's
|
|||
|
comfort and convenience. Virtue shall array herself more resolutely
|
|||
|
than ever against vice, and rid the world of its malignant power.
|
|||
|
Brother shall cease slaying brother at the command of kingly
|
|||
|
despots, and thus the world shall be crowned with the laurels of
|
|||
|
peace. Priestcraft shall lose its power over humanity, and mental
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Bank of Wisdom
|
|||
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|||
|
16
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
EVOLUTION AND SPECIAL CREATION.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
liberty shall have a new birth. The barriers of social caste shall
|
|||
|
be broken down, and the brotherhood of man thereby consolidated.
|
|||
|
Woman shall no longer be a slave, but free in her own right.
|
|||
|
Capital and labor shall cease to be antagonistic, and shall be
|
|||
|
harmoniously employed to enrich the comforts and to augment the
|
|||
|
happiness of the race. Education shall supplant ignorance, and
|
|||
|
justice take the place of oppression. Then the era shall have
|
|||
|
arrived of which the philosopher has written and the poet has sung.
|
|||
|
Freedom shall be the watchword of man, reason shall reign supreme,
|
|||
|
and happiness prevail throughout the earth.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"When from the lips of Truth one mighty breath
|
|||
|
Shall, like a whirlwind, scatter in its breeze
|
|||
|
The whole dark pile of human miseries,
|
|||
|
Then shall the reign of mind commence on earth
|
|||
|
And, starting forth as from a second birth,
|
|||
|
Man, in the sunrise of the world's new spring,
|
|||
|
Shall walk transparent like some holy thing."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
**** ****
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Reproducible Electronic Publishing can defeat censorship.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
**** ****
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The Bank of Wisdom is a collection of the most thoughtful,
|
|||
|
scholarly and factual books. These computer books are reprints of
|
|||
|
suppressed books and will cover American and world history; the
|
|||
|
Biographies and writings of famous persons, and especially of our
|
|||
|
nations Founding Fathers. They will include philosophy and
|
|||
|
religion. all these subjects, and more, will be made available to
|
|||
|
the public in electronic form, easily copied and distributed, so
|
|||
|
that America can again become what its Founders intended --
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The Free Market-Place of Ideas.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The Bank of Wisdom is always looking for more of these old,
|
|||
|
hidden, suppressed and forgotten books that contain needed facts
|
|||
|
and information for today. If you have such books, magazines,
|
|||
|
newspapers, pamphlets, etc. please contact us, we need to give them
|
|||
|
back to America. If you have such books please send us a list that
|
|||
|
includes Title, Author, publication date, condition and price.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
**** ****
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Bank of Wisdom
|
|||
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|||
|
17
|
|||
|
|