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Inception of Darwin's theory

The inception of Darwin's theory occurred during an intensively busy period which began when Charles Darwin returned from the survey voyage of the Beagle, with his reputation as a fossil collector and geologist already established. He was given an allowance from his father to become a gentleman naturalist rather than a clergyman, and his first tasks were to find suitable experts to describe his collections, write out his Journal and Remarks, and present papers on his findings to the Geological Society of London.

At Darwin's geological début, the anatomist Richard Owen's reports on the fossils showed that extinct species were related to current species in the same locality, and the ornithologist John Gould showed that bird specimens from the Galápagos Islands were of distinct species related to places, not just varieties. These points convinced Darwin that transmutation of species must be occurring, and in his Red Notebook he jotted down his first evolutionary ideas. He began specific transmutation notebooks with speculations on variation in offspring "to adapt & alter the race to changing world", and sketched an "irregularly branched" genealogical branching of a single evolutionary tree.

Animal observations of an orangutan at the zoo showed how human its expressions looked, confirming his thoughts from the Beagle voyage that there was little gulf between man and animals. He investigated animal breeding and found parallels to nature removing runts and keeping the fit, with farmers deliberately selecting breeding animals so that through "a thousand intermediate forms" their descendants were significantly changed. His speculations on instincts and mental traits suggested habits, beliefs and facial expressions having evolved, and considered the social implications. While this was his "prime hobby", he was struggling with an immense workload and began suffering from his illness. Having taken a break from work, his thoughts of marriage turned to his cousin Emma Wedgwood.

Reading about Malthus and natural law led him to apply to his search the Malthusian logic of social thinking of struggle for survival with no handouts, and he "had at last got a theory by which to work". He proposed to Emma and was accepted. In his theory, he compared breeders selecting traits to natural selection from variants thrown up by "chance", and continued to look to the countryside for supporting information. On 24 January 1839 he was elected as Fellow of the Royal Society, and on the 29th married Emma. The development of Darwin's theory followed.

Background

Darwin was not the first to propose that species of organisms could become modified over time. In the third edition of On the Origin of Species Darwin provided a historical sketch of his predecessors in writing of descent with modification or natural selection, including those whom he had only learned of after the 1859 publication of The Origin. His account essentially deals with 19th-century authors; "Passing over authors from the classical period to that of Buffon, with whose writings I am not familiar, Lamarck was the first man whose conclusions on this subject excited much attention." However, in a footnote he remarks on how his grandfather, Dr. Erasmus Darwin, Goethe and Geoffroy Saint Hilaire came to the same conclusion on the origin of species in the years 1794–95, anticipating Lamarck.[1]

After his early life in a Unitarian family, Charles Darwin developed his interest in natural history. At Edinburgh University his work as a student of Robert Edmund Grant involved him in pioneering investigations of the ideas of Lamarck and Erasmus Darwin on homology showing common descent, but he also saw how controversial and troubling such theories were. Robert Jameson's course taught Darwin stratigraphic geology, and closed with lectures on the "Origin of the Species of Animals". At Christ's College, Cambridge to qualify as an Anglican clergyman, Darwin became passionate about beetle collecting, then shone in John Stevens Henslow's botany course. He was convinced by Paley's Natural Theology which set out the Teleological argument that complexity of "design" in nature proved God's role as Creator, and by the views of Paley and John Herschel that creation was by laws which science could discover, not by intermittent miracles. The geology course of Adam Sedgwick and summer work mapping strata in Wales emphasised that life on earth went back over eons of time.

Then on his voyage on the Beagle Darwin became convinced by Charles Lyell's uniformitarian theory of gradual geological process, and puzzled over how various theories of creation fitted the evidence he saw. However, Darwin did not conceive the theory of evolution during the Beagle's voyage, later recounting that:

it was equally evident that neither the action of the surrounding conditions, nor the will of the organisms (especially in the case of plants), could account for the innumerable cases in which organisms of every kind are beautifully adapted to their habitats of life—for instance, a woodpecker or a tree-frog to climb trees, or a seed for dispersal by hooks or plumes. I had always been much struck by such adaptations, and until these could be explained it seemed to me almost useless to endeavour to prove by indirect evidence that species have been modified.

Return to England

When Beagle returned, it anchored at Falmouth, Cornwall, on 2 October 1836. That same stormy night, Darwin set off on the mail coach for two days' travel to his family home – The Mount House in Shrewsbury, Shropshire. He arrived late at night on 4 October.[2] and having taken the coach for his last visit,[3] had thought he might sleep at the Lion coaching inn rather disturb them "in the dead of the night".[4] He greeted his family at breakfast in the morning, and began catching up with news of his family and of the country: "all England appears changed". The Reform Bill had brought what the Tory Duke of Wellington described as a shift in power from decent Tory Anglicans to Whig manufacturers, shopkeepers and atheists. Educated people were discussing the writings of Thomas Malthus on population outstripping resources as the New Poor Law, described by opponents as "a Malthusian bill designed to force the poor to emigrate, to work for lower wages, to live on a coarser sort of food", brought the construction of workhouses in the southern counties despite riots and arson. The government had not yet dared introduce these measures to London and the industrial north, and recession was bringing threats of mass unemployment.

Darwin wrote to Henslow that he was still "giddy with joy & confusion... I want your advice on so many points, indeed I am in the clouds" and on 15 October went on to Cambridge to get advice from Henslow and Sedgwick on the task of organising the description and cataloguing of his collections accumulated from the Beagle expedition. Henslow took on the plants, and Darwin was given introductions to the best London naturalists with a warning that they would already be busy with other work.

Charles went on to stay with his brother Erasmus in London, near the scientific institutions which were in the throes of renovation, while the city itself was being torn up to install new sewers and gas lighting. He went round the British Museum, the Royal College of Surgeons, the Linnean, the Zoological Society and Geological Society, trying to get the experts to take on his collections. Henslow had already established his former pupil's reputation during the Beagle expedition by giving selected naturalists access to fossil specimens sent back, as well as reading out Extracts from Letters to Henslow to the Cambridge Philosophical Society, which had them privately printed for distribution, while Darwin's geological notes from the letters were summarised by Sedgwick at the Geological Society, and extracts appeared in magazines. Darwin went "in most exciting dissipation amongst the Dons in science", and as Charles Bunbury reported, "[he] seems to be a universal collector" finding new species "to the surprise of all the big wigs". While geologists were quick to take on the rock samples, zoologists already had more specimens arriving than they could deal with. Their institutions were in turmoil as democrats argued for reforms replacing the aristocratic amateurs with professional salaried scientists as in the French research institutes. At the Zoological Society the reformers were led by Darwin's tutor from Edinburgh days, Robert Edmund Grant. Darwin now had an allowance plus stocks from his father, bringing him around £400 per year, and his sympathies were with the amateur clerical "Dons in science" of Cambridge.

Owen and fossils

The geologist Charles Lyell invited Darwin to dinner on 29 October 1836. Over dinner Lyell listened eagerly to Darwin's stories (which supported Lyell's uniformitarianism) and introduced him to Richard Owen and William Broderip, Tories who had just been involved in voting Grant out of a position at the Zoological Society. Owen was rapidly ousting Grant as the country's leading anatomist. Darwin went to visit him at his Royal College of Surgeons, and Owen agreed to work on some animal specimens in spirits and the fossil bones. Owen shared Darwin's enthusiasm. He was a proponent of German ideas of "organising energy" and vehemently opposed to Grant's evolution. At around this time Grant was one of the few to volunteer his help with cataloguing the collection. Darwin turned down the offer, not wanting to be associated with a disreputable radical who denounced his Cambridge friends.

On 12 November Darwin visited his Wedgwood relatives at Maer Hall, and they encouraged him to publish a book of his travels based on his diary, an idea his sisters picked up when he visited his home.

On 2 December he returned to London and began finding takers for his specimens, with Thomas Bell and the Revd. William Buckland interested in the reptiles. Darwin's reputation was being made by the giant mammal fossils. Owen's first surprising revelation was that a hippopotamus-sized fossil skull 2 feet 4 inches (710 mm) long which Darwin had bought for about two shillings near Mercedes while on a "galloping" trip 120 miles (190 km) from Montevideo was of an extinct rodent-like creature resembling a giant capybara, which Owen named Toxodon. Darwin wrote to his sister Caroline that "[the fossils] are turning out great treasures" and of the Toxodon, "There is another head, as large as a Rhinoceros which as far as they can guess, must have been a gnawing animal. Conceive a Rat or a Hare of such a size – What famous Cats they ought to have had in those days!"[5] The College of Surgeons distributed casts of the fossils to the major scientific institutions.

Darwin paid a visit to his brother Erasmus's lady friend the literary Whig Miss Harriet Martineau who had strong views on egalitarianism and whose writings had popularised the ideas of Thomas Malthus. Around this time, she was writing her Society in America which included discussion of the geological "process of world making" that she had seen on her visit to the Niagara Falls.[6] He sat there for almost an hour. "She was very agreeable and managed to talk on a most wonderful number of subjects, considering the limited time. I was astonished to find how little ugly she is, but as it appears to me, she is overwhelmed with her own projects, her own thoughts and own abilities. Erasmus palliated all this, by maintaining one ought not to look at her as a woman."[7] In her autobiography, she later recalled Charles as being "simple, childlike, painstaking, effective".[8]

Geological début, species related to places

Unhappy with life in a "dirty odious London" he returned to Cambridge on 13 December then wrote his first paper, showing that the Chilean coast and the South American land-mass was rising slowly, and discussed his ideas with Lyell. To Lyell's delight, Darwin went further in balancing the rising continent with sinking mountains forming the basis of coral atolls. Darwin briefly returned to London to read his paper to the Geological Society on 4 January 1837. Despite Darwin's nerves about his début, the talk was so well received that he felt "like a peacock admiring his tail". On the same day, Darwin presented 80 mammal and 450 bird specimens to the Zoological Society. The Mammalia were ably taken on by George R. Waterhouse.

While the birds seemed almost an afterthought the ornithologist John Gould took them on and was quick to notice the significance of specimens from the Galápagos Islands. He startlingly revealed at the next meeting on 10 January that what Darwin had taken to be wrens, blackbirds and slightly differing finches were "a series of ground finches which are so peculiar" as to form "an entirely new group" of 11 species. The story of what we now call "Darwin's finches" was covered by the daily newspapers, though Darwin was in Cambridge and did not get details at this stage. In the minutes of the meeting the number was extended to 12 species.[9]

Owen was finding unexpected relationships from the fossils: the batch included the horse sized Scelidotherium which appeared to be closely allied to the anteater,[5] a gigantic ground sloth, and an ox-sized armoured armadillo which he called Glyptodon. The Patagonian spine and leg bones from Port St Julian which Darwin had thought might be from a Mastodon were apparently from a gigantic guanaco or Llama, or perhaps camel, which Owen named Macrauchenia. Lyell saw a "law of succession" with mammals being replaced by their own kind on each continent, and on 17 February used his presidential address at the Geological Society to present Owen's findings to date on Darwin's fossils, pointing out this inference that extinct species were related to current species in the same locality. He invited Darwin to come along, and the speech drew Darwin's attention to the question of why past and present species in one place should be so closely related. At the same meeting Darwin was elected to the Council of the Society. For Lyell this was "a glorious addition to my society of geologists", gentlemen (and amateurs of independent means) with duty only to scientific integrity, social stability and responsible religion, for Darwin it meant joining the respectable élite of eminent geologists developing a science dealing with the age of the earth and the Days of Creation.

Darwin had already been invited by FitzRoy to contribute his Journal, based on his field notes, as the natural history section of the captain's account of the Beagle's voyage, and this ended up keeping him fully occupied from 13 March to the end of September.[10] He also plunged into writing a book on South American Geology, putting his and Lyell's ideas forward against the cataclysmic explanation of mountain formation Alcide d'Orbigny was promoting in a multi-volume account of the continent begun two years previously.

On Monday 27 February Darwin presented a talk to the Cambridge Philosophical Society on glassy tubes he had found amongst Maldonado sand dunes, explained by lightning having fused the sand.[11]

To supervise his collections Darwin had to return to London, and on Lyell's advice he planned to arrive on Friday 3 March 1837, in time for one of Charles Babbage's Saturday parties, talking shops about the latest developments "brilliantly attended by fashionable ladies, as well as literary and scientific gents" and "a good mixture of pretty women", bankers and politicians, where Babbage promoted such projects as his mechanical computer.[11] At first Darwin stayed with Erasmus, in his journal (written up later) he put his date of moving as 6 March 1837. On the 13th he moved to nearby lodgings, joining Erasmus's circle of friends including Martineau and Hensleigh and enjoying his intimate dinner parties with guests such as Lyell, Babbage and Thomas Carlyle.[12]

In their first meeting to discuss his detailed findings, Gould told Darwin that the Galápagos mockingbirds from different islands were separate species, not just varieties, and the finch group included the "wrens".[13] The two rheas were also distinct species, and on 14 March Gould's announcement of this finding to the Zoological Society of London was accompanied by Darwin, who presented a paper on how distribution of the two species of rheas changed going southwards.[14]

Transmutation

Context

Darwin was concerned to make sure that his theorising, whether published or private, fully complied with the accepted scientific methodology of his peers. In the scientific societies and at informal dinners he discussed methods with two leading authorities on the topic, John Herschel and William Whewell.[15]

Scientific circles were buzzing with ideas of natural theology. In a letter to Lyell, Herschel had written of "that mystery of mysteries, the replacement of extinct species by others". This was circulated and widely discussed, with scientists sharing Herschel's approach of looking for an answer through laws of nature and rejecting ad hoc miracles as an explanation.[16] Charles Babbage expressed in his Ninth Bridgewater Treatise (1837) a view of "Nature's God" along the lines of a programmer of such laws.[17] Darwin's freethinking brother Erasmus was part of this Whig circle and a close friend of the writer Harriet Martineau, who promoted the Malthusianism underlying the controversial Whig Poor Law reforms (1834) to stop welfare from causing overpopulation and more poverty, which were then being implemented piecemeal in the face of opposition to the new poorhouses. As a Unitarian, Martineau welcomed the radical implications of transmutation of species, which was promoted by Grant and some medical men but anathema to Darwin's Anglican friends who saw it as a threat to the social order. Transmutation threatened the essential distinction between man and beast, and implied progressive improvement with the implication that the lower orders could aspire to the privileges of their aristocratic overlords.[18]

The medical establishment controlling the London teaching hospitals, including the Royal College of Surgeons, was restricted to Anglicans and dominated by the aristocracy who saw perfect animal design as proof of a natural theology supporting their ideas of God-given rank and privilege. Since the 1820s large numbers of private medical schools joined by the new London University had introduced the "philosophical anatomy" of Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire based on unity of plan compatible with the transmutation of species, implying ideas of progressive improvement and supporting radical demands for democracy. This anatomy had already spread from Paris to the medical schools of Edinburgh, and the new London schools attracted Scots, including Grant. Numerous journals now promoted these radical ideas, including Thomas Wakley's The Lancet (started in 1823 with support from William Cobbett and William Lawrence, whose 1819 publication of evolutionary ideas the Crown had prosecuted for blasphemy). In response, the medical establishment gave support to the idealist biology of Joseph Henry Green (1791–1863) and of his younger protégé Richard Owen (1804–1892), based on the vitalism of German Naturphilosophie and Platonic idealism, which saw anatomical forms as "archetypes" in the Divine mind, imposed through "descensive" powers of delegation of divine authority in accordance with traditional hierarchies.[19]

Red Notebook

In 1836 Darwin used his Red Notebook to record field observations during the last stages of his Beagle voyage, from May to 25 September. Page 113 mentions a meeting with Richard Owen, after the ship's return to England in October. Later notes mention discussions with other experts, including the geographer Sir Woodbine Parish, geologists Charles Lyell and Roderick Murchison, and the conchologist James De Carle Sowerby. Darwin also took brief notes on what he was reading, reminders on planned publications including his Journal of the voyage, and his developing "theories", "conjectures", and "hypotheses". He continued using the notebook until May or June 1837.[20]

In his later "Journal", Darwin recalled having been "greatly struck from about month of previous March on character of S. American fossils – & species on Galapagos Archipelago. – These facts origin (especially latter) of all my views."[21] His first reference to transmutation appears in the Red Notebook around early March 1837, after John Gould told him that the common Rhea was a different species to the Petisse. Darwin wrote "Speculate on neutral ground of 2 ostriches; bigger one encroaches on smaller. change not progressif<e>: produced at one blow. if one species altered", proposing a sudden change or saltation in contrast to Lamarck's idea that species graded imperceptibly into each other: later, Darwin referred to this jump as inosculation. He drew on the relationship Owen had shown between fossils of the extinct giant Macrauchenia and the modern guanacos that Darwin had hunted in Patagonia: "The same kind of relation that common ostrich bears to [Petisse]: extinct Guanaco to recent: in former case position, in latter time. .... – As in first cases distinct species inosculate, so must we believe ancient ones: not gradual change or degeneration. from circumstances: if one species does change into another it must be per saltum – or species may perish." Here, he related the geographical distribution of species to their replacement over time, and tentatively proposed that the Rheas had a shared ancestor.[22]

He noted his thoughts on reproduction and extinction; "Tempted to believe animals created for a definite time: – not extinguished by change of circumstances", and various domesticated animals had "all run wild & bred. no doubt with perfect success. – showing non-Creation does not bear upon solely adaptation of animals. – extinction in same manner may not depend. – There is no more wonder in extinction of species than of individual."[22]

Darwin's notes mention several papers based on his geological writings during the voyage.[23] At the Geographical Society meeting on 3 May 1837, Darwin read his paper on strata around Río de la Plata where he had found fossils including the Toxodon.[24] At the same meeting, announcements were made of the first discoveries of ancient fossil primates; finds by Proby Cautley and Hugh Falconer in Neogene strata of the Sivalik Hills, and by Édouard Lartet in Miocene beds at Sansan, Gers.[25] Later, Lyell joked uncomfortably to his sister that "according to Lamarck's view, there may have been a great many thousand centuries for their tails to wear off, and the transformation to men to take place", but Darwin was beginning to look at these "wonderful" fossils in relation to transmutation.[26] Darwin's notes mentioned his "Coral Paper" which he had originally drafted in 1835; he presented this on 31 May 1837 at the Geological Society of London, and later used it as the basis for his book on The Structure and Distribution of Coral Reefs.[23]

At their frequent meetings, Owen argued that intrinsic "organising energy" in the "embryonic germ" set the lifespan of the species and precluded transmutation. The botanist Robert Brown showed Darwin a different concept, of "swarming atoms" inside the germ, allowing nature's self-development. Embarrassed by his lack of labels for his finch specimens, he examined FitzRoy's in the British Museum and contacted seamen including Syms Covington for their collections. From this he was able to relate the finches to separate islands, with distinct species on each island. As well as pressing on with his Journal, he started an ambitious project to get the expert reports on his collection published as a multi-volume Zoology of the Voyage of H.M.S. Beagle. A search for sponsorship was answered when Henslow used his contacts with the Chancellor of the Exchequer Thomas Spring Rice to arrange a Treasury grant of £1,000,[27] a sum equivalent to about £97,000 in present-day terms.[28]

During the Beagle voyage Darwin had noted the distribution of the two species of Galápagos iguanas and suspected that "this genus, the species of which are so well adapted to their respective localities, is peculiar to this group of Isds". He had identified the sea iguanas from a book on board as having been named Amblyrhyncus Cristatus by Bell from a specimen which had arrived in Mexico, probably found on the Pacific shore.[29] In June he gave this information to William Buckland.[30] As the Victorian era began, Darwin pressed on with writing his Journal, and in August 1837 began correcting printer's proofs.[31]

Transmutation notebooks

In mid-July 1837, as his Red Notebook filled up, Darwin reorganised his note-taking, and began two new notebooks: his "A" notebook on geology, and his "B" notebook, the first of a series on "transmutation of Species",[21][32] in which he scribbled down a framework for his speculations, jotting down thoughts on evolution. In a phrase he used later, this became "mental rioting".[33]

B notebook

The title page of the "B" notebook was headed Zoönomia, referring to his late grandfather's evolutionary ideas, and began with questions about the reasons for "generation" in which asexual reproduction resulted in copies of the original, while sexual reproduction produced variation in the offspring, and organisms had short lifespans. The world was known to have changed over time, and "the young of living beings, become permanently changed or subject to variety, according to circumstances". This included plants, animals, and humanity: "in course of generations even mind and instinct become influenced. – child of savage not civilized man." Full-grown organisms might be unchangeable, but variability of their offspring would "adapt & alter the race to changing world."[34][35] His ideas predated genetic concepts, and he continued to believe that variations arose through reproduction in a purposeful way responding to changes in the environment.[36] Not all would succeed: "The father being climatized, climatizes the child. Whether every animal produces in course of ages ten thousand varieties (influenced itself perhaps by circumstances) & those alone preserved which are well adapted."[37]

 
In mid-July 1837 Darwin started his "B" notebook on Transmutation of Species, and quickly developed unique ideas of branching descent. On page 36 wrote "I think" above his first evolutionary tree diagram.[38]

In a large population, "intermarriages" (crossing) would even out these variations and explain why species appeared constant, but reproductive isolation of a small sub-group could lead to divergence and geographic speciation: "animals on separate islands ought to become different if kept long enough apart with slightly differing circumstances", as in the various species he had seen of Galápagos tortoises and mockingbirds, the Falkland Fox and the Chiloe fox, the "Inglish and Irish Hare". What Darwin called "inosculation" would abruptly introduce a clear distinction between even the most closely related species, explaining the rheas which remained distinct species with overlapping territories.[39]

Uniquely for his time, he envisaged this diverging adaptation as genealogical branching from a common ancestor, an evolutionary tree: "Organized beings represent a tree irregularly branched some branches far more branched – Hence Genera. – ) As many terminal buds dying as new ones generated". Refining the concept, he proposed a coral of life; "The tree of life should perhaps be called the coral of life, base of branches dead; so that passages cannot be seen".[40] With the words "I think", he sketched a diagram of this branching pattern.[38] This novel view contrasted with the ideas of transmutationists of the time (including Lamarck and Grant), who envisaged independent parallel lineages impelled by inner forces to make progress to higher forms. Darwin protested against these linear ideas of progress; "It is absurd to talk of one animal being higher than another. – We consider those, when the intellectual faculties [or] cerebral structure most developed, as highest. – A bee doubtless would when the instincts were". Later in the notebook, he set down a progressionist concept of human origins: "If all men were dead, then monkeys make men. – Men make angels".[41]

Darwin thought that the possibility of a common ancestor of "mammalia & fish" could not be ruled out when such strange forms as the platypus existed. The unique plants and animals on the Galápagos islands sharing features with mainland American species, while wandering birds such as sandpipers were unchanged, showed the way "creative power acted at Galapagos", confirmed "if we believe the Creator created by any laws, which I think is shown by the very facts of the Zoological character of these islands". A similar relationship in time was shown by the extinct armoured giant Glyptodon resembling the modern South American armadillo. He considered that the way that astronomers once thought that God ordered the movement of individual planets was comparable to individual creation of species in particular countries, but divine powers were "much more simple & sublime" in creating the first animals so that species then arose by "the fixed laws of generation". A hypothesis of "fresh creations" he saw as "mere assumption, it explains nothing further".[42] From Owen, he learnt of John Hunter's observations on "the production of monsters" (mutants) at birth, and he noted that this could "present an analogy to production of species".[43] He jotted down thoughts on how organisms could reach new islands: could "Owls transport mice alive?". Seeds might be blown over, transported by floating trees or eaten by birds which flew to the islands. He noted a reminder to "Experimentise on land shells in salt water & lizards" ditto.[44]

Under pressure with organising Zoology and correcting proofs of his Journal (which had to have the introduction revised when FitzRoy complained that he was "astonished at the total omission of any notice of the officers" for their help), Darwin's health suffered. On 20 September 1837 he suffered "an uncomfortable palpitation of the heart". His doctors advised him "strongly to knock off all work" and to leave for the country. Two days later he went to Maer Hall, the Wedgwoods' home, for a month of recuperation. His relations wore him out with questions about gaucho life. His invalid aunt was being cared for by the as-yet unmarried Emma, and his uncle Jos pointed out an area of ground where cinders had disappeared under loam which Jos though might have been the work of earthworms. Darwin returned to London on 21 October and on 1 November gave a talk on the role of earthworms in soil formation to the Geological Society, a mundane subject which to them may have seemed[original research?] eccentric. William Buckland subsequently recommended Darwin's paper for publication, praising it as "a new & important theory to explain Phenomena of universal occurrence on the surface of the Earth – in fact a new Geological Power", while rightly rejecting Darwin's suggestion that chalkland could have been formed in a similar way.[45]

Darwin had avoided taking on official posts which would take valuable time, turning down William Whewell's request that he become Secretary of the Geological Society with excuses including "anything which flurries me completely knocks me up afterwards and brings on a bad palpitation of the heart",[46][47] but in January 1838 he accepted the post.[48] On 7 March he read to the Society his longest paper yet, which explained the earthquake he had witnessed at Concepción, Chile, in terms of gradual crustal movements, to the delight of Lyell. Despite hours of practice, as he later recalled; "I was so nervous at first, I somehow could see nothing all around me, & felt as if my body was gone, & only my head left".[49]

At the same time, Darwin pondered likely opposition to his ideas. Sure that there must have been "a thousand intermediate forms" between the modern otter and its land-only ancestor, he thought. "Opponent will say. show them me. I will answer yes, if you will show me every step between bull Dog & Greyhound".[50][51] He privately scorned Whewell's faith in a human-centred universe, perfectly adapted to man, and wrote that "My theory would give zest to recent & fossil Comparative Anatomy, it would lead to study of instincts, heredity & mind heredity, whole metaphysics".[52] Contrary to the views of his Cambridge professors that humans were "godlike", around February 1838 Darwin wrote in his B notebook; "Animals whom we have made our slaves we do not like to consider our equals. – Do not slave holders wish to make the black man other kind – animals with affections, imitation, fear of death, pain, sorrow for the dead. – respect." The expectation of finding "the father of mankind" was comparable to finding Macrauchenia, and "if we choose to let conjecture run wild then our animals our fellow brethern in pain, disease, death & suffering, & famine, our slaves in the most laborious works, our companions in our amusements. they may partake from our origin in one common ancestor; we may be all netted together."[53]

C notebook: animal observations

By February 1838 Darwin was on to a new pocketbook, the maroon C notebook, and was investigating the breeding of domestic animals. He found the newspaper wholesaler William Yarrell at the Zoological museum a fund of knowledge, and questioned if breeders weren't going against nature in "picking varieties". He was now writing of "Descent" rather than transmutation, and hinting at ideas of "adaptation" to climate.

At the zoo on 28 March he had his first sight of an ape, and was impressed at the orang-utan's antics "just like a naughty child" when the keeper held back an apple. In his notes he wrote "Let man visit Ourang-outang in domestication, hear expressive whine, see its intelligence.... let him look at savage...naked, artless, not improving yet improvable & let him dare to boast of his proud preeminence." Here Darwin was drawing on his experience of the natives of Tierra del Fuego and daring to think that there was little gulf between man and animals despite the theological doctrine that only humanity possessed a soul.

On 1 April Charles wrote to his older sister Susan that he had also seen the rhinoceros in the zoo let out for the first time that spring, "kicking & rearing" and galloping for joy. He then passed on the gossip that Miss Martineau had been "as frisky lately [as] the Rhinoceros. – Erasmus has been with her noon, morning, and night: – if her character was not as secure, as a mountain in the polar regions she certainly would loose it. – Lyell called there the other day & there was a beautiful rose on the table, & she coolly showed it to him & said "Erasmus Darwin" gave me that. – How fortunate it is, she is so very plain; otherwise I should be frightened: She is a wonderful woman".[54] He began thinking about marriage himself, and on the back of an old letter (dated 7 April 1838) he listed the pros and cons of London, Cambridge or the countryside, noting that "I have so much more pleasure in direct observation, that I could not go on as Lyell does, correcting & adding up new information to old train & I do not see what line can be followed by man tied down to London. – In country, experiment & observations on lower animals. – more space – ".[55] In an 8 May letter to his Cambridge friend Charles Thomas Whitley, who had recently married, Darwin described himself as having "turned a complete scribbler", and said "Of the future I know nothing I never look further ahead than two or three Chapters – for my life is now measured by volume, chapters & sheets & has little to do with the sun – As for a wife, that most interesting specimen in the whole series of vertebrate animals, Providence only know whether I shall ever capture one or be able to feed her if caught."[56]

Darwin found a pamphlet by Yarrell's friend Sir John Sebright, with a passage reading:

A severe winter, or a scarcity of food, by destroying the weak and the unhealthy, has all the good effects of the most skilful selection. In cold or barren countries no animals can live to the age of maturity, but those who have strong constitutions; the weak and the unhealthy do not live to propagate their infirmities.[57]

Sebright said females went to "the most vigorous males", and "the strongest individuals of both sexes, by driving away the weakest, will enjoy the best food, and the most favourable positions, for themselves and their offspring." After reading the pamphlet, Darwin commented "excellent observations of sickly offspring being cut off so that not propagated by nature. – Whole art of making varieties may be inferred from facts stated".[58][59]

Speculations

Darwin's speculations in his notebooks deepened as he wondered how instincts and mental traits were passed on to offspring; "Thought (or desires more properly) being hereditary it is difficult to imagine it anything but structure of brain hereditary, analogy points out to this. – love of the deity effect of organization, oh you materialist!", and reminded himself to read Barclay "on organization!!"[60] He struggled on with the Beagle geology, overworked, worried and suffering stomach upsets and headaches which laid him up for days on end. Privately he thought of the social implications of evolution, writing "Educate all classes. avoid the contamination of castes, improve the women (double influence) & mankind must improve." This was similar to the position of the radical Lamarckians, but female education was already supported by the whole Wedgwood-Darwin family, and strongly advocated by Martineau.[61]

Darwin wrote "Man in his arrogance thinks himself a great work worthy the interposition of a deity, more humble & I believe truer to consider him created from animals."[62] In an early precursor of his work on The Expression of the Emotions in Man and Animals, Darwin turned round the theological idea of Charles Bell that humans were designed to expose their canine teeth when grinning, and explained the expression by shared descent: "no doubt a habit gained by formerly being a baboon with great canine teeth. – Blend this argument with his having canine teeth at all. – This way of viewing the subject important. Laughing modified barking, smiling modified laughing. Barking to tell other animals in associated kinds of good news, discovery of prey, arising no doubt from want of assistance. – crying is a puzzler. – Under this point of view expression of all animals becomes very curious – a dog snarling in play." Darwin had privately talked with his cousin "Hensleigh Wedgwood about the relationship of humans to animals; "Hensleigh says the love of the deity & thought of him or eternity only difference between the mind of man & animals. – yet how faint in a Fuegian or Australian!" Darwin's own experience with "savages" he had met on the Beagle expedition showed that not all humans shared these religious beliefs.[63]

As he worried at these ideas and the Geology his illness intensified, with stomach upsets, headaches and heart troubles, so that he became overworked and laid up for days on end.[64] In May he wrote to his sister Caroline Wedgwood hoping to visit his relatives in July or early August, "but I shall be cruelly hurried – as I have to go to Scotland for Geological work" and also had to be in London every second month for the publication of his Zoology. "I hope I may be able to work on right hard during the next three years, otherwise I shall never have finished, – but I find the noddle & the stomach are antagonist powers, and that it is a great deal more easy to think too much in a day, than to think too little – What thought has to do with digesting roast beef, – I cannot say, but they are brother faculties."[65] Darwin's cousin William Darwin Fox gave helpful answers to his questions about crossing domestic breeds, and in his reply of 15 June, Darwin admitted for the first time that "It is my prime hobby & I really think some day, I shall be able to do something on that most intricate subject species & varieties."[50][66]

At the same time Darwin was gaining public position, and on 21 June 1838 was elected to the establishment Athenæum Club, along with Charles Dickens. From the start of August, Darwin began going there each day to "dine at the Athenæum like a gentleman, or rather like a Lord, for I am sure the first evening I sat in that great drawing room, all on a sofa by myself, I felt just like a duke. – I am full of admiration at the Athenæum; one meets so many people there, that one likes to see. ... I enjoy it the more, because I fully expected to detest it."[67][68]

Thoughts of marriage

The Hensleigh Wedgwoods were now living next door to Erasmus. In early June 1838 they were visited for a week by Catherine Darwin and Emma Wedgwood, returning from a family get-together in Paris. As Emma told her aunt a few weeks later, "Charles used to come from next door, so we were a very pleasant, merry party."

Illness prompted Darwin to take a break from the pressure of work: on 15 June he told his cousin William Darwin Fox; "I have not been very well of late, which has suddenly determined me to leave London earlier than I had anticipated. I go by the steam-packet to Edinburgh. – take a solitary walk on Salisbury crags & call up old thoughts of former times then go on to Glasgow & the great valley of Inverness, – near which I intend stopping a week to geologise the parallel roads of Glen Roy, – thence to Shrewsbury, Maer for one day, & London for smoke, ill health & hard work."[66] On 23 June 1838 he took the steamboat to Edinburgh to go "geologising" in Scotland. After revisiting Edinburgh on 28 June (the day that Queen Victoria had her coronation in London) he went on to Fort William. At Glen Roy in glorious weather he was convinced that he had solved the riddle of the "parallel roads" around the glen, which he identified as raised beaches, though later geologists would support the ideas of Louis Agassiz that these had been formed by glaciation.

Fully recuperated and optimistic, he returned home to The Mount, Shrewsbury. He discussed his ideas with his father and asked for advice about Emma. Speaking from experience, Doctor Robert Waring Darwin told his son to conceal religious doubts which could cause "extreme misery... Things went on pretty well until the husband or wife became out of health, and then some women suffered miserably by doubting about the salvation of their husbands, thus making them likewise to suffer." Charles drew up a list with two columns on a scrap of paper.[69] Under Marry he listed benefits, "Children–if it please God–Constant companion & friend in old age will feel interested in one,–object to be beloved and played with, better than a dog anyhow", while under Not Marry he put "Freedom to go where one liked ... Not forced to visit relatives ... to have the expense and anxiety of children ... fatness & idleness ... if many children forced to earn one's bread ...". He jotted down further thoughts, then concluded "My God, it is intolerable to think of spending ones whole life, like a neuter bee, working, working, & nothing after all. – No, no won't do. – Imagine living all one's day solitarily in smoky dirty London House. – Only picture to yourself a nice soft wife on a sofa with good fire, & books & music perhaps – Compare this vision with the dingy reality of Grt. Marlbro' St.    Marry–Marry–Marry Q.E.D."[70]

Then he spent his fortnight being "Very idle at Shrewsbury" which meant starting his "D" notebook on the transmutation sequence and his "M" notebook on the evolutionary basis of moral and social behaviour, filling sixty pages with notes and anecdotes from his father about experiences with patients.

Having come down in favour, he went to visit his cousin Emma on 29 July. He did not get around to proposing, but failed to conceal his ideas on transmutation. Emma noted "he is the most open, transparent man I ever saw, and every word expresses his real thoughts." When she asked about ultimate origins he steered clear of the subject, aware that "it will become necessary to show how the first eye is formed" which he could not yet do.

Malthus and natural law

After returning to London on 1 August 1838 Darwin read a review of Auguste Comte's Positive Philosophy at the Athenaeum Club. It bolstered his pantheist ideas of natural laws,[71] making him remark "What a magnificent view one can take of the world" with everything synchronised "by certain laws of harmony", a vision "far grander" than the Almighty individually creating "a long succession of vile Molluscous animals – How beneath the dignity of Him"! Only a "cramped imagination" saw God "warring against those very laws he established in all organic nature."[72] His work on Coral Reefs and a paper theorising that Glen Roy had been an arm of the sea soldiered on. He visited the zoo to experiment, observing the reactions of the apes and seeing emotions like "revenge and anger", implying that "Our descent, then, [is the root] of our evil passions." He needed an ally, and hinted to Lyell that his work was "bearing on the question of species", amassing "facts, which begin to group themselves clearly under sub-laws."[73]

Then in late September he began reading "for amusement" the 6th edition of Malthus's An Essay on the Principle of Population which reminded him of Malthus's statistical proof that human populations breed beyond their means and compete to survive, at a time when he was primed to apply these ideas to animal species. Malthus had softened from the bleakness of the earlier editions, now allowing that the population crush could be mitigated by education, celibacy and emigration. Already Radical crowds were demonstrating against the harsh imposition of Malthusian ideas in the Poor Laws, and a slump was resulting in mass emigration. Lyell was convinced that animals were also driven to spread their territory by overpopulation, but Darwin went further in applying the Whig social thinking of struggle for survival with no handouts. His views were secular, but not atheistic. He asked how God's laws had produced "so high a mind" as ours, with purpose shown by descent geared towards the "production of higher animals", suggesting that "we are [a] step towards some higher end".[74][75]

Malthus's essay calculates from the birth rate that human population could double every 25 years, but in practice growth is kept in check by death, disease, wars and famine.[76][77][78][79] Darwin was well prepared to see at once that this related to de Candolle's concept of "nature's war" and also applies to the struggle for existence amongst wildlife,[80][81] so that when there is more population than resources can maintain, favourable variations that allow the organism to better use the limited resources available tend to be preserved, and unfavourable ones destroyed by being unable to get the means for existence, resulting in the formation of new species.[82] On 28 September 1838 he noted this insight, describing it as a kind of wedging, forcing adapted structures into gaps in the economy of nature formed as weaker ones were thrust out. He now had a theory by which to work.[78]

Proposal

Darwin's thoughts and work continued and he suffered repeated bouts of illness. On 11 November he returned to Maer Hall and proposed to Emma.

Again he discussed his ideas, and she subsequently wrote telling him of her "fear that our opinions on the most important subject should differ widely. My reason tells me that honest & conscientious doubts cannot be a sin, but I feel it would be a painful void between us. I thank you from my heart for your openness with me & I should dread the feeling that you were concealing your opinions from the fear of giving me pain." She continued; "my own dear Charley we now do belong to each other & I cannot help being open with you. Will you do me a favour? yes I am sure you will, it is to read our Saviours farewell discourse to his disciples which begins at the end of the 13th Chap of John. It is so full of love to them & devotion & every beautiful feeling."[83] In the Farewell Discourse from the Gospel of St. John, Jesus instructs his disciples to "love one another", a central part of Christian doctrine which emphasises the need for belief. For Emma the importance of faith had been reinforced by the death of her sister Fanny in 1832, and her need to meet Fanny again in the afterlife. She clearly felt that Darwin would be able to overcome doubt and believe.[84] John 15 also says "If a man abide not in me...they are burned". Darwin's warm reply reassured her, and she replied that "To see you in earnest on the subject will be my greatest comfort & that I am sure you are. I believe I agree with every word you say, & it pleased me that you shd have felt inclined to enter a little more on the subject." However, this tension would remain.[85][86]

Emma's father promised a dowry of £5,000 plus £400 a year, while Doctor Darwin added £10,000 for Charles, to be invested. They decided to move to London until Charles had "wearied the geological public" with his itch to write, then they would "decide, whether the pleasures of retirement & country... are preferable to society."

Theory

Charles went house-hunting by day. At night he thought about "innumerable variations" (which he still thought were acquired in some way) with competitive nature selecting the best leading to step by step change, while vestigial organs like the human coccyx (tail) were not, as commonly thought, God "rounding out his original thought [to its] exhaustion", but ancestral remnants pointing to "the parent of man".

Darwin considered Malthus's argument, that human populations breed beyond their means and compete to survive, in relation to his findings about species relating to localities, earlier enquiries into animal breeding, and ideas of Natural "laws of harmony". Around late November 1838 he compared breeders selecting traits to a Malthusian Nature selecting from random variants, now thrown up by "chance", and in mid-December described this comparison as "a beautiful part of my theory, that domesticated races of organics are made by precisely same means as species – but latter far more perfectly & infinitely slower",[87] so that in "species every part of newly acquired structure is fully practical & perfected."[88]

The second edition of Charles Babbage's The Ninth Bridgewater Treatise. A Fragment published that year included a copy of a letter John Herschel had sent to Charles Lyell in 1836,[89] not long before Darwin visited Herschel in Cape Town. On 2 December, Darwin wrote in his E Notebook "Babbage 2d Edit. p. 226 – Herschel calls the appearance of new species the mystery of mysteries, & has grand passage upon the problem.! Hurrah – 'intermediate causes' ".[90] Herschel's letter advocated seeking natural causes, as opposed to miraculous causes, and gave philosophical justification to Darwin's project.[91]

Stress

The Zoology ran into difficulties, with Richard Owen having to halt work on Fossil Mammalia, and John Gould sailing off for Tasmania leaving Darwin to complete the half finished Birds.[92] "What can a man have to say, who works all morning in describing hawks & owls; & then rushes out , & walks in a bewildered manner up one street & down another, looking out for the word To Let'."[93] Emma had arranged to come with the Hensleigh Wedgwoods to London for a week to help with the search for a house,[94] and wrote telling him "It is very well I am coming to look after you my poor old man", before arriving on 6 December.[95]

On 19 December 1838 as secretary of the Geological Society of London Darwin witnessed the vicious interrogation by Owen and his allies including Sedgwick and Buckland of Darwin's old tutor Robert Edmund Grant when they ridiculed Grant's Lamarckian heresy in a clear reminder of establishment hatred of evolutionism.[96]

During her visit, Emma thought Darwin looked unwell and overtired.[97] At the end of December she wrote urging him "to leave town at once & get some rest. You have looked so unwell for some time that I fear you will be laid up... nothing could make me so happy as to feel that I could be of any use or comfort to my own dear Charles when he is not well. So don't be ill any more my dear Charley till I can be with you to nurse you".[98]

Marriage

On 29 December 1838, Darwin took the let of a furnished property at 12 Upper Gower Street. He wrote to Emma that "Gower St is ours, yellow curtains & all", and of his delight at being the "possessor of Macaw Cottage".[99] which he long recalled for its gaudy coloured walls and furniture that "combined all the colours of the macaw in hideous discord",[100] Emma rejoiced at their getting a house she liked, while hoping that they had got rid of "that dead dog out of the garden".[101] Darwin impatiently moved his "museum" in on 31 December, astounding himself, Erasmus and the porters with the weight of his luggage containing geological specimens.[102]

On 24 January 1839 he was honoured by being elected as Fellow of the Royal Society and presented his paper on the Roads of Glen Roy. The next day he took the train home to Shrewsbury, then on the 28th travelled to Maer Hall.

On 29 January 1839, Charles married Emma at Maer, Staffordshire in an Anglican ceremony arranged to also suit the Unitarians, conducted by the vicar, their cousin John Allen Wedgwood. Emma's bedridden mother slept through the service, sparing Emma "the pain of parting". Immediately afterwards Charles and Emma rushed off to the railway station, raising their relative's eyebrows, and ate their sandwiches and toasted their future from a "bottle of water" on the train. Back at Macaw Cottage, Charles noted in his journal "Married at Maer & returned to London 30 years old", and in his "E" notebook recorded uncle John Wedgwood's views on turnips.

See the development of Darwin's theory for the ensuing developments, in the context of his life, work and outside influences at the time.

Citations

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References

Note that this article is largely based on Desmond and Moore's book, with commentary summarised in other words and quotations (or extracts from quotations) repeated verbatim.

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  • Darwin, Charles (1839), Narrative of the surveying voyages of His Majesty's Ships Adventure and Beagle between the years 1826 and 1836, describing their examination of the southern shores of South America, and the Beagle's circumnavigation of the globe. Journal and remarks. 1832–1836., vol. III, London: Henry Colburn, retrieved 24 October 2008
  • Darwin, Charles (1859), On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection, or the Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life (1st ed.), London: John Murray, retrieved 24 October 2008
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External links

  • The Complete Works of Charles Darwin Online – Darwin Online; Darwin's publications, private papers and bibliography, supplementary works including biographies, obituaries and reviews. Free to use, includes items not in public domain.
  • Works by Charles Darwin at Project Gutenberg; public domain
  • Darwin Correspondence Project Text and notes for most of his letters

inception, darwin, theory, inception, darwin, theory, occurred, during, intensively, busy, period, which, began, when, charles, darwin, returned, from, survey, voyage, beagle, with, reputation, fossil, collector, geologist, already, established, given, allowan. The inception of Darwin s theory occurred during an intensively busy period which began when Charles Darwin returned from the survey voyage of the Beagle with his reputation as a fossil collector and geologist already established He was given an allowance from his father to become a gentleman naturalist rather than a clergyman and his first tasks were to find suitable experts to describe his collections write out his Journal and Remarks and present papers on his findings to the Geological Society of London At Darwin s geological debut the anatomist Richard Owen s reports on the fossils showed that extinct species were related to current species in the same locality and the ornithologist John Gould showed that bird specimens from the Galapagos Islands were of distinct species related to places not just varieties These points convinced Darwin that transmutation of species must be occurring and in his Red Notebook he jotted down his first evolutionary ideas He began specific transmutation notebooks with speculations on variation in offspring to adapt amp alter the race to changing world and sketched an irregularly branched genealogical branching of a single evolutionary tree Animal observations of an orangutan at the zoo showed how human its expressions looked confirming his thoughts from the Beagle voyage that there was little gulf between man and animals He investigated animal breeding and found parallels to nature removing runts and keeping the fit with farmers deliberately selecting breeding animals so that through a thousand intermediate forms their descendants were significantly changed His speculations on instincts and mental traits suggested habits beliefs and facial expressions having evolved and considered the social implications While this was his prime hobby he was struggling with an immense workload and began suffering from his illness Having taken a break from work his thoughts of marriage turned to his cousin Emma Wedgwood Reading about Malthus and natural law led him to apply to his search the Malthusian logic of social thinking of struggle for survival with no handouts and he had at last got a theory by which to work He proposed to Emma and was accepted In his theory he compared breeders selecting traits to natural selection from variants thrown up by chance and continued to look to the countryside for supporting information On 24 January 1839 he was elected as Fellow of the Royal Society and on the 29th married Emma The development of Darwin s theory followed Contents 1 Background 2 Return to England 2 1 Owen and fossils 2 2 Geological debut species related to places 3 Transmutation 3 1 Context 3 2 Red Notebook 4 Transmutation notebooks 4 1 B notebook 4 2 C notebook animal observations 4 2 1 Speculations 5 Thoughts of marriage 6 Malthus and natural law 7 Proposal 8 Theory 8 1 Stress 9 Marriage 10 Citations 11 References 12 External linksBackground EditDarwin was not the first to propose that species of organisms could become modified over time In the third edition of On the Origin of Species Darwin provided a historical sketch of his predecessors in writing of descent with modification or natural selection including those whom he had only learned of after the 1859 publication of The Origin His account essentially deals with 19th century authors Passing over authors from the classical period to that of Buffon with whose writings I am not familiar Lamarck was the first man whose conclusions on this subject excited much attention However in a footnote he remarks on how his grandfather Dr Erasmus Darwin Goethe and Geoffroy Saint Hilaire came to the same conclusion on the origin of species in the years 1794 95 anticipating Lamarck 1 After his early life in a Unitarian family Charles Darwin developed his interest in natural history At Edinburgh University his work as a student of Robert Edmund Grant involved him in pioneering investigations of the ideas of Lamarck and Erasmus Darwin on homology showing common descent but he also saw how controversial and troubling such theories were Robert Jameson s course taught Darwin stratigraphic geology and closed with lectures on the Origin of the Species of Animals At Christ s College Cambridge to qualify as an Anglican clergyman Darwin became passionate about beetle collecting then shone in John Stevens Henslow s botany course He was convinced by Paley s Natural Theology which set out the Teleological argument that complexity of design in nature proved God s role as Creator and by the views of Paley and John Herschel that creation was by laws which science could discover not by intermittent miracles The geology course of Adam Sedgwick and summer work mapping strata in Wales emphasised that life on earth went back over eons of time Then on his voyage on the Beagle Darwin became convinced by Charles Lyell s uniformitarian theory of gradual geological process and puzzled over how various theories of creation fitted the evidence he saw However Darwin did not conceive the theory of evolution during the Beagle s voyage later recounting that it was equally evident that neither the action of the surrounding conditions nor the will of the organisms especially in the case of plants could account for the innumerable cases in which organisms of every kind are beautifully adapted to their habitats of life for instance a woodpecker or a tree frog to climb trees or a seed for dispersal by hooks or plumes I had always been much struck by such adaptations and until these could be explained it seemed to me almost useless to endeavour to prove by indirect evidence that species have been modified Return to England EditWhen Beagle returned it anchored at Falmouth Cornwall on 2 October 1836 That same stormy night Darwin set off on the mail coach for two days travel to his family home The Mount House in Shrewsbury Shropshire He arrived late at night on 4 October 2 and having taken the coach for his last visit 3 had thought he might sleep at the Lion coaching inn rather disturb them in the dead of the night 4 He greeted his family at breakfast in the morning and began catching up with news of his family and of the country all England appears changed The Reform Bill had brought what the Tory Duke of Wellington described as a shift in power from decent Tory Anglicans to Whig manufacturers shopkeepers and atheists Educated people were discussing the writings of Thomas Malthus on population outstripping resources as the New Poor Law described by opponents as a Malthusian bill designed to force the poor to emigrate to work for lower wages to live on a coarser sort of food brought the construction of workhouses in the southern counties despite riots and arson The government had not yet dared introduce these measures to London and the industrial north and recession was bringing threats of mass unemployment Darwin wrote to Henslow that he was still giddy with joy amp confusion I want your advice on so many points indeed I am in the clouds and on 15 October went on to Cambridge to get advice from Henslow and Sedgwick on the task of organising the description and cataloguing of his collections accumulated from the Beagle expedition Henslow took on the plants and Darwin was given introductions to the best London naturalists with a warning that they would already be busy with other work Charles went on to stay with his brother Erasmus in London near the scientific institutions which were in the throes of renovation while the city itself was being torn up to install new sewers and gas lighting He went round the British Museum the Royal College of Surgeons the Linnean the Zoological Society and Geological Society trying to get the experts to take on his collections Henslow had already established his former pupil s reputation during the Beagle expedition by giving selected naturalists access to fossil specimens sent back as well as reading out Extracts from Letters to Henslow to the Cambridge Philosophical Society which had them privately printed for distribution while Darwin s geological notes from the letters were summarised by Sedgwick at the Geological Society and extracts appeared in magazines Darwin went in most exciting dissipation amongst the Dons in science and as Charles Bunbury reported he seems to be a universal collector finding new species to the surprise of all the big wigs While geologists were quick to take on the rock samples zoologists already had more specimens arriving than they could deal with Their institutions were in turmoil as democrats argued for reforms replacing the aristocratic amateurs with professional salaried scientists as in the French research institutes At the Zoological Society the reformers were led by Darwin s tutor from Edinburgh days Robert Edmund Grant Darwin now had an allowance plus stocks from his father bringing him around 400 per year and his sympathies were with the amateur clerical Dons in science of Cambridge Owen and fossils Edit The geologist Charles Lyell invited Darwin to dinner on 29 October 1836 Over dinner Lyell listened eagerly to Darwin s stories which supported Lyell s uniformitarianism and introduced him to Richard Owen and William Broderip Tories who had just been involved in voting Grant out of a position at the Zoological Society Owen was rapidly ousting Grant as the country s leading anatomist Darwin went to visit him at his Royal College of Surgeons and Owen agreed to work on some animal specimens in spirits and the fossil bones Owen shared Darwin s enthusiasm He was a proponent of German ideas of organising energy and vehemently opposed to Grant s evolution At around this time Grant was one of the few to volunteer his help with cataloguing the collection Darwin turned down the offer not wanting to be associated with a disreputable radical who denounced his Cambridge friends On 12 November Darwin visited his Wedgwood relatives at Maer Hall and they encouraged him to publish a book of his travels based on his diary an idea his sisters picked up when he visited his home On 2 December he returned to London and began finding takers for his specimens with Thomas Bell and the Revd William Buckland interested in the reptiles Darwin s reputation was being made by the giant mammal fossils Owen s first surprising revelation was that a hippopotamus sized fossil skull 2 feet 4 inches 710 mm long which Darwin had bought for about two shillings near Mercedes while on a galloping trip 120 miles 190 km from Montevideo was of an extinct rodent like creature resembling a giant capybara which Owen named Toxodon Darwin wrote to his sister Caroline that the fossils are turning out great treasures and of the Toxodon There is another head as large as a Rhinoceros which as far as they can guess must have been a gnawing animal Conceive a Rat or a Hare of such a size What famous Cats they ought to have had in those days 5 The College of Surgeons distributed casts of the fossils to the major scientific institutions Darwin paid a visit to his brother Erasmus s lady friend the literary Whig Miss Harriet Martineau who had strong views on egalitarianism and whose writings had popularised the ideas of Thomas Malthus Around this time she was writing her Society in America which included discussion of the geological process of world making that she had seen on her visit to the Niagara Falls 6 He sat there for almost an hour She was very agreeable and managed to talk on a most wonderful number of subjects considering the limited time I was astonished to find how little ugly she is but as it appears to me she is overwhelmed with her own projects her own thoughts and own abilities Erasmus palliated all this by maintaining one ought not to look at her as a woman 7 In her autobiography she later recalled Charles as being simple childlike painstaking effective 8 Geological debut species related to places Edit Unhappy with life in a dirty odious London he returned to Cambridge on 13 December then wrote his first paper showing that the Chilean coast and the South American land mass was rising slowly and discussed his ideas with Lyell To Lyell s delight Darwin went further in balancing the rising continent with sinking mountains forming the basis of coral atolls Darwin briefly returned to London to read his paper to the Geological Society on 4 January 1837 Despite Darwin s nerves about his debut the talk was so well received that he felt like a peacock admiring his tail On the same day Darwin presented 80 mammal and 450 bird specimens to the Zoological Society The Mammalia were ably taken on by George R Waterhouse While the birds seemed almost an afterthought the ornithologist John Gould took them on and was quick to notice the significance of specimens from the Galapagos Islands He startlingly revealed at the next meeting on 10 January that what Darwin had taken to be wrens blackbirds and slightly differing finches were a series of ground finches which are so peculiar as to form an entirely new group of 11 species The story of what we now call Darwin s finches was covered by the daily newspapers though Darwin was in Cambridge and did not get details at this stage In the minutes of the meeting the number was extended to 12 species 9 Owen was finding unexpected relationships from the fossils the batch included the horse sized Scelidotherium which appeared to be closely allied to the anteater 5 a gigantic ground sloth and an ox sized armoured armadillo which he called Glyptodon The Patagonian spine and leg bones from Port St Julian which Darwin had thought might be from a Mastodon were apparently from a gigantic guanaco or Llama or perhaps camel which Owen named Macrauchenia Lyell saw a law of succession with mammals being replaced by their own kind on each continent and on 17 February used his presidential address at the Geological Society to present Owen s findings to date on Darwin s fossils pointing out this inference that extinct species were related to current species in the same locality He invited Darwin to come along and the speech drew Darwin s attention to the question of why past and present species in one place should be so closely related At the same meeting Darwin was elected to the Council of the Society For Lyell this was a glorious addition to my society of geologists gentlemen and amateurs of independent means with duty only to scientific integrity social stability and responsible religion for Darwin it meant joining the respectable elite of eminent geologists developing a science dealing with the age of the earth and the Days of Creation Darwin had already been invited by FitzRoy to contribute his Journal based on his field notes as the natural history section of the captain s account of the Beagle s voyage and this ended up keeping him fully occupied from 13 March to the end of September 10 He also plunged into writing a book on South American Geology putting his and Lyell s ideas forward against the cataclysmic explanation of mountain formation Alcide d Orbigny was promoting in a multi volume account of the continent begun two years previously On Monday 27 February Darwin presented a talk to the Cambridge Philosophical Society on glassy tubes he had found amongst Maldonado sand dunes explained by lightning having fused the sand 11 To supervise his collections Darwin had to return to London and on Lyell s advice he planned to arrive on Friday 3 March 1837 in time for one of Charles Babbage s Saturday parties talking shops about the latest developments brilliantly attended by fashionable ladies as well as literary and scientific gents and a good mixture of pretty women bankers and politicians where Babbage promoted such projects as his mechanical computer 11 At first Darwin stayed with Erasmus in his journal written up later he put his date of moving as 6 March 1837 On the 13th he moved to nearby lodgings joining Erasmus s circle of friends including Martineau and Hensleigh and enjoying his intimate dinner parties with guests such as Lyell Babbage and Thomas Carlyle 12 In their first meeting to discuss his detailed findings Gould told Darwin that the Galapagos mockingbirds from different islands were separate species not just varieties and the finch group included the wrens 13 The two rheas were also distinct species and on 14 March Gould s announcement of this finding to the Zoological Society of London was accompanied by Darwin who presented a paper on how distribution of the two species of rheas changed going southwards 14 Transmutation EditContext Edit Darwin was concerned to make sure that his theorising whether published or private fully complied with the accepted scientific methodology of his peers In the scientific societies and at informal dinners he discussed methods with two leading authorities on the topic John Herschel and William Whewell 15 Scientific circles were buzzing with ideas of natural theology In a letter to Lyell Herschel had written of that mystery of mysteries the replacement of extinct species by others This was circulated and widely discussed with scientists sharing Herschel s approach of looking for an answer through laws of nature and rejecting ad hoc miracles as an explanation 16 Charles Babbage expressed in his Ninth Bridgewater Treatise 1837 a view of Nature s God along the lines of a programmer of such laws 17 Darwin s freethinking brother Erasmus was part of this Whig circle and a close friend of the writer Harriet Martineau who promoted the Malthusianism underlying the controversial Whig Poor Law reforms 1834 to stop welfare from causing overpopulation and more poverty which were then being implemented piecemeal in the face of opposition to the new poorhouses As a Unitarian Martineau welcomed the radical implications of transmutation of species which was promoted by Grant and some medical men but anathema to Darwin s Anglican friends who saw it as a threat to the social order Transmutation threatened the essential distinction between man and beast and implied progressive improvement with the implication that the lower orders could aspire to the privileges of their aristocratic overlords 18 The medical establishment controlling the London teaching hospitals including the Royal College of Surgeons was restricted to Anglicans and dominated by the aristocracy who saw perfect animal design as proof of a natural theology supporting their ideas of God given rank and privilege Since the 1820s large numbers of private medical schools joined by the new London University had introduced the philosophical anatomy of Geoffroy Saint Hilaire based on unity of plan compatible with the transmutation of species implying ideas of progressive improvement and supporting radical demands for democracy This anatomy had already spread from Paris to the medical schools of Edinburgh and the new London schools attracted Scots including Grant Numerous journals now promoted these radical ideas including Thomas Wakley s The Lancet started in 1823 with support from William Cobbett and William Lawrence whose 1819 publication of evolutionary ideas the Crown had prosecuted for blasphemy In response the medical establishment gave support to the idealist biology of Joseph Henry Green 1791 1863 and of his younger protege Richard Owen 1804 1892 based on the vitalism of German Naturphilosophie and Platonic idealism which saw anatomical forms as archetypes in the Divine mind imposed through descensive powers of delegation of divine authority in accordance with traditional hierarchies 19 Red Notebook Edit In 1836 Darwin used his Red Notebook to record field observations during the last stages of his Beagle voyage from May to 25 September Page 113 mentions a meeting with Richard Owen after the ship s return to England in October Later notes mention discussions with other experts including the geographer Sir Woodbine Parish geologists Charles Lyell and Roderick Murchison and the conchologist James De Carle Sowerby Darwin also took brief notes on what he was reading reminders on planned publications including his Journal of the voyage and his developing theories conjectures and hypotheses He continued using the notebook until May or June 1837 20 In his later Journal Darwin recalled having been greatly struck from about month of previous March on character of S American fossils amp species on Galapagos Archipelago These facts origin especially latter of all my views 21 His first reference to transmutation appears in the Red Notebook around early March 1837 after John Gould told him that the common Rhea was a different species to the Petisse Darwin wrote Speculate on neutral ground of 2 ostriches bigger one encroaches on smaller change not progressif lt e gt produced at one blow if one species altered proposing a sudden change or saltation in contrast to Lamarck s idea that species graded imperceptibly into each other later Darwin referred to this jump as inosculation He drew on the relationship Owen had shown between fossils of the extinct giant Macrauchenia and the modern guanacos that Darwin had hunted in Patagonia The same kind of relation that common ostrich bears to Petisse extinct Guanaco to recent in former case position in latter time As in first cases distinct species inosculate so must we believe ancient ones not gradual change or degeneration from circumstances if one species does change into another it must be per saltum or species may perish Here he related the geographical distribution of species to their replacement over time and tentatively proposed that the Rheas had a shared ancestor 22 He noted his thoughts on reproduction and extinction Tempted to believe animals created for a definite time not extinguished by change of circumstances and various domesticated animals had all run wild amp bred no doubt with perfect success showing non Creation does not bear upon solely adaptation of animals extinction in same manner may not depend There is no more wonder in extinction of species than of individual 22 Darwin s notes mention several papers based on his geological writings during the voyage 23 At the Geographical Society meeting on 3 May 1837 Darwin read his paper on strata around Rio de la Plata where he had found fossils including the Toxodon 24 At the same meeting announcements were made of the first discoveries of ancient fossil primates finds by Proby Cautley and Hugh Falconer in Neogene strata of the Sivalik Hills and by Edouard Lartet in Miocene beds at Sansan Gers 25 Later Lyell joked uncomfortably to his sister that according to Lamarck s view there may have been a great many thousand centuries for their tails to wear off and the transformation to men to take place but Darwin was beginning to look at these wonderful fossils in relation to transmutation 26 Darwin s notes mentioned his Coral Paper which he had originally drafted in 1835 he presented this on 31 May 1837 at the Geological Society of London and later used it as the basis for his book on The Structure and Distribution of Coral Reefs 23 At their frequent meetings Owen argued that intrinsic organising energy in the embryonic germ set the lifespan of the species and precluded transmutation The botanist Robert Brown showed Darwin a different concept of swarming atoms inside the germ allowing nature s self development Embarrassed by his lack of labels for his finch specimens he examined FitzRoy s in the British Museum and contacted seamen including Syms Covington for their collections From this he was able to relate the finches to separate islands with distinct species on each island As well as pressing on with his Journal he started an ambitious project to get the expert reports on his collection published as a multi volume Zoology of the Voyage of H M S Beagle A search for sponsorship was answered when Henslow used his contacts with the Chancellor of the Exchequer Thomas Spring Rice to arrange a Treasury grant of 1 000 27 a sum equivalent to about 97 000 in present day terms 28 During the Beagle voyage Darwin had noted the distribution of the two species of Galapagos iguanas and suspected that this genus the species of which are so well adapted to their respective localities is peculiar to this group of Isds He had identified the sea iguanas from a book on board as having been named Amblyrhyncus Cristatus by Bell from a specimen which had arrived in Mexico probably found on the Pacific shore 29 In June he gave this information to William Buckland 30 As the Victorian era began Darwin pressed on with writing his Journal and in August 1837 began correcting printer s proofs 31 Transmutation notebooks EditIn mid July 1837 as his Red Notebook filled up Darwin reorganised his note taking and began two new notebooks his A notebook on geology and his B notebook the first of a series on transmutation of Species 21 32 in which he scribbled down a framework for his speculations jotting down thoughts on evolution In a phrase he used later this became mental rioting 33 B notebook Edit The title page of the B notebook was headed Zoonomia referring to his late grandfather s evolutionary ideas and began with questions about the reasons for generation in which asexual reproduction resulted in copies of the original while sexual reproduction produced variation in the offspring and organisms had short lifespans The world was known to have changed over time and the young of living beings become permanently changed or subject to variety according to circumstances This included plants animals and humanity in course of generations even mind and instinct become influenced child of savage not civilized man Full grown organisms might be unchangeable but variability of their offspring would adapt amp alter the race to changing world 34 35 His ideas predated genetic concepts and he continued to believe that variations arose through reproduction in a purposeful way responding to changes in the environment 36 Not all would succeed The father being climatized climatizes the child Whether every animal produces in course of ages ten thousand varieties influenced itself perhaps by circumstances amp those alone preserved which are well adapted 37 In mid July 1837 Darwin started his B notebook on Transmutation of Species and quickly developed unique ideas of branching descent On page 36 wrote I think above his first evolutionary tree diagram 38 In a large population intermarriages crossing would even out these variations and explain why species appeared constant but reproductive isolation of a small sub group could lead to divergence and geographic speciation animals on separate islands ought to become different if kept long enough apart with slightly differing circumstances as in the various species he had seen of Galapagos tortoises and mockingbirds the Falkland Fox and the Chiloe fox the Inglish and Irish Hare What Darwin called inosculation would abruptly introduce a clear distinction between even the most closely related species explaining the rheas which remained distinct species with overlapping territories 39 Uniquely for his time he envisaged this diverging adaptation as genealogical branching from a common ancestor an evolutionary tree Organized beings represent a tree irregularly branched some branches far more branched Hence Genera As many terminal buds dying as new ones generated Refining the concept he proposed a coral of life The tree of life should perhaps be called the coral of life base of branches dead so that passages cannot be seen 40 With the words I think he sketched a diagram of this branching pattern 38 This novel view contrasted with the ideas of transmutationists of the time including Lamarck and Grant who envisaged independent parallel lineages impelled by inner forces to make progress to higher forms Darwin protested against these linear ideas of progress It is absurd to talk of one animal being higher than another We consider those when the intellectual faculties or cerebral structure most developed as highest A bee doubtless would when the instincts were Later in the notebook he set down a progressionist concept of human origins If all men were dead then monkeys make men Men make angels 41 Darwin thought that the possibility of a common ancestor of mammalia amp fish could not be ruled out when such strange forms as the platypus existed The unique plants and animals on the Galapagos islands sharing features with mainland American species while wandering birds such as sandpipers were unchanged showed the way creative power acted at Galapagos confirmed if we believe the Creator created by any laws which I think is shown by the very facts of the Zoological character of these islands A similar relationship in time was shown by the extinct armoured giant Glyptodon resembling the modern South American armadillo He considered that the way that astronomers once thought that God ordered the movement of individual planets was comparable to individual creation of species in particular countries but divine powers were much more simple amp sublime in creating the first animals so that species then arose by the fixed laws of generation A hypothesis of fresh creations he saw as mere assumption it explains nothing further 42 From Owen he learnt of John Hunter s observations on the production of monsters mutants at birth and he noted that this could present an analogy to production of species 43 He jotted down thoughts on how organisms could reach new islands could Owls transport mice alive Seeds might be blown over transported by floating trees or eaten by birds which flew to the islands He noted a reminder to Experimentise on land shells in salt water amp lizards ditto 44 Under pressure with organising Zoology and correcting proofs of his Journal which had to have the introduction revised when FitzRoy complained that he was astonished at the total omission of any notice of the officers for their help Darwin s health suffered On 20 September 1837 he suffered an uncomfortable palpitation of the heart His doctors advised him strongly to knock off all work and to leave for the country Two days later he went to Maer Hall the Wedgwoods home for a month of recuperation His relations wore him out with questions about gaucho life His invalid aunt was being cared for by the as yet unmarried Emma and his uncle Jos pointed out an area of ground where cinders had disappeared under loam which Jos though might have been the work of earthworms Darwin returned to London on 21 October and on 1 November gave a talk on the role of earthworms in soil formation to the Geological Society a mundane subject which to them may have seemed original research eccentric William Buckland subsequently recommended Darwin s paper for publication praising it as a new amp important theory to explain Phenomena of universal occurrence on the surface of the Earth in fact a new Geological Power while rightly rejecting Darwin s suggestion that chalkland could have been formed in a similar way 45 Darwin had avoided taking on official posts which would take valuable time turning down William Whewell s request that he become Secretary of the Geological Society with excuses including anything which flurries me completely knocks me up afterwards and brings on a bad palpitation of the heart 46 47 but in January 1838 he accepted the post 48 On 7 March he read to the Society his longest paper yet which explained the earthquake he had witnessed at Concepcion Chile in terms of gradual crustal movements to the delight of Lyell Despite hours of practice as he later recalled I was so nervous at first I somehow could see nothing all around me amp felt as if my body was gone amp only my head left 49 At the same time Darwin pondered likely opposition to his ideas Sure that there must have been a thousand intermediate forms between the modern otter and its land only ancestor he thought Opponent will say show them me I will answer yes if you will show me every step between bull Dog amp Greyhound 50 51 He privately scorned Whewell s faith in a human centred universe perfectly adapted to man and wrote that My theory would give zest to recent amp fossil Comparative Anatomy it would lead to study of instincts heredity amp mind heredity whole metaphysics 52 Contrary to the views of his Cambridge professors that humans were godlike around February 1838 Darwin wrote in his B notebook Animals whom we have made our slaves we do not like to consider our equals Do not slave holders wish to make the black man other kind animals with affections imitation fear of death pain sorrow for the dead respect The expectation of finding the father of mankind was comparable to finding Macrauchenia and if we choose to let conjecture run wild then our animals our fellow brethern in pain disease death amp suffering amp famine our slaves in the most laborious works our companions in our amusements they may partake from our origin in one common ancestor we may be all netted together 53 C notebook animal observations Edit By February 1838 Darwin was on to a new pocketbook the maroon C notebook and was investigating the breeding of domestic animals He found the newspaper wholesaler William Yarrell at the Zoological museum a fund of knowledge and questioned if breeders weren t going against nature in picking varieties He was now writing of Descent rather than transmutation and hinting at ideas of adaptation to climate At the zoo on 28 March he had his first sight of an ape and was impressed at the orang utan s antics just like a naughty child when the keeper held back an apple In his notes he wrote Let man visit Ourang outang in domestication hear expressive whine see its intelligence let him look at savage naked artless not improving yet improvable amp let him dare to boast of his proud preeminence Here Darwin was drawing on his experience of the natives of Tierra del Fuego and daring to think that there was little gulf between man and animals despite the theological doctrine that only humanity possessed a soul On 1 April Charles wrote to his older sister Susan that he had also seen the rhinoceros in the zoo let out for the first time that spring kicking amp rearing and galloping for joy He then passed on the gossip that Miss Martineau had been as frisky lately as the Rhinoceros Erasmus has been with her noon morning and night if her character was not as secure as a mountain in the polar regions she certainly would loose it Lyell called there the other day amp there was a beautiful rose on the table amp she coolly showed it to him amp said Erasmus Darwin gave me that How fortunate it is she is so very plain otherwise I should be frightened She is a wonderful woman 54 He began thinking about marriage himself and on the back of an old letter dated 7 April 1838 he listed the pros and cons of London Cambridge or the countryside noting that I have so much more pleasure in direct observation that I could not go on as Lyell does correcting amp adding up new information to old train amp I do not see what line can be followed by man tied down to London In country experiment amp observations on lower animals more space 55 In an 8 May letter to his Cambridge friend Charles Thomas Whitley who had recently married Darwin described himself as having turned a complete scribbler and said Of the future I know nothing I never look further ahead than two or three Chapters for my life is now measured by volume chapters amp sheets amp has little to do with the sun As for a wife that most interesting specimen in the whole series of vertebrate animals Providence only know whether I shall ever capture one or be able to feed her if caught 56 Darwin found a pamphlet by Yarrell s friend Sir John Sebright with a passage reading A severe winter or a scarcity of food by destroying the weak and the unhealthy has all the good effects of the most skilful selection In cold or barren countries no animals can live to the age of maturity but those who have strong constitutions the weak and the unhealthy do not live to propagate their infirmities 57 Sebright said females went to the most vigorous males and the strongest individuals of both sexes by driving away the weakest will enjoy the best food and the most favourable positions for themselves and their offspring After reading the pamphlet Darwin commented excellent observations of sickly offspring being cut off so that not propagated by nature Whole art of making varieties may be inferred from facts stated 58 59 Speculations Edit Darwin s speculations in his notebooks deepened as he wondered how instincts and mental traits were passed on to offspring Thought or desires more properly being hereditary it is difficult to imagine it anything but structure of brain hereditary analogy points out to this love of the deity effect of organization oh you materialist and reminded himself to read Barclay on organization 60 He struggled on with the Beagle geology overworked worried and suffering stomach upsets and headaches which laid him up for days on end Privately he thought of the social implications of evolution writing Educate all classes avoid the contamination of castes improve the women double influence amp mankind must improve This was similar to the position of the radical Lamarckians but female education was already supported by the whole Wedgwood Darwin family and strongly advocated by Martineau 61 Darwin wrote Man in his arrogance thinks himself a great work worthy the interposition of a deity more humble amp I believe truer to consider him created from animals 62 In an early precursor of his work on The Expression of the Emotions in Man and Animals Darwin turned round the theological idea of Charles Bell that humans were designed to expose their canine teeth when grinning and explained the expression by shared descent no doubt a habit gained by formerly being a baboon with great canine teeth Blend this argument with his having canine teeth at all This way of viewing the subject important Laughing modified barking smiling modified laughing Barking to tell other animals in associated kinds of good news discovery of prey arising no doubt from want of assistance crying is a puzzler Under this point of view expression of all animals becomes very curious a dog snarling in play Darwin had privately talked with his cousin Hensleigh Wedgwood about the relationship of humans to animals Hensleigh says the love of the deity amp thought of him or eternity only difference between the mind of man amp animals yet how faint in a Fuegian or Australian Darwin s own experience with savages he had met on the Beagle expedition showed that not all humans shared these religious beliefs 63 As he worried at these ideas and the Geology his illness intensified with stomach upsets headaches and heart troubles so that he became overworked and laid up for days on end 64 In May he wrote to his sister Caroline Wedgwood hoping to visit his relatives in July or early August but I shall be cruelly hurried as I have to go to Scotland for Geological work and also had to be in London every second month for the publication of his Zoology I hope I may be able to work on right hard during the next three years otherwise I shall never have finished but I find the noddle amp the stomach are antagonist powers and that it is a great deal more easy to think too much in a day than to think too little What thought has to do with digesting roast beef I cannot say but they are brother faculties 65 Darwin s cousin William Darwin Fox gave helpful answers to his questions about crossing domestic breeds and in his reply of 15 June Darwin admitted for the first time that It is my prime hobby amp I really think some day I shall be able to do something on that most intricate subject species amp varieties 50 66 At the same time Darwin was gaining public position and on 21 June 1838 was elected to the establishment Athenaeum Club along with Charles Dickens From the start of August Darwin began going there each day to dine at the Athenaeum like a gentleman or rather like a Lord for I am sure the first evening I sat in that great drawing room all on a sofa by myself I felt just like a duke I am full of admiration at the Athenaeum one meets so many people there that one likes to see I enjoy it the more because I fully expected to detest it 67 68 Thoughts of marriage EditThe Hensleigh Wedgwoods were now living next door to Erasmus In early June 1838 they were visited for a week by Catherine Darwin and Emma Wedgwood returning from a family get together in Paris As Emma told her aunt a few weeks later Charles used to come from next door so we were a very pleasant merry party Illness prompted Darwin to take a break from the pressure of work on 15 June he told his cousin William Darwin Fox I have not been very well of late which has suddenly determined me to leave London earlier than I had anticipated I go by the steam packet to Edinburgh take a solitary walk on Salisbury crags amp call up old thoughts of former times then go on to Glasgow amp the great valley of Inverness near which I intend stopping a week to geologise the parallel roads of Glen Roy thence to Shrewsbury Maer for one day amp London for smoke ill health amp hard work 66 On 23 June 1838 he took the steamboat to Edinburgh to go geologising in Scotland After revisiting Edinburgh on 28 June the day that Queen Victoria had her coronation in London he went on to Fort William At Glen Roy in glorious weather he was convinced that he had solved the riddle of the parallel roads around the glen which he identified as raised beaches though later geologists would support the ideas of Louis Agassiz that these had been formed by glaciation Fully recuperated and optimistic he returned home to The Mount Shrewsbury He discussed his ideas with his father and asked for advice about Emma Speaking from experience Doctor Robert Waring Darwin told his son to conceal religious doubts which could cause extreme misery Things went on pretty well until the husband or wife became out of health and then some women suffered miserably by doubting about the salvation of their husbands thus making them likewise to suffer Charles drew up a list with two columns on a scrap of paper 69 Under Marry he listed benefits Children if it please God Constant companion amp friend in old age will feel interested in one object to be beloved and played with better than a dog anyhow while under Not Marry he put Freedom to go where one liked Not forced to visit relatives to have the expense and anxiety of children fatness amp idleness if many children forced to earn one s bread He jotted down further thoughts then concluded My God it is intolerable to think of spending ones whole life like a neuter bee working working amp nothing after all No no won t do Imagine living all one s day solitarily in smoky dirty London House Only picture to yourself a nice soft wife on a sofa with good fire amp books amp music perhaps Compare this vision with the dingy reality of Grt Marlbro St Marry Marry Marry Q E D 70 Then he spent his fortnight being Very idle at Shrewsbury which meant starting his D notebook on the transmutation sequence and his M notebook on the evolutionary basis of moral and social behaviour filling sixty pages with notes and anecdotes from his father about experiences with patients Having come down in favour he went to visit his cousin Emma on 29 July He did not get around to proposing but failed to conceal his ideas on transmutation Emma noted he is the most open transparent man I ever saw and every word expresses his real thoughts When she asked about ultimate origins he steered clear of the subject aware that it will become necessary to show how the first eye is formed which he could not yet do Malthus and natural law EditAfter returning to London on 1 August 1838 Darwin read a review of Auguste Comte s Positive Philosophy at the Athenaeum Club It bolstered his pantheist ideas of natural laws 71 making him remark What a magnificent view one can take of the world with everything synchronised by certain laws of harmony a vision far grander than the Almighty individually creating a long succession of vile Molluscous animals How beneath the dignity of Him Only a cramped imagination saw God warring against those very laws he established in all organic nature 72 His work on Coral Reefs and a paper theorising that Glen Roy had been an arm of the sea soldiered on He visited the zoo to experiment observing the reactions of the apes and seeing emotions like revenge and anger implying that Our descent then is the root of our evil passions He needed an ally and hinted to Lyell that his work was bearing on the question of species amassing facts which begin to group themselves clearly under sub laws 73 Then in late September he began reading for amusement the 6th edition of Malthus s An Essay on the Principle of Population which reminded him of Malthus s statistical proof that human populations breed beyond their means and compete to survive at a time when he was primed to apply these ideas to animal species Malthus had softened from the bleakness of the earlier editions now allowing that the population crush could be mitigated by education celibacy and emigration Already Radical crowds were demonstrating against the harsh imposition of Malthusian ideas in the Poor Laws and a slump was resulting in mass emigration Lyell was convinced that animals were also driven to spread their territory by overpopulation but Darwin went further in applying the Whig social thinking of struggle for survival with no handouts His views were secular but not atheistic He asked how God s laws had produced so high a mind as ours with purpose shown by descent geared towards the production of higher animals suggesting that we are a step towards some higher end 74 75 Malthus s essay calculates from the birth rate that human population could double every 25 years but in practice growth is kept in check by death disease wars and famine 76 77 78 79 Darwin was well prepared to see at once that this related to de Candolle s concept of nature s war and also applies to the struggle for existence amongst wildlife 80 81 so that when there is more population than resources can maintain favourable variations that allow the organism to better use the limited resources available tend to be preserved and unfavourable ones destroyed by being unable to get the means for existence resulting in the formation of new species 82 On 28 September 1838 he noted this insight describing it as a kind of wedging forcing adapted structures into gaps in the economy of nature formed as weaker ones were thrust out He now had a theory by which to work 78 Proposal EditDarwin s thoughts and work continued and he suffered repeated bouts of illness On 11 November he returned to Maer Hall and proposed to Emma Again he discussed his ideas and she subsequently wrote telling him of her fear that our opinions on the most important subject should differ widely My reason tells me that honest amp conscientious doubts cannot be a sin but I feel it would be a painful void between us I thank you from my heart for your openness with me amp I should dread the feeling that you were concealing your opinions from the fear of giving me pain She continued my own dear Charley we now do belong to each other amp I cannot help being open with you Will you do me a favour yes I am sure you will it is to read our Saviours farewell discourse to his disciples which begins at the end of the 13th Chap of John It is so full of love to them amp devotion amp every beautiful feeling 83 In the Farewell Discourse from the Gospel of St John Jesus instructs his disciples to love one another a central part of Christian doctrine which emphasises the need for belief For Emma the importance of faith had been reinforced by the death of her sister Fanny in 1832 and her need to meet Fanny again in the afterlife She clearly felt that Darwin would be able to overcome doubt and believe 84 John 15 also says If a man abide not in me they are burned Darwin s warm reply reassured her and she replied that To see you in earnest on the subject will be my greatest comfort amp that I am sure you are I believe I agree with every word you say amp it pleased me that you shd have felt inclined to enter a little more on the subject However this tension would remain 85 86 Emma s father promised a dowry of 5 000 plus 400 a year while Doctor Darwin added 10 000 for Charles to be invested They decided to move to London until Charles had wearied the geological public with his itch to write then they would decide whether the pleasures of retirement amp country are preferable to society Theory EditCharles went house hunting by day At night he thought about innumerable variations which he still thought were acquired in some way with competitive nature selecting the best leading to step by step change while vestigial organs like the human coccyx tail were not as commonly thought God rounding out his original thought to its exhaustion but ancestral remnants pointing to the parent of man Darwin considered Malthus s argument that human populations breed beyond their means and compete to survive in relation to his findings about species relating to localities earlier enquiries into animal breeding and ideas of Natural laws of harmony Around late November 1838 he compared breeders selecting traits to a Malthusian Nature selecting from random variants now thrown up by chance and in mid December described this comparison as a beautiful part of my theory that domesticated races of organics are made by precisely same means as species but latter far more perfectly amp infinitely slower 87 so that in species every part of newly acquired structure is fully practical amp perfected 88 The second edition of Charles Babbage s The Ninth Bridgewater Treatise A Fragment published that year included a copy of a letter John Herschel had sent to Charles Lyell in 1836 89 not long before Darwin visited Herschel in Cape Town On 2 December Darwin wrote in his E Notebook Babbage 2d Edit p 226 Herschel calls the appearance of new species the mystery of mysteries amp has grand passage upon the problem Hurrah intermediate causes 90 Herschel s letter advocated seeking natural causes as opposed to miraculous causes and gave philosophical justification to Darwin s project 91 Stress Edit The Zoology ran into difficulties with Richard Owen having to halt work on Fossil Mammalia and John Gould sailing off for Tasmania leaving Darwin to complete the half finished Birds 92 What can a man have to say who works all morning in describing hawks amp owls amp then rushes out amp walks in a bewildered manner up one street amp down another looking out for the word To Let 93 Emma had arranged to come with the Hensleigh Wedgwoods to London for a week to help with the search for a house 94 and wrote telling him It is very well I am coming to look after you my poor old man before arriving on 6 December 95 On 19 December 1838 as secretary of the Geological Society of London Darwin witnessed the vicious interrogation by Owen and his allies including Sedgwick and Buckland of Darwin s old tutor Robert Edmund Grant when they ridiculed Grant s Lamarckian heresy in a clear reminder of establishment hatred of evolutionism 96 During her visit Emma thought Darwin looked unwell and overtired 97 At the end of December she wrote urging him to leave town at once amp get some rest You have looked so unwell for some time that I fear you will be laid up nothing could make me so happy as to feel that I could be of any use or comfort to my own dear Charles when he is not well So don t be ill any more my dear Charley till I can be with you to nurse you 98 Marriage EditOn 29 December 1838 Darwin took the let of a furnished property at 12 Upper Gower Street He wrote to Emma that Gower St is ours yellow curtains amp all and of his delight at being the possessor of Macaw Cottage 99 which he long recalled for its gaudy coloured walls and furniture that combined all the colours of the macaw in hideous discord 100 Emma rejoiced at their getting a house she liked while hoping that they had got rid of that dead dog out of the garden 101 Darwin impatiently moved his museum in on 31 December astounding himself Erasmus and the porters with the weight of his luggage containing geological specimens 102 On 24 January 1839 he was honoured by being elected as Fellow of the Royal Society and presented his paper on the Roads of Glen Roy The next day he took the train home to Shrewsbury then on the 28th travelled to Maer Hall On 29 January 1839 Charles married Emma at Maer Staffordshire in an Anglican ceremony arranged to also suit the Unitarians conducted by the vicar their cousin John Allen Wedgwood Emma s bedridden mother slept through the service sparing Emma the pain of parting Immediately afterwards Charles and Emma rushed off to the railway station raising their relative s eyebrows and ate their sandwiches and toasted their future from a bottle of water on the train Back at Macaw Cottage Charles noted in his journal Married at Maer amp returned to London 30 years old and in his E notebook recorded uncle John Wedgwood s views on turnips See the development of Darwin s theory for the ensuing developments in the context of his life work and outside influences at the time Citations Edit Darwin 1861 p xiii harvnb error no target CITEREFDarwin1861 help Keynes 2001 p 447 Kees Rookmaaker amp John van Wyhe ed Darwin C R Beagle diary 1831 1836 EH88202366 Darwin Online p 2 Retrieved 9 December 2021 got to St Albans amp so by the Wonder to Shrewsbury on Thursday 22d September 1831 The Wonder coach ran daily from Shrewsbury to London via Wolverhampton Coventry and St Albans covering the 158 miles in 15 3 4 hours It was started in 1825 by the landlord of the Lion Inn Isaac Taylor and his two brothers Letter no 275 Charles Darwin to Susan Elizabeth Darwin 23 April 1835 Darwin Correspondence Project 6 December 2021 Retrieved 6 December 2021 a b Darwin Correspondence Project Letter 321 Darwin C R to Darwin C S 9 Nov 1836 Archived from the original on 16 January 2009 Desmond amp Moore 1991 p 205 Letter 325 Darwin C R to Darwin C S 7 Dec 1836 Darwin Correspondence Project Retrieved 18 December 2011 Harriet Martineau s Autobiography With Memorials by Maria Weston Chapman 2 volumes Smith Elder amp Co 1877 vol I SectionII p 268 Sulloway 1982 p 21 Darwin 2006 pp 13 recto a b Darwin Correspondence Project Letter 346 Darwin C R to Darwin C S 27 Feb 1837 Retrieved 19 December 2008 proposes a move on Friday 3 March 1837 Darwin s Journal Darwin 2006 pp 12 verso backdated from August 1838 gives a date of 6 March 1837 Sulloway 1982 pp 20 23 Browne 1995 p 360 Darwin C R Read 14 March 1837 Notes on Rhea americana and Rhea darwinii Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London Retrieved 17 December 2008 Bowler 1996 pp 70 72 van Wyhe 2007 p 197 Babbage Charles 1837 The Ninth Bridgewater Treatise A Fragment 2 ed London J Murray published 1838 pp 32 33 Retrieved 12 September 2015 To illustrate the distinction between a system to which the restoring hand of its contriver is applied either frequently or at distant intervals and one which had received at its first formation the impress of the will of its author foreseeing the varied but yet necessary laws of its action throughout the whole of its existence we must have recourse to some machine the produce of human skill But far as all such engines must ever be placed at an immeasurable interval below the simplest of Nature s works yet from the vastness of those cycles which even human contrivance in some cases unfolds to our view we may perhaps be enabled to form a faint estimate of the magnitude of that lowest step in the chain of reasoning which leads us up to Nature s God Desmond amp Moore 1991 pp 201 212 21 Desmond 1989 pp 4 6 9 13 Herbert 1980 pp 6 12 14 a b Darwin s personal Journal 1809 1881 CUL DAR158 1 7 a b Herbert 1980 pp 7 10 a b Herbert 1980 p 13 Darwin C R 1837 A sketch of the deposits containing extinct Mammalia in the neighbourhood of the Plata Read 3 May Proceedings of the Geological Society of London 2 542 44 Kennedy Kenneth A R Ciochon Russell L 1999 A canine tooth from the Siwaliks first recorded discovery of a fossil ape Hum Evol 14 3 231 53 doi 10 1007 bf02440159 S2CID 85354584 Desmond amp Moore 1991 p 222 Allen Grant March 1882 Sir Charles Lyell Popular Science Monthly Volume 20 Browne 1995 pp 367 69 UK Retail Price Index inflation figures are based on data from Clark Gregory 2017 The Annual RPI and Average Earnings for Britain 1209 to Present New Series MeasuringWorth Retrieved 11 June 2022 Keynes 2000 p 296harvnb error no target CITEREFKeynes2000 help Darwin Correspondence Project Letter 359 Darwin C R to Buckland William 15 June 1837 Retrieved 23 December 2008 Keynes 2001 Herbert 1980 p 14 Desmond amp Moore 1991 p 240 Letter no 1086 Darwin C R to Hooker J D 6 May 1847 Darwin Correspondence Project Retrieved 5 August 2016 Darwin 1837 p 3 van Wyhe 2008b p 44Desmond amp Moore 2009 p 121harvnb error no target CITEREFDesmondMoore2009 help Bowler 1996 pp 78 79 Desmond amp Moore 1991 p 240Darwin 1837 p 90 a b Darwin 1837 p 36 Desmond amp Moore 1991 pp 229 30Darwin 1837 pp 6 13 Bowler 1996 pp 79 81Darwin 1837 pp 21 25 26Desmond amp Moore 1991 Bowler 1996 pp 81 85Darwin 1837 pp 74 169 Darwin 1837 pp 97 104 Desmond amp Moore 1991 p 225Darwin 1837 pp 161 Desmond amp Moore 1991 p 232Darwin 1837 pp 82 192 93 248 Darwin Correspondence Project Letter 404 Buckland William to Geological Society of London 9 Mar 1838 Retrieved 23 December 2008 Desmond amp Moore 1991 p 235 Letter no 382 Darwin C R to Henslow J S Darwin Correspondence Project 14 October 1837 Retrieved 28 July 2016 Letter no 400 Darwin C R to Henslow J S Darwin Correspondence Project 21 January 1838 Retrieved 28 July 2016 Desmond amp Moore 1991 p 236Darwin C R 1838 On the connexion of certain volcanic phaenomena and on the formation of mountain chains and volcanos as the effects of continental elevations Read 7 March Proceedings of the Geological Society of London 2 654 60 Letter no 1805 Darwin C R to Darwin William Erasmus Darwin Correspondence Project 17 February 1857 Retrieved 28 July 2016 a b Desmond amp Moore 1991 p 248 Darwin 1837 pp 216 17 Desmond amp Moore 1991 pp 236 37Darwin 1837 p 228 Desmond amp Moore 2009 pp 114 15harvnb error no target CITEREFDesmondMoore2009 help Darwin 1837 p 231 Letter 407 Darwin C R to Darwin S E 1 Apr 1838 Darwin Correspondence Project Retrieved 18 December 2011 Desmond amp Moore 1991 pp 245 46Darwin C R Work finished If not marry Memorandum on marriage 1838 CUL DAR210 8 1 Darwin Online Desmond amp Moore 1991 p 245 Letter no 411A Darwin C R to Whitley C T 8 May 1838 Darwin Correspondence Project Retrieved 5 August 2016 Desmond amp Moore 1991 p 247 Desmond amp Moore 1991 pp 247 48 Darwin 1838 pp 133 34 Desmond amp Moore 1991 pp 249 50Darwin 1838 p 166 Desmond amp Moore 1991 p 252Darwin 1838 p 220 Desmond amp Moore 1991 pp 252 53Darwin 1838 pp 196 97 Desmond amp Moore 1991 pp 251 53Darwin 1838 pp 243 44 Desmond amp Moore 1991 p 252 Letter no 411 Darwin C R to Wedgwood C S May 1838 Darwin Correspondence Project Retrieved 7 August 2016 a b Letter no 419 Darwin C R to Fox W D 15 June 1838 Darwin Correspondence Project Retrieved 7 August 2016 Desmond amp Moore 1991 pp 253 54 Letter no 424 Darwin C R to Lyell Charles 9 Aug 1838 Darwin Correspondence Project Retrieved 7 August 2016 Desmond amp Moore 1991 pp 256 57 Darwin C R 7 1838 This is the Question Marry Not Marry Memorandum on marriage CUL DAR210 8 2 Desmond amp Moore pp 260 61harvnb error no target CITEREFDesmondMoore help Darwin C R August 1838 Notebook D Transmutation of species CUL DAR123 pp 36 37 Retrieved 3 May 2009 Desmond amp Moore pp 262 63harvnb error no target CITEREFDesmondMoore help Desmond amp Moore pp 264 68harvnb error no target CITEREFDesmondMoore help Barrett P H 1974 Early writings of Charles Darwin Gruber H E Darwin on man A psychological study of scientific creativity together with Darwin s early and unpublished notebooks Transcribed and annotated by Paul H Barrett commentary by Howard E Gruber Foreword by Jean Piaget London Wildwood House p 394 Retrieved 3 May 2009 An Essay on the Principle of Population 6th edition 1826 Desmond amp Moore 1991 pp 264 65 a b Charles Darwin gentleman naturalist A biographical sketch by John van Wyhe 2006 Huxley Thomas 1897 Evolution and Ethics and Other Essays D Appleton and Company New York Section IV Capital The Mother of Labour pp 162 63 Darwin transmutation notebook D pp 134e 135e Retrieved 10 September 2022 Desmond amp Moore 1991 p 265 Darwin 1958 p 120 Letter 441 Wedgwood Emma Darwin Emma to Darwin C R Darwin Correspondence Project 21 22 November 1838 Retrieved 1 February 2016 Browne 1995 pp 396 97 Desmond amp Moore 1991 pp 270 71 Letter 444 Wedgwood Emma Darwin Emma to Darwin C R Darwin Correspondence Project 25 November 1838 Retrieved 5 February 2016 Darwin transmutation notebook E p 71 Retrieved 17 March 2009 Darwin transmutation notebook E p 75 Retrieved 17 March 2009 Babbage 1838 pp 225 26harvnb error no target CITEREFBabbage1838 help Darwin C R Notebook E Transmutation of species 1838 1839 CUL DAR124 p 59 Retrieved 13 May 2009 James Lennox 2004 Darwinism Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Retrieved 23 May 2009 Desmond amp Moore 1991 p 274 Letter 448 Darwin C R to Wedgwood Emma Darwin Emma 30 Nov 1838 Darwin Correspondence Project Retrieved 16 June 2010 Letter 447 Wedgwood Emma Darwin Emma to Darwin C R 30 Nov 1838 Darwin Correspondence Project Retrieved 16 June 2010 Letter 449 Wedgwood Emma Darwin Emma to Darwin C R 3 Dec 1838 Darwin Correspondence Project Retrieved 16 June 2010 Desmond amp Moore 1991 pp 274 75 Letter 460 Wedgwood Emma Darwin Emma to Darwin C R 23 Dec 1838 Darwin Correspondence Project Retrieved 16 June 2010 Letter 465 Wedgwood Emma Darwin Emma to Darwin C R 30 Dec 1838 Darwin Correspondence Project Retrieved 16 June 2010 Letter 463 Darwin C R to Wedgwood Emma Darwin Emma 29 Dec 1838 Darwin Correspondence Project Retrieved 15 June 2010 Litchfield H E Recollection of Darwin on Macaw cottage CUL DAR112 B99Litchfield 1915 p 18 Letter 464 Wedgwood Emma Darwin Emma to Darwin C R 29 Dec 1838 Darwin Correspondence Project Retrieved 16 June 2010 Letter 466 Darwin C R to Wedgwood Emma Darwin Emma 31 Dec 1838 1 Jan 1839 Darwin Correspondence Project Retrieved 16 June 2010 References EditNote that this article is largely based on Desmond and Moore s book with commentary summarised in other words and quotations or extracts from quotations repeated verbatim Bowler Peter J 1996 Charles Darwin the man and his influence Cambridge England New York NY USA Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 56668 1 Browne E Janet 1995 Charles Darwin vol 1 Voyaging London Jonathan Cape ISBN 978 1 84413 314 7 Browne E Janet 2002 Charles Darwin vol 2 The Power of Place London Jonathan Cape ISBN 978 0 7126 6837 8 Darwin Charles 1835 Extracts from letters to Professor Henslow Cambridge privately printed retrieved 1 November 2008 Darwin Charles 1837 Notebook B Transmutation of species 1837 1838 Darwin Online CUL DAR121 retrieved 20 December 2008 Darwin C R 1837a Observations of proofs of recent elevation on the coast of Chili made during the survey of His Majesty s Ship Beagle commanded by Capt FitzRoy R N Read 4 January Proceedings of the Geological Society of London no 2 pp 446 49 retrieved 23 January 2008 Darwin C R 1837b A sketch of the deposits containing extinct Mammalia in the neighbourhood of the Plata Read 3 May Proceedings of the Geological Society of London no 2 pp 542 44 retrieved 23 January 2008 Darwin C R 1837c On certain areas of elevation and subsidence in the Pacific and Indian oceans as deduced from the study of coral formations Read 31 May Proceedings of the Geological Society of London no 2 pp 552 54 retrieved 23 January 2008 Darwin Charles 1838 Notebook C Transmutation of species Darwin Online CUL DAR122 retrieved 5 August 2016 Darwin Charles 1838a Notebook D Transmutation of species Darwin Online CUL DAR123 retrieved 5 August 2016 Darwin Charles 1838b Notebook E Transmutation of species 1838 1839 Darwin Online CUL DAR124 retrieved 5 August 2016 Darwin Charles 1838c Notebook M Metaphysics on morals amp expression Darwin Online CUL DAR125 retrieved 5 August 2016 Darwin Charles 1838d Notebook N Metaphysics amp expression 1838 1839 Darwin Online CUL DAR126 retrieved 5 August 2016 Darwin Charles 1839 Narrative of the surveying voyages of His Majesty s Ships Adventure and Beagle between the years 1826 and 1836 describing their examination of the southern shores of South America and the Beagle s circumnavigation of the globe Journal and remarks 1832 1836 vol III London Henry Colburn retrieved 24 October 2008 Darwin Charles 1859 On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection or the Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life 1st ed London John Murray retrieved 24 October 2008 Darwin Charles 1887 Darwin Francis ed The life and letters of Charles Darwin including an autobiographical chapter London John Murray retrieved 4 November 2008 Darwin Charles 1958 Barlow Nora ed The Autobiography of Charles Darwin 1809 1882 With the original omissions restored Edited and with appendix and notes by his granddaughter Nora Barlow London Collins retrieved 4 November 2008 Darwin Charles 2006 Journal in van Wyhe John ed Darwin s personal Journal 1809 1881 Darwin Online CUL DAR158 1 76 retrieved 20 December 2008 Desmond Adrian J 1989 The Politics of Evolution Morphology Medicine and Reform in Radical London University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 14374 3 Desmond Adrian Moore James 1991 Darwin London Michael Joseph Penguin Group ISBN 978 0 7181 3430 3 Eldredge Niles 2006 Confessions of a Darwinist The Virginia Quarterly Review The Virginia Quarterly Review no Spring 2006 pp 32 53 retrieved 4 November 2008 FitzRoy Robert 1839 Voyages of the Adventure and Beagle Volume II London Henry Colburn retrieved 4 November 2008 Herbert Sandra 1980 The red notebook of Charles Darwin Bulletin of the British Museum Natural History Historical Series no 7 24 April pp 1 164 retrieved 11 January 2009 Keynes Richard 2001 Charles Darwin s Beagle Diary Cambridge University Press retrieved 18 August 2019 Litchfield Henrietta Emma 1915 Emma Darwin A century of family letters 1792 1896 edited by her daughter Henrietta Litchfield London John Murray retrieved 15 June 2010 Moore James 2005 Darwin A Devil s Chaplain PDF American Public Media archived from the original PDF on 27 February 2008 retrieved 22 November 2008 Moore James 2006 Evolution and Wonder Understanding Charles Darwin Speaking of Faith Radio Program American Public Media archived from the original on 22 December 2008 retrieved 22 November 2008 Owen Richard 1840 Darwin C R ed Fossil Mammalia Part 1 The zoology of the voyage of H M S Beagle London Smith Elder and Co Sulloway Frank J 1982 Darwin and His Finches The Evolution of a Legend PDF Journal of the History of Biology vol 15 no 1 pp 1 53 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 458 3975 doi 10 1007 BF00132004 S2CID 17161535 van Wyhe John 27 March 2007 Mind the gap Did Darwin avoid publishing his theory for many years Notes and Records of the Royal Society 61 2 177 205 doi 10 1098 rsnr 2006 0171 S2CID 202574857 retrieved 7 February 2008 van Wyhe John 2008 Charles Darwin gentleman naturalist A biographical sketch Darwin Online retrieved 17 November 2008 van Wyhe John 2008b Darwin The Story of the Man and His Theories of Evolution London Andre Deutsch Ltd published 1 September 2008 ISBN 978 0 233 00251 4 von Sydow Momme 2005 Darwin A Christian Undermining Christianity On Self Undermining Dynamics of Ideas Between Belief and Science PDF in Knight David M Eddy Matthew D eds Science and Beliefs From Natural Philosophy to Natural Science 1700 1900 Burlington Ashgate pp 141 56 ISBN 978 0 7546 3996 1 retrieved 16 December 2008External links EditThe Complete Works of Charles Darwin Online Darwin Online Darwin s publications private papers and bibliography supplementary works including biographies obituaries and reviews Free to use includes items not in public domain Works by Charles Darwin at Project Gutenberg public domain Darwin Correspondence Project Text and notes for most of his letters Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Inception of Darwin 27s theory amp oldid 1132438725, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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