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Reactions to On the Origin of Species

The immediate reactions, from November 1859 to April 1861, to On the Origin of Species, the book in which Charles Darwin described evolution by natural selection, included international debate, though the heat of controversy was less than that over earlier works such as Vestiges of Creation. Darwin monitored the debate closely, cheering on Thomas Henry Huxley's battles with Richard Owen to remove clerical domination of the scientific establishment. While Darwin's illness kept him away from the public debates, he read eagerly about them and mustered support through correspondence.

Religious views were mixed, with the Church of England's scientific establishment reacting against the book, while liberal Anglicans strongly supported Darwin's natural selection as an instrument of God's design. Religious controversy was soon diverted by the publication of Essays and Reviews and debate over the higher criticism.

The most famous confrontation took place at the public 1860 Oxford evolution debate during a meeting of the British Association for the Advancement of Science, when the Bishop of Oxford Samuel Wilberforce argued against Darwin's explanation. In the ensuing debate Joseph Hooker argued strongly in favor of Darwinian evolution. Thomas Huxley's support of evolution was so intense that the media and public nicknamed him "Darwin's bulldog". Huxley became the fiercest defender of the evolutionary theory on the Victorian stage. Both sides came away feeling victorious, but Huxley went on to depict the debate as pivotal in a struggle between religion and science and used Darwinism to campaign against the authority of the clergy in education, as well as daringly advocating the "Ape Origin of Man".

Background edit

Darwin's ideas developed rapidly after returning from the Voyage of the Beagle in 1836. By December 1838, he had developed the basic principles of his theory. At that time, ideas about the transmutation of species were associated with radical political ideas of the Age of Enlightenment and the French Revolution, and some people, such as Darwin's old instructor Robert Edmond Grant had been ridiculed and marginalized by members of the scientific establishment such as Richard Owen for advocating them.[1] Darwin was conscious of the need to answer all likely objections before publishing. While he continued with research, he had an immense amount of work in hand analyzing and publishing findings from the Beagle expedition, and was repeatedly delayed by illness.

The Natural history, especially in Britain, at that time was dominated by proponents of natural theology, who saw their science as revealing God's plan, and many of whom, like Darwin's professors Adam Sedgwick and John Stevens Henslow, were ordained clergy in the Church of England.[2] Darwin found three close allies. The eminent geologist Charles Lyell, whose books had influenced the young Darwin during the Voyage of the Beagle, befriended Darwin who he saw as a supporter of his ideas of gradual geological processes with continuing divine Creation of species. By the 1840s Darwin became friends with the young botanist Joseph Dalton Hooker who had followed his father into the science, and after going on a survey voyage used his contacts to eventually find a position.[3] In the 1850s Darwin met Thomas Huxley, an ambitious naturalist who had returned from a long survey trip but lacked the family wealth or contacts to find a career[4] and who joined the progressive group around Herbert Spencer looking to make science a profession, freed from the clerics.

This was also a time of intense conflict over religious morality in England, where evangelicalism led to increasing professionalism of clerics who had previously been expected to act as country gentlemen with wide interests, but now were seriously focussed on expanded religious duties. A new orthodoxy proclaimed the virtues of truth but also inculcated beliefs that the Bible should be read literally and that religious doubt was in itself sinful so should not be discussed. Science was also becoming professional and a series of discoveries cast doubt on literal interpretations of the Bible and the honesty of those denying the findings. A series of crises erupted with fierce debate and criticism over issues such as George Combe's The Constitution of Man and the anonymous Vestiges of the Natural History of Creation which converted vast popular audiences to the belief that natural laws controlled the development of nature and society. German higher criticism questioned the Bible as a historical document in contrast to the evangelical creed that every word was divinely inspired. Dissident clergymen even began questioning accepted premises of Christian morality, and Benjamin Jowett's 1855 commentary on St. Paul brought a storm of controversy.[5]

By September 1854 Darwin's other books reached a stage where he was able to turn his attention fully to Species, and from this point he was working to publish his theory. On 18 June 1858 he received a parcel from Alfred Russel Wallace enclosing about twenty pages describing an evolutionary mechanism that was similar to Darwin's own theory. Darwin put matters in the hands of his friends Lyell and Hooker, who agreed on a joint presentation to the Linnean Society on 1 July 1858. Their papers were entitled, collectively, On the Tendency of Species to form Varieties; and on the Perpetuation of Varieties and Species by Natural Means of Selection.

 
Darwin, as photographed in 1860

Publication of The Origin of Species edit

Darwin now worked on an "abstract" trimmed from his Natural Selection manuscript. The publisher John Murray agreed the title as On the Origin of Species through Natural Selection and the book went on sale to the trade on 22 November 1859. The stock of 1,250 copies was oversubscribed, and Darwin, still at Ilkley spa town, began corrections for a second edition. The novelist Charles Kingsley, a Christian socialist country rector, sent him a letter of praise: "It awes me...if you be right I must give up much that I have believed", it was "just as noble a conception of Deity, to believe that He created primal forms capable of self development... as to believe that He required a fresh act of intervention to supply the lacunas which he himself had made."[6] Darwin added these lines to the last chapter, with attribution to "a celebrated author and divine".

First reviews edit

The reviewers were less encouraging. Four days before publication, a review in the authoritative Athenaeum[7][8] (by John Leifchild, published anonymously, as was the custom at that time) was quick to pick out the unstated implications of "men from monkeys" already controversial from Vestiges, saw snubs to theologians, summing up Darwin's "creed" as man "was born yesterday – he will perish tomorrow" and concluded that "The work deserves attention, and will, we have no doubt, meet with it. Scientific naturalists will take up the author upon his own peculiar ground; and there will we imagine be a severe struggle for at least theoretical existence. Theologians will say—and they have a right to be heard—Why construct another elaborate theory to exclude Deity from renewed acts of creation? Why not at once admit that new species were introduced by the Creative energy of the Omnipotent? Why not accept direct interference, rather than evolutions of law, and needlessly indirect or remote action? Having introduced the author and his work, we must leave them to the mercies of the Divinity Hall, the College, the Lecture Room, and the Museum."[9] At Ilkley, Darwin raged "But the manner in which he drags in immortality, & sets the Priests at me, & leaves me to their mercies, is base. He would on no account burn me; but he will get the wood ready and tell the black beasts how to catch me."[10] Darwin sprained an ankle and his health worsened, as he wrote to friends it was "odious".[8]

By 9 December when Darwin left Ilkley to come home, he had been told that Murray was organising a second run of 3,000 copies.[11] Hooker had been "converted", Lyell was "absolutely gloating" and Huxley wrote "with such tremendous praise", advising that he was sharpening his "beak and claws" to disembowel "the curs who will bark and yelp".[12][13]

First response edit

Richard Owen had been the first to respond to the complimentary copies, courteously claiming that he had long believed that "existing influences" were responsible for the "ordained" birth of species.[14] Darwin now had long talks with him, and told Lyell that "Under garb of great civility, he was inclined to be most bitter & sneering against me. Yet I infer from several expressions, that at bottom he goes immense way with us." Owen was furious at being included among those defending immutability of species, and in effect said that the book offered the best explanation "ever published of the manner of formation of species", though he did not agree with it in all respects.[15] He still had the gravest doubts that transmutation would bestialise man. It appears that Darwin had assured Owen that he was looking at everything as resulting from designed laws, which Owen interpreted as showing a shared belief in "Creative Power".

Darwin had already made his views clearer to others, telling Lyell that if each step in evolution was providentially planned, the whole procedure would be a miracle and natural selection superfluous.[16] He had also sent a copy to John Herschel, and on 10 December he told Lyell of having "heard by round about channel that Herschel says my Book "is the law of higgledy-piggledy".– What this exactly means I do not know, but it is evidently very contemptuous.– If true this is great blow & discouragement."[15] Darwin subsequently corresponded with Herschel, and in January 1861 Herschel added a footnote to the draft of his Physical Geography which, while disparaging "the principle of arbitrary and casual variation and natural selection" as insufficient without "intelligent direction", said that "with some demur as to the genesis of man, we are far from disposed to repudiate the view taken of this mysterious subject in Mr. Darwin's book."[17]

Geological time edit

It was known that the geologic time scale was "incomprehensibly vast", if unquantifiable. From 1848 Darwin discussed data with Andrew Ramsay, who had said "it is vain to attempt to measure the duration of even small portions of geological epochs." A chapter of Lyell's Principles of Geology described the enormous amount of erosion involved in forming the Weald.[18] To demonstrate the time available for natural selection to operate, Darwin drew on Lyell's example and Ramsay's data in chapter 9 of On the Origin of Species to estimate that erosion of the Weald's layered dome of Lower Cretaceous rocks "must have required 306,662,400 years; or say three hundred million years."[19]

The "necessary corrections" Darwin made to his drafts for the second edition of the Origin were based on comments from others, particularly Lyell, and added a caveat suggesting a faster rate of erosion of the Weald:[20] "perhaps it would be safer to allow two or three inches per century, and this would reduce the number of years to one hundred and fifty or one hundred million years."[21][22] Copies of the second edition were advertised as ready on 24 December, in advance of official publication on 7 January 1860.[23]

The Saturday Review of 24 December 1859 strongly criticised the methodology of Darwin's calculations.[24] On 3 January 1860, Darwin wrote to Hooker about it: "Some of the remarks about the lapse of years are very good, & the Reviewer gives me some good & well deserved raps,—confound it I am sorry to confess the truth. But it does not at all concern main argument."[25] A day later, he said to Lyell "You saw I suppose Saturday Review: argument confined to Geology, but has given me some perfectly just & severe raps on knuckles."[26]

In the third edition published on 30 April 1861, Darwin cited the Saturday Review article as reason to remove his calculation altogether.[27][28]

Friendly reviews edit

The December 1859 review in the British Unitarian National Review was written by Darwin's old friend William Carpenter, who was clear that only a world of "order, continuity, and progress" befitted an Omnipotent Deity and that "any theological objection" to a species of slug or a breed of dog deriving from a previous one was "simply absurd" dogma.[29] He touched on human evolution, satisfied that the struggle for existence tended "inevitably... towards the progressive exaltation of the races engaged in it".

On Boxing Day (26 December) The Times carried an anonymous review.[30] The staff reviewer, "as innocent of any knowledge of science as a babe", gave the task to Huxley, leading Darwin to ask his friend how "did you influence Jupiter Olympus and make him give three and a half columns to pure science? The old fogies will think the world will come to an end." Darwin treasured the piece more than "a dozen reviews in common periodicals", but noted "Upon my life I am sorry for Owen... he will be so d—d savage, for credit given to any other man, I strongly suspect, is in his eyes so much credit robbed from him. Science is so narrow a field, it is clear there ought to be only one cock of the walk!".[31]

Hooker also wrote a favourable review, which appeared at the end of December in the Gardener's Chronicle and treated the theory as an extension of horticultural lore.[32]

Clerical concern, atheist enthusiasm edit

In his lofty position at the head of Natural History Collections at the British Museum, Owen received numerous complaints about the book. The Revd. Adam Sedgwick, geologist at the University of Cambridge who had taken Darwin on his first geology field trip, could not see the point in a world without providence. The missionary David Livingstone could see no struggle for existence on the African plains. Jeffries Wyman at Harvard saw no truth in chance variations.

The most enthusiastic response came from atheists, with Hewett Watson hailing Darwin as the "greatest revolutionist in natural history of this century".[33] The 68-year-old Robert Edmund Grant, who had shown him the study of invertebrates when Darwin was a student at the University of Edinburgh and who was still teaching Lamarckian evolution weekly at University College London, brought out a small book on classification dedicated to Darwin: "With one fell-sweep of the wand of truth, you have now scattered to the winds the pestilential vapours accumulated by 'species-mongers'."[34]

Widespread interest edit

In January 1860, Darwin told Lyell of a reported incident at Waterloo Bridge Station: "I never till to day realised that it was getting widely distributed; for in a letter from a lady today to Emma, she says she heard a man enquiring for it at Railway Station!!! at Waterloo Bridge; & the Bookseller said that he had none till new Edit. was out.— The Bookseller said he had not read it but had heard it was a very remarkable book!!!"[35]

Asa Gray in the United States edit

In December 1859 the botanist Asa Gray negotiated with a Boston publisher for publication of an authorised American version, however, he learnt that two New York publishing firms were already planning to exploit the absence of international copyright to print Origin.[36] Darwin wrote in January, "I never dreamed of my Book being so successful with general readers: I believe I should have laughed at the idea of sending the sheets to America." and asked Gray to keep any profits.[37] Gray managed to negotiate a 5 per cent royalty with Appleton's of New York,[38] who got their edition out in mid January, and the other two withdrew. In a May letter Darwin mentioned a print run of 2,500 copies, but it is not clear if this was the first printing alone as there were four that year.[39][40]

When sending his Historical preface and corrections for the American edition in February, Darwin thanked Asa Gray for his comments, as "a Review from a man, who is not an entire convert, if fair & moderately favourable, is in all respects the best kind of Review. About weak points I agree. The eye to this day gives me a cold shudder, but when I think of the fine known gradations, my reason tells me I ought to conquer the cold shudder."[41] In April he continued, "It is curious that I remember well time when the thought of the eye made me cold all over, but I have got over this stage of the complaint, & now small trifling particulars of structure often make me very uncomfortable. The sight of a feather in a peacock's tail, whenever I gaze at it, makes me sick!"[42] A month later Darwin emphasised that he was bewildered by the theological aspects and "had no intention to write atheistically, but could not see, as plainly as others do, & as I shd wish to do, evidence of design & beneficence on all sides of us. There seems to me too much misery in the world. I cannot persuade myself that a beneficent and omnipotent God would have designedly created the Ichneumonidae with the express intention of their feeding within the living bodies of caterpillars" – expressing his particular revulsion at the Ichneumonidae family of parasitic wasps that lay their eggs in the larvae and pupae of other insects so that their parasitoid young have a ready source of food. He therefore could not believe in the necessity of design, but rather than attributing the wonders of the universe to brute force was "inclined to look at everything as resulting from designed laws, with the details, whether good or bad, left to the working out of what we may call chance. Not that this notion at all satisfies me. I feel most deeply that the whole subject is too profound for the human intellect. A dog might as well speculate on the mind of Newton" – referring to Isaac Newton.[43]

Erasmus and Martineau edit

Darwin's brother Erasmus reported on 23 November that their cousin Henry Holland was reading the book and in "a dreadful state of indecision", sure that explaining the eye would be "utterly impossible", but after reading it "he hummed & hawed & perhaps it was partly conceivable". Erasmus himself thought it "the most interesting book I ever read",[44] and sent a copy to his old flame Miss Harriet Martineau who, at 58, was still reviewing from her home in the Lake District. Martineau sent her thanks, adding that she had previously praised "the quality & conduct of your brother's mind, but it is an unspeakable satisfaction to see here the full manifestation of its earnestness & simplicity, its sagacity, its industry, & the patient power by wh. it has collected such a mass of facts, to transmute them by such sagacious treatment into such portentious knowledge. I shd. much like to know how large a proportion of our scientific men believe he has found a sound road."[45]

Writing to her fellow Malthusian (and atheist) George Holyoake she enthused, "What a book it is! – overthrowing (if true) revealed Religion on the one hand, & Natural (as far as Final Causes & Design are concerned) on the other. The range & mass of knowledge take away one's breath." To Fanny Wedgwood she wrote, "I rather regret that C.D. went out of his way two or three times to speak of "The Creator" in the popular sense of the First Cause.... His subject is the 'Origin of Species' & not the origin of Organisation; & it seems a needless mischief to have opened the latter speculation at all – There now! I have delivered my mind."

Clerical reaction edit

The Revd. Adam Sedgwick had received his copy "with more pain than pleasure."[46] Without Creation showing divine love, "humanity, to my mind, would suffer a damage that might brutalise it, and sink the human race..." He indicated that unless Darwin accepted God's revelation in nature and scripture, Sedgwick would not meet Darwin in heaven, a sentiment that upset Emma. The Revd. John Stevens Henslow, the botany professor whose natural history course Charles had joined thirty years earlier, gave faint praise to the Origin as "a stumble in the right direction" but distanced himself from its conclusions, "a question past our finding out..."[47]

The Anglican establishment predominantly opposed Darwin. Palmerston, who became Prime Minister in June 1859, mooted Darwin's name to Queen Victoria as a candidate for the Honours List with the prospect of a knighthood. While Prince Albert supported the idea, after the publication of the Origin Queen Victoria's ecclesiastical advisers, including the Bishop of Oxford Samuel Wilberforce, dissented and the request was denied.[48] Some Anglicans were more in favour, and Huxley reported of Kingsley that "He is an excellent Darwinian to begin with, and told me a capital story of his reply to Lady Aylesbury who expressed astonishment at his favouring such a heresy – 'What can be more delightful to me Lady Aylesbury, than to know that your Ladyship & myself sprang from the same toad stool.' Whereby the frivolous old woman shut up, in doubt whether she was being chaffed or adored for her remark."

There was no official comment from the Vatican for several decades, but in 1860 a council of the German Catholic bishops pronounced that the belief that "man as regards his body, emerged finally from the spontaneous continuous change of imperfect nature to the more perfect, is clearly opposed to Sacred Scripture and to the Faith." This defined the range of official Catholic discussion of evolution, which has remained almost exclusively concerned with human evolution.[49]

Huxley and Owen edit

 
The combative Thomas Huxley demanded a fair hearing for Darwin's ideas.

On 10 February 1860 Huxley gave a lecture titled On Species and Races, and their Origin at the Royal Institution,[50] reviewing Darwin's theory with fancy pigeons on hand to demonstrate artificial selection, as well as using the occasion to confront the clergy with his aim of wresting science from ecclesiastical control. He referred to Galileo's persecution by the church, "the little Canutes of the hour enthroned in solemn state, bidding that great wave to stay, and threatening to check its beneficent progress." He hailed the Origin as heralding a "new Reformation" in a battle against "those who would silence and crush" science, and called on the public to cherish Science and "follow her methods faithfully and implicitly in their application to all branches of human thought," for the future of England.[51] To Darwin such rhetoric was "time wasted" and on reflection he thought the lecture "an entire failure which gave no just idea of natural selection,"[50] but by March he was listing those on "our side" as against the "outsiders." His close allies were Hooker and Huxley, and in August he called Huxley his "good and kind agent for the propagation of the Gospel – i.e. the devil's gospel."[52]

The position of Richard Owen was unknown: when emphasising to a Parliamentary committee the need for a new Natural History museum, he pointed out that "The whole intellectual world this year has been excited by a book on the origin of species; and what is the consequence? Visitors come to the British Museum, and they say, 'Let us see all these varieties of pigeons: where is the tumbler, where is the pouter?' and I am obliged with shame to say, I can show you none of them..." As to showing you the varieties of those species, or of any of those phenomena that would aid one in getting at that mystery of mysteries, the origin of species, our space does not permit; but surely there ought to be a space somewhere, and, if not in the British Museum, where is it to be obtained?"

 
Thomas Henry Huxley applied Darwins ideas to humans. This showed humans and apes had a common ancestor.

Huxley's April review in the Westminster Review included the first mention of the term "Darwinism" in the question, "What if the orbit of Darwinism should be a little too circular?"[53] Darwin thought it a "brilliant review."[54]

Overflowing the narrow bounds of purely scientific circles, the "species question" divides with Italy and the Volunteers the attention of general society. Everybody has read Mr. Darwin's book, or, at least, has given an opinion upon its merits or demerits; pietists, whether lay or ecclesiastic, decry it with the mild railing which sounds so charitable; bigots denounce it with ignorant invective; old ladies of both sexes consider it a decidedly dangerous book, and even savants, who have no better mud to throw, quote antiquated writers to show that its author is no better than an ape himself; while every philosophical thinker hails it as a veritable Whitworth gun in the armoury of liberalism; and all competent naturalists and physiologists, whatever their opinions as to the ultimate fate of the doctrines put forth, acknowledge that the work in which they are embodied is a solid contribution to knowledge and inaugurates a new epoch in natural history. – Thomas Huxley, 1860[53]

When Owen's own anonymous review of the Origin appeared in the April Edinburgh Review he praised himself and his own axiom of the continuous operation of the ordained becoming of living things, and showed his anger at what he saw as Darwin's caricature of the creationist position and ignoring Owen's pre-eminence. To him, new species appeared at birth, not through natural selection. As well as attacking Darwin's "disciples" Hooker and Huxley, he thought that the book symbolised the sort of "abuse of science to which a neighbouring nation, some seventy years since, owed its temporary degradation."[55] Darwin had Huxley and Hooker staying with him when he read it, and he wrote telling Lyell that it was "extremely malignant, clever & I fear will be very damaging. He is atrociously severe on Huxley's lecture, & very bitter against Hooker. So we three enjoyed it together: not that I really enjoyed it, for it made me uncomfortable for one night; but I have got quite over it today. It requires much study to appreciate all the bitter spite of many of the remarks against me; indeed I did not discover all myself.– It scandalously misrepresents many parts. .... It is painful to be hated in the intense degree with which Owen hates me."[54] He commented to Henslow that "Owen is indeed very spiteful. He misrepresents & alters what I say very unfairly. .... The Londoners says he is mad with envy because my book has been talked about: what a strange man to be envious of a naturalist like myself, immeasurably his inferior!"[56]

Geological time and Phillips edit

Darwin's had estimated that erosion of the Weald would take 300 million years, but in the second edition of On the Origin of Species published on 7 January 1860 he accepted that it would be safer to allow 150 million to 200 million years.[57]

Geologists knew the earth was ancient, but had felt unable to put realistic figures on the duration of past geological changes. Darwin's book provided a new impetus to quantifying geological time. His most prominent critic, John Phillips, had investigated how temperatures increased with depth in the 1830s, and was convinced that, contrary to Lyell and Darwin's uniformitarianism, the Earth was cooling over the long term. Between 1838 and 1855 he tried various ways of quantifying the timing of stratified deposits, without success.[58] On 17 February 1860, Phillips used his presidential address to the Geological Society of London to accuse Darwin of "abuse of arithmetic". He said 300 million years was an "inconceivable number" and that, depending on assumptions, erosion of the Weald could have taken anything from 12,000 years to at most 1,332,000 years, well below Darwin's estimate. When giving the May 1860 Rede Lecture, Phillips produced his own first published estimates of the duration of the whole stratigraphic record,[18] using rates of sedimentation to calculate it at around 96 million years.[59]

Natural persecution edit

Most reviewers wrote with great respect, deferring to Darwin's eminent position in science though finding it hard to understand how natural selection could work without a divine selector. There were hostile comments, at the start of May he commented to Lyell that he had "received in a Manchester Newspaper a rather a good squib, showing that I have proved 'might is right', & therefore that Napoleon is right & every cheating Tradesman is also right".[60] The Saturday Review reported that "The controversy excited by the appearance of Darwin's remarkable work on the Origin of Species has passed beyond the bounds of the study and lecture-room into the drawing-room and the public street."[61]

The older generation of Darwin's tutors were rather negative, and later in May he told his cousin Fox that "the attacks have been falling thick & heavy on my now case-hardened hide.— Sedgwick & Clarke opened regular battery on me lately at Cambridge Phil. Socy. & dear old Henslow defended me in grand style, saying that my investigations were perfectly legitimate."[62] While defending Darwin's honest motives and belief that "he was exalting & not debasing our views of a Creator, in attributing to him a power of imposing laws on the Organic World by which to do his work, as effectually as his laws imposed upon the inorganic had done it in the Mineral Kingdom", Henslow had not disguised his own opinion that "Darwin has pressed his hypothesis too far".[63]

In June, Karl Marx saw the book as a "bitter satire" that showed "a basis in natural science for class struggle in history", in which "Darwin recognizes among beasts and plants his English society".[64]

Darwin remarked to Lyell, "I must be a very bad explainer... Several Reviews, & several letters have shown me too clearly how little I am understood. I suppose natural selection was bad term; but to change it now, I think, would make confusion worse confounded. Nor can I think of better; Natural preservation would not imply a preservation of particular varieties & would seem a truism; & would not bring man's & nature's selection under one point of view. I can only hope by reiterated explanations finally to make matter clearer."[65] It was too illegible for Lyell, and Darwin later apologised "I am utterly ashamed & groan over my hand-writing. It was Natural Preservation. Natural persecution is what the author ought to suffer."[66]

Debate edit

Essays and Reviews edit

Around February 1860 liberal theologians entered the fray, when seven produced a manifesto titled Essays and Reviews. These Anglicans included Oxford professors, country clergymen, the headmaster of Rugby school and a layman. Their declaration that miracles were irrational stirred up unprecedented anger, drawing much of the fire away from Darwin. Essays sold 22,000 copies in two years, more than the Origin sold in twenty years, and sparked five years of increasingly polarised debate with books and pamphlets furiously contesting the issues.

The most scientific of the seven was the Reverend Baden Powell, who held the Savilian chair of geometry at the University of Oxford. Referring to "Mr Darwin's masterly volume" and restating his argument that God is a lawgiver, miracles break the lawful edicts issued at Creation, therefore belief in miracles is atheistic, he wrote that the book "must soon bring about an entire revolution in opinion in favour of the grand principle of the self-evolving powers of nature." He drew attacks, with Sedgwick accusing him of "greedily" adopting nonsense and Tory reviews saying he was joining "the infidel party". He would have been on the platform at the British Association debate, facing the bishop, but died of a heart attack on 11 June.

The British Association debate edit

The most famous confrontation took place at a meeting of the British Association for the Advancement of Science in Oxford on Saturday 30 June 1860. While there was no formal debate organised on the issue, Professor John William Draper of New York University was to talk on Darwin and social progress at a routine "Botany and Zoology" meeting. The new museum hall was crowded with clergy, undergraduates, Oxford dons and gentlewomen anticipating that Samuel Wilberforce, the Bishop of Oxford, would speak to repeat the savage trouncing he had given in 1847 to the Vestiges published anonymously by Robert Chambers. Owen lodged with Wilberforce the night before, but Wilberforce would have been well prepared as he had just reviewed the Origin for the Tory Quarterly for a fee of £60.[67] Huxley was not going to wait for the meeting, but met Chambers who accused him of "deserting them" and changed his mind. Darwin was taking treatment at Dr. Lane's new hydropathic establishment at Sudbrooke Park, Petersham, near Richmond in Surrey.

 
The debate was held in the Oxford University Museum of Natural History

From Hooker's account, Draper "droned on for an hour", then for half an hour "Soapy Sam" Wilberforce replied with the eloquence that had earned him his nickname. This time the climate of opinion had changed and the ensuing debate was more evenly matched, with Hooker being particularly successful in defence of Darwin's ideas. In response to what Huxley took as a jibe from Wilberforce as to whether it was on Huxley's grandfather's or grandmother's side that he was descended from an ape, Huxley made a reply which he later recalled as being that "[if asked] would I rather have a miserable ape for a grandfather or a man highly endowed by nature and possessed of great means and influence and yet who employs these faculties and that influence for the mere purpose of introducing ridicule into a grave scientific discussion I unhesitatingly affirm my preference for the ape". No verbatim record was taken: eyewitness accounts exist, and vary somewhat.[68][69][70]

Robert FitzRoy, who had been the captain of HMS Beagle during Darwin's voyage, was there to present a paper on storms. During the debate FitzRoy, seen by Hooker as "a grey haired Roman nosed elderly gentleman", stood in the centre of the audience and "lifting an immense Bible first with both and afterwards with one hand over his head, solemnly implored the audience to believe God rather than man". As he admitted that the Origin of Species had given him "acutest pain" the crowd shouted him down.

Hooker's "blood boiled, I felt myself a dastard; now I saw my advantage–I swore to myself I would smite that Amalekite Sam hip and thigh", (he was invited up to the platform and) "there and then I smacked him amid rounds of applause... proceeded to demonstrate... that he could never have read your book... wound up with a very few observations on the...old and new hypotheses... Sam was shut up... and the meeting was dissolved forthwith leaving you [Darwin] master of the field after 4 hours battle."[71]

Both sides came away claiming victory, with Hooker and Huxley each sending Darwin rather contradictory triumphant accounts. Supporters of Darwinism seized on this meeting as a sign that the idea of evolution could not be suppressed by authority, and would be defended vigorously by its advocates. Liberal clerics were also satisfied that literal belief in all aspects of the Bible was now questioned by science; they were sympathetic to some of the ideas in Essays and Reviews.[72][73] William Whewell wrote to his friend James David Forbes that "Perhaps the Bishop was not prudent to venture into a field where no eloquence can supersede the need for precise knowledge. The young naturalists declared themselves in favour of Darwin’s views which tendency I saw already at Leeds two years ago. I am sorry for it, for I reckon Darwin’s book to be an utterly unphilosophical one."[74]

 
1869 Caricature of Wilberforce. His hand washing gesture helped earn the Bishop of Oxford his nickname

Wilberforce's Quarterly review edit

In late July Darwin read Wilberforce's review in the Quarterly.[67] It used a 60-year-old parody from the Anti-Jacobin of the prose of Darwin's grandfather Erasmus, implying old revolutionary sympathies. It argued that if "transmutations were actually occurring" this would be seen in rapidly reproducing invertebrates, and since it isn't, why think that "the favourite varieties of turnips are tending to become men". Darwin pencilled "rubbish" in the margin. To the statement about classification that "all creation is the transcript in matter of ideas eternally existing in the mind of the Most High!!", Darwin scribbled "mere words". At the same time, Darwin was willing to grant that Wilberforce's review was clever: he wrote to Hooker that "it picks out with skill all the most conjectural parts, and brings forward well all the difficulties. It quizzes me quite splendidly by quoting the 'Anti-Jacobin' against my Grandfather."[75]

Wilberforce also attacked Essays and Reviews in the Quarterly Review,[76] and in a letter to The Times, signed by the Archbishop of Canterbury and 25 bishops, which threatened the theologians with the ecclesiastical courts.[77] Darwin quoted a proverb: "A bench of bishops is the devil's flower garden", and joined others including Lyell, though not Hooker and Huxley, in signing a counter-letter supporting Essays and Reviews for trying to "establish religious teachings on a firmer and broader foundation". Despite this alignment of pro-evolution scientists and Unitarians with liberal churchmen, two of the authors were indicted for heresy and lost their jobs by 1862.[77]

Geological time, Phillips and third edition edit

In October 1860, John Phillips published Life on the Earth, its origin and succession, reiterating points from his Rede Lecture and disputing Darwin's arguments.[78] He sent a copy to Darwin, who thanked him, though "sorry, but not surprised, to see that you are dead against me".[79]

On 20 November, Darwin told Lyell of his revisions for a third edition of the Origin, including removing his estimate of the time it took for the Weald to erode: "The confounded Wealden calculation, to be struck out. & a note to be inserted to effect that I am convinced of its inaccuracy from Review in Saturday R. & from Phillips, as I see in Table of Contents that he attacks it."[80] He later told Lyell that "Having burnt my own fingers so consumedly with the Wealden, I am fearful for you", and advised caution: "for Heaven-sake take care of your fingers; to burn them severely, as I have done, is very unpleasant."[81] The third edition, as published on 30 April 1861, stated "The computation of time required for the denudation of the Weald omitted. I have been convinced of its inaccuracy in several respects by an excellent article in the 'Saturday Review,' Dec. 24, 1859."[28]

Natural History Review edit

The Natural History Review was bought and refurbished by Huxley, Lubbock, Busk and other "plastically minded young men" – supporters of Darwin. The first issue in January 1861 carried Huxley's paper on man's relationship to apes, "showing up" Owen. Huxley cheekily sent a copy to Wilberforce.

Darwin at home edit

As the battles raged, Darwin returned home from the spa to proceed with experiments on chloroforming carnivorous sundew plants, looking over his Natural Selection manuscript and drafting two chapters on pigeon breeding that would eventually form part of The Variation of Animals and Plants Under Domestication.[27] He wrote to Asa Gray and used the example of fantail pigeons to argue against Gray's belief "that variation has been led along certain beneficial lines", with the implication of Creationism rather than Natural Selection.[82]

Over the winter he organised a third edition of the Origin, adding an introductory historical sketch. Asa Gray had published three supportive articles in the Atlantic Monthly. Darwin persuaded Gray to publish them as a pamphlet, and was delighted when Gray came up with the title of Natural Selection Not Inconsistent with Natural Theology. Darwin paid half the cost, imported 250 copies into Britain and as well as advertising it in periodicals and sending 100 copies out to scientists, reviewers, and theologians (including Wilberforce), he included in the Origin a recommendation for it, available to be purchased for 1s. 6d. from Trübner's in Paternoster Row.

The Huxleys became close family friends, frequently visiting Down House. When their 3-year-old son died of scarlet fever they were badly affected. Henrietta Huxley brought their three infants to Down in March 1861 where Emma helped to console her, while Huxley continued with his working-men's lectures at the Royal School of Mines, writing that "My working men stick with me wonderfully, the house fuller than ever, By next Friday evening they will all be convinced that they are monkeys."[83]

Arguments with Owen edit

Huxley's arguments with Owen continued in the Athenaeum so that each Saturday Darwin could read the latest ripostes. Owen tried to smear Huxley by portraying him as an "advocate of man's origins from a transmuted ape", and one of his contributions was titled "Ape-Origin of Man as Tested by the Brain". This backfired, as Huxley had already delighted Darwin by speculating on "pithecoid man" – ape-like man, and was glad of the invitation to publicly turn the anatomy of brain structure into a question of human ancestry. He was determined to indict Owen for perjury, promising "before I have done with that mendacious humbug I will nail him out, like a kite to a barn door, an example to all evil doers."[84] Darwin egged him on from Down, writing "Oh Lord what a thorn you must be in the poor dear man's side".[85]

Their campaign ran over two years and was devastatingly successful, with each "slaying" being followed by a recruiting drive for the Darwinian cause. The spite lingered. When Huxley joined the Zoological Society Council in 1861, Owen left, and in the following year Huxley moved to stop Owen from being elected to the Royal Society Council as "no body of gentlemen" should admit a member "guilty of wilful & deliberate falsehood."

Lyell was troubled both by Huxley's belligerence and by the question of ape ancestry, but got little sympathy from Darwin who teased him that "Our ancestor was an animal which breathed water, had a swim bladder, a great swimming tail, an imperfect skull, and undoubtedly was a hermaphrodite! Here is a pleasant genealogy for mankind."[86][87] Lyell began work on a book examining human origins.

Geological time: William Thomson (Lord Kelvin) edit

Like the geologist John Phillips, the physicist William Thomson (later ennobled as Baron Kelvin of Largs, thus becoming Lord Kelvin) had considered since the 1840s that the physics of thermodynamics required that the Earth was cooling from an initial molten state. This contradicted Lyell's uniformitarian concept of unchanging processes over deep geological time, which Darwin shared and had assumed would allow ample time for the slow process of natural selection.[58]

In June 1861 Thomson asked Phillips how geologists felt about Darwin's "prodigious durations for geological epochs". and mentioned his own preliminary calculation that the Sun was 20 million years old, with the Earth at most 200 to 1,000 million years old. Phillips discussed his own published view that stratified rocks went back 96 million years, and dismissed Darwin's original estimate that the Weald had taken 300 million years to erode. In September 1861 Thomson produced a paper "On the age of the Sun's heat" which estimated that the Sun was between 100 and 500 million years old,[88] and in 1862 he used assumptions on the rate of cooling from a molten condition to estimate the age of the Earth at 98 million years. The dispute continued for the rest of Darwin's life.[89]

Continued debate edit

 
A French caricature around 1878 shows a bearded Darwin breaking through hoops of "gullibility, superstitions, errors, and ignorance" held up by Émile Littré.

The reception of Darwin's ideas continued to arouse scientific and religious debates, and wide public interest. Satirical cartoonists seized on animal ancestry in relation to other topical issues, drawing on a long tradition of identifying animal traits in humans. In Britain mass circulation magazines were droll rather than cruel, and thus presented Darwin's theory in an unthreatening way. Due to illness, Darwin began growing a beard in 1862, and when he reappeared in public in 1866 with a bushy beard, caricatures centred on Darwin and his new look contributed to a trend in which all forms of evolutionism were identified with Darwinism.[90][91]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Larson 2004, pp. 44–45
  2. ^ Bowler 2003, p. 149
  3. ^ Desmond & Moore 1991, pp. 313–320, 325–326
  4. ^ Desmond & Moore 1991, pp. 403–404
  5. ^ Altholz 1976
  6. ^ , Darwin Correspondence Project, archived from the original on 29 June 2009
  7. ^ "LITERATURE". 19 November 1859.
  8. ^ a b Browne 2002, p. 87
  9. ^ Leifchild 1859
  10. ^ Letter 2542 – Darwin, C. R. to Hooker, J. D., 22 Nov 1859, Darwin Correspondence Project
  11. ^ Letter 2570 – Darwin, C. R. to Murray, John (b), 4 Dec (1859), Darwin Correspondence Project
  12. ^ Letter 2544 – Huxley, T. H. to Darwin, C. R., 23 Nov (1859), Darwin Correspondence Project
  13. ^ Darwin 1887, pp. 228–232
  14. ^ Letter 2526 – Owen, Richard to Darwin, C. R., 12 Nov (1859), Darwin Correspondence Project
  15. ^ a b Letter 2575 – Darwin, C. R. to Lyell, Charles, (10 Dec 1859), Darwin Correspondence Project
  16. ^ Letter 2507 – Darwin, C. R. to Lyell, Charles, 20 Oct (1859), Darwin Correspondence Project
  17. ^ Darwin & Seward 1903, pp. 190–191
    Darwin, Charles (23 May 1861). "Darwin, C. R. to Herschel, J. F. W." Darwin Correspondence Project. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Library. Letter 3154. Retrieved 28 January 2016.
  18. ^ a b Herbert 2005, pp. 350–351.
  19. ^ Darwin & Costa 2009, pp. 284–287.
  20. ^ Burchfield 1974, pp. 303–304.
  21. ^ Darwin & Costa 2009, p. 287.
  22. ^ Darwin 1860, p. 287.
  23. ^ Freeman 1977a.
  24. ^ Anon (24 December 1859) [Review of] On the origin of species, Saturday Review, pp. 775–776.
  25. ^ "Letter no. 2635; Darwin, C.R. to Hooker, J.D." Darwin Correspondence Project. 3 January 1860. Retrieved 1 May 2017.
  26. ^ "Letter no. 2637; Darwin, C.R. to Lyell, C". Darwin Correspondence Project. 4 January 1860. Retrieved 1 May 2017.
  27. ^ a b Charles Darwin's journal for 1860, Darwin Online
  28. ^ a b Darwin 1861, p. xii
  29. ^ Carpenter 1859
  30. ^ Huxley 1859
  31. ^ Letter 2611 – Darwin, C. R. to Huxley, T. H., 28 Dec (1859), Darwin Correspondence Project
  32. ^ Hooker 1859
  33. ^ Letter 2540 – Watson, H. C. to Darwin, C. R., 21 Nov (1859), Darwin Correspondence Project
  34. ^ Letter 3150 – Grant, R. E. to Darwin, C. R., 16 May 1861, Darwin Correspondence Project
  35. ^ Letter 2650 – Darwin, C. R. to Lyell, Charles, 14 Jan (1860), Darwin Correspondence Project
  36. ^ , Darwin Correspondence Project, archived from the original on 13 February 2009, retrieved 6 December 2008
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  42. ^ Letter 2743 – Darwin, C. R. to Gray, Asa, 3 Apr (1860), Darwin Correspondence Project, retrieved 5 December 2008
  43. ^ Letter 2814 – Darwin, C. R. to Gray, Asa, 22 May (1860), Darwin Correspondence Project
  44. ^ "Letter no. 2545; Darwin, E.A., to Darwin, C.R." Darwin Correspondence Project. 23 November 1859. Retrieved 3 May 2017.
  45. ^ Spelling and abbreviations as Desmond & Moore 1991, p. 486.
  46. ^ Letter 2548 – Sedgwick, Adam to Darwin, C. R., 24 Nov 1859, Darwin Correspondence Project
  47. ^ Henslow 1861
  48. ^ Desmond & Moore 1991, p. 488.
  49. ^ Harrison, Brian W., Early Vatican Responses to Evolutionist Theology, Living Tradition, Organ of the Roman Theological Forum, May 2001 – quotation from here. See also: Artigas, Mariano; Glick, Thomas F., Martínez, Rafael A.; Negotiating Darwin: the Vatican confronts evolution, 1877–1902, JHU Press, 2006, ISBN 0-8018-8389-X, 9780801883897, Google books
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  51. ^ Charles Blinderman; David Joyce (1998), The Huxley File § 4 Darwin's Bulldog, Clark University, retrieved 22 March 2009
    Thomas Henry Huxley, On Species and Races, and Their Origin (1860), retrieved 22 March 2009
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    Letter 2893 – Darwin, C. R. to Huxley, T. H., 8 Aug (1860), Darwin Correspondence Project, retrieved 14 August 2009
  53. ^ a b Huxley 1860
  54. ^ a b Letter 2754 – Darwin, C. R. to Lyell, Charles, 10 Apr (1860), Darwin Correspondence Project, retrieved 14 August 2009
  55. ^ Owen 1860
  56. ^ Letter 2791 – Darwin, C. R. to Henslow, J. S., 8 May (1860), Darwin Correspondence Project, retrieved 14 August 2009
  57. ^ Darwin & Costa 2009, p. 286.
  58. ^ a b Morrell 2001, pp. 87–88.
  59. ^ Morrell 2001, p. 88.
  60. ^ "Letter 2782 – Darwin, C. R. to Lyell, Charles, 4 May (1860)". Darwin Correspondence Project. Retrieved 17 February 2011.
  61. ^ Anon (5 May 1860), "Professor Owen on the Origin of Species", The Saturday Review, London, p. 579.
  62. ^ Letter 2809 – Darwin, C. R. to Fox, W. D., 18 May (1860), Darwin Correspondence Project, retrieved 7 December 2008
  63. ^ Letter 2794 – Henslow, J. S. to Hooker, J. D., 10 May 1860, Darwin Correspondence Project, retrieved 7 December 2008
  64. ^ Letter from Karl Marx to Engels dated 18 June 1862 cited in Browne (2002, pp. 187–188).
  65. ^ Letter 2822 – Darwin, C. R. to Lyell, Charles, 6 June (1860), Darwin Correspondence Project, retrieved 6 December 2008
  66. ^ Letter 2935 – Darwin, C. R. to Lyell, Charles, 3 Oct (1860), Darwin Correaspondence Project, retrieved 6 December 2008
  67. ^ a b Wilberforce 1860
  68. ^ Jenson, J. Vernon 1991. Thomas Henry Huxley: communicating for science. U. of Delaware Press, Newark. [Chapter 3 is an excellent survey, and its notes gives references to all the eyewitness accounts except Newton]
  69. ^ Wollaston 1921, pp. 118–120
  70. ^ Lucas 1979
  71. ^ Letter 2852 – Hooker, J. D. to Darwin, C. R., 2 July (1860), Darwin Correspondence Project
  72. ^ Jenson, J. Vernon 1991. Thomas Henry Huxley: communicating for science. U. of Delaware Press, Newark.
  73. ^ See also: Alfred Newton#Reception of the Origin of Species and Thomas Henry Huxley#Debate with Wilberforce
  74. ^ James A. Secord (20 September 2003). Victorian Sensation: The Extraordinary Publication, Reception, and Secret Authorship of Vestiges of the Natural History of Creation. University of Chicago Press. p. 514. ISBN 978-0-226-15825-9.,
    William Whewell Quotes - 38 Science Quotes - Dictionary of Science Quotations and Scientist Quotes, Letter to James D, Forbes (24 Jul 1860)
  75. ^ Darwin 1887, pp. 324–325, Vol. 2
  76. ^ Wilberforce 1861
  77. ^ a b Desmond & Moore 1991, pp. 500–501
  78. ^ Phillips, John (October 1860). Life on the Earth, its origin and succession. p. 130.
  79. ^ "Letter no. 2983: Darwin, C. R. to Phillips, John". Darwin Correspondence Project. 14 November 1860. Retrieved 25 April 2017.
  80. ^ "Letter no. 2989: Darwin, C. R. to Lyell, Charles". Darwin Correspondence Project. 20 November 1860. Retrieved 25 April 2017.
  81. ^ "Letter no. 2997: Darwin, C. R. to Lyell, Charles". Darwin Correspondence Project. 25 November 1860. Retrieved 25 April 2017.
  82. ^ Letter 2998 – Darwin, C. R. to Gray, Asa, 26 Nov (1860), Darwin Correspondence Project
  83. ^ Huxley 1903, p. 276, Vol. 1. Page 190 in the first edition.
  84. ^ Desmond & Moore 1991, p. 504
  85. ^ Letter 3107 – Darwin, C. R. to Huxley, T. H., 1 Apr (1861), Darwin Correspondence Project
  86. ^ Desmond & Moore 1991, p. 505
  87. ^ Letter 2647 – Darwin, C. R. to Lyell, Charles, 10 Jan (1860), Darwin Correspondence Project, retrieved 13 April 2009
  88. ^ Morrell 2001, pp. 88–89.
  89. ^ Thomson, William. (1864). "On the secular cooling of the earth", read 28 April 1862. Transactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh, 23, 157–170.
  90. ^ Browne 2002, pp. 373–379
  91. ^ Freeman 2007, p. 76

Bibliography edit

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  • Bowler, Peter J. (2003), Evolution: The History of an Idea (3rd ed.), University of California Press, ISBN 0-520-23693-9
  • Browne, E. Janet (2002), Charles Darwin: vol. 2 The Power of Place, London: Jonathan Cape, ISBN 0-7126-6837-3
  • Burchfield, Joe D. (1974). "Darwin and the Dilemma of Geological Time". Isis. University of Chicago Press. 65 (3): 301–321. doi:10.1086/351300. S2CID 55390686. pdf
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Further reading edit

  • Darwin, Charles (1837–1838), Notebook B: [Transmutation of species], Darwin Online, CUL-DAR121, retrieved 20 December 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 (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
  • Freeman, R.B. (1977), The Works of Charles Darwin: An Annotated Bibliographical Handlist (2nd ed.), Folkestone, Kent, England: Wm Dawson & Sons, retrieved 15 December 2006
  • Huxley, Thomas H. (1863), Six Lectures to Working Men "On Our Knowledge of the Causes of the Phenomena of Organic Nature" (Republished in Volume II of his Collected Essays, Darwiniana), retrieved 15 December 2006

External links edit

  • The Complete Works of Charles Darwin Online – Darwin Online; Darwin's publications, private papers and bibliography, supplementary works including biographies, obituaries and reviews. For a comprehensive set of reviews of On the Origin of Species see Reviews & Responses to Darwin.
  • Works by Charles Darwin at Project Gutenberg
  • Darwin Correspondence Project Text and notes for most of his letters.
  • Charles Darwin in the British horticultural press - Occasional Papers from RHS Lindley Library, volume 3 July 2010

reactions, origin, species, immediate, reactions, from, november, 1859, april, 1861, origin, species, book, which, charles, darwin, described, evolution, natural, selection, included, international, debate, though, heat, controversy, less, than, that, over, ea. The immediate reactions from November 1859 to April 1861 to On the Origin of Species the book in which Charles Darwin described evolution by natural selection included international debate though the heat of controversy was less than that over earlier works such as Vestiges of Creation Darwin monitored the debate closely cheering on Thomas Henry Huxley s battles with Richard Owen to remove clerical domination of the scientific establishment While Darwin s illness kept him away from the public debates he read eagerly about them and mustered support through correspondence Religious views were mixed with the Church of England s scientific establishment reacting against the book while liberal Anglicans strongly supported Darwin s natural selection as an instrument of God s design Religious controversy was soon diverted by the publication of Essays and Reviews and debate over the higher criticism The most famous confrontation took place at the public 1860 Oxford evolution debate during a meeting of the British Association for the Advancement of Science when the Bishop of Oxford Samuel Wilberforce argued against Darwin s explanation In the ensuing debate Joseph Hooker argued strongly in favor of Darwinian evolution Thomas Huxley s support of evolution was so intense that the media and public nicknamed him Darwin s bulldog Huxley became the fiercest defender of the evolutionary theory on the Victorian stage Both sides came away feeling victorious but Huxley went on to depict the debate as pivotal in a struggle between religion and science and used Darwinism to campaign against the authority of the clergy in education as well as daringly advocating the Ape Origin of Man Contents 1 Background 1 1 Publication of The Origin of Species 2 First reviews 2 1 First response 2 2 Geological time 2 3 Friendly reviews 2 4 Clerical concern atheist enthusiasm 3 Widespread interest 3 1 Asa Gray in the United States 3 2 Erasmus and Martineau 3 3 Clerical reaction 3 4 Huxley and Owen 3 5 Geological time and Phillips 3 6 Natural persecution 4 Debate 4 1 Essays and Reviews 4 2 The British Association debate 4 3 Wilberforce s Quarterly review 4 4 Geological time Phillips and third edition 4 5 Natural History Review 5 Darwin at home 5 1 Arguments with Owen 5 2 Geological time William Thomson Lord Kelvin 6 Continued debate 7 See also 8 References 9 Bibliography 10 Further reading 11 External linksBackground editDarwin s ideas developed rapidly after returning from the Voyage of the Beagle in 1836 By December 1838 he had developed the basic principles of his theory At that time ideas about the transmutation of species were associated with radical political ideas of the Age of Enlightenment and the French Revolution and some people such as Darwin s old instructor Robert Edmond Grant had been ridiculed and marginalized by members of the scientific establishment such as Richard Owen for advocating them 1 Darwin was conscious of the need to answer all likely objections before publishing While he continued with research he had an immense amount of work in hand analyzing and publishing findings from the Beagle expedition and was repeatedly delayed by illness The Natural history especially in Britain at that time was dominated by proponents of natural theology who saw their science as revealing God s plan and many of whom like Darwin s professors Adam Sedgwick and John Stevens Henslow were ordained clergy in the Church of England 2 Darwin found three close allies The eminent geologist Charles Lyell whose books had influenced the young Darwin during the Voyage of the Beagle befriended Darwin who he saw as a supporter of his ideas of gradual geological processes with continuing divine Creation of species By the 1840s Darwin became friends with the young botanist Joseph Dalton Hooker who had followed his father into the science and after going on a survey voyage used his contacts to eventually find a position 3 In the 1850s Darwin met Thomas Huxley an ambitious naturalist who had returned from a long survey trip but lacked the family wealth or contacts to find a career 4 and who joined the progressive group around Herbert Spencer looking to make science a profession freed from the clerics This was also a time of intense conflict over religious morality in England where evangelicalism led to increasing professionalism of clerics who had previously been expected to act as country gentlemen with wide interests but now were seriously focussed on expanded religious duties A new orthodoxy proclaimed the virtues of truth but also inculcated beliefs that the Bible should be read literally and that religious doubt was in itself sinful so should not be discussed Science was also becoming professional and a series of discoveries cast doubt on literal interpretations of the Bible and the honesty of those denying the findings A series of crises erupted with fierce debate and criticism over issues such as George Combe s The Constitution of Man and the anonymous Vestiges of the Natural History of Creation which converted vast popular audiences to the belief that natural laws controlled the development of nature and society German higher criticism questioned the Bible as a historical document in contrast to the evangelical creed that every word was divinely inspired Dissident clergymen even began questioning accepted premises of Christian morality and Benjamin Jowett s 1855 commentary on St Paul brought a storm of controversy 5 By September 1854 Darwin s other books reached a stage where he was able to turn his attention fully to Species and from this point he was working to publish his theory On 18 June 1858 he received a parcel from Alfred Russel Wallace enclosing about twenty pages describing an evolutionary mechanism that was similar to Darwin s own theory Darwin put matters in the hands of his friends Lyell and Hooker who agreed on a joint presentation to the Linnean Society on 1 July 1858 Their papers were entitled collectively On the Tendency of Species to form Varieties and on the Perpetuation of Varieties and Species by Natural Means of Selection nbsp Darwin as photographed in 1860Publication of The Origin of Species edit See also Publication of Darwin s theory Darwin now worked on an abstract trimmed from his Natural Selection manuscript The publisher John Murray agreed the title as On the Origin of Species through Natural Selection and the book went on sale to the trade on 22 November 1859 The stock of 1 250 copies was oversubscribed and Darwin still at Ilkley spa town began corrections for a second edition The novelist Charles Kingsley a Christian socialist country rector sent him a letter of praise It awes me if you be right I must give up much that I have believed it was just as noble a conception of Deity to believe that He created primal forms capable of self development as to believe that He required a fresh act of intervention to supply the lacunas which he himself had made 6 Darwin added these lines to the last chapter with attribution to a celebrated author and divine First reviews editThe reviewers were less encouraging Four days before publication a review in the authoritative Athenaeum 7 8 by John Leifchild published anonymously as was the custom at that time was quick to pick out the unstated implications of men from monkeys already controversial from Vestiges saw snubs to theologians summing up Darwin s creed as man was born yesterday he will perish tomorrow and concluded that The work deserves attention and will we have no doubt meet with it Scientific naturalists will take up the author upon his own peculiar ground and there will we imagine be a severe struggle for at least theoretical existence Theologians will say and they have a right to be heard Why construct another elaborate theory to exclude Deity from renewed acts of creation Why not at once admit that new species were introduced by the Creative energy of the Omnipotent Why not accept direct interference rather than evolutions of law and needlessly indirect or remote action Having introduced the author and his work we must leave them to the mercies of the Divinity Hall the College the Lecture Room and the Museum 9 At Ilkley Darwin raged But the manner in which he drags in immortality amp sets the Priests at me amp leaves me to their mercies is base He would on no account burn me but he will get the wood ready and tell the black beasts how to catch me 10 Darwin sprained an ankle and his health worsened as he wrote to friends it was odious 8 By 9 December when Darwin left Ilkley to come home he had been told that Murray was organising a second run of 3 000 copies 11 Hooker had been converted Lyell was absolutely gloating and Huxley wrote with such tremendous praise advising that he was sharpening his beak and claws to disembowel the curs who will bark and yelp 12 13 First response edit Richard Owen had been the first to respond to the complimentary copies courteously claiming that he had long believed that existing influences were responsible for the ordained birth of species 14 Darwin now had long talks with him and told Lyell that Under garb of great civility he was inclined to be most bitter amp sneering against me Yet I infer from several expressions that at bottom he goes immense way with us Owen was furious at being included among those defending immutability of species and in effect said that the book offered the best explanation ever published of the manner of formation of species though he did not agree with it in all respects 15 He still had the gravest doubts that transmutation would bestialise man It appears that Darwin had assured Owen that he was looking at everything as resulting from designed laws which Owen interpreted as showing a shared belief in Creative Power Darwin had already made his views clearer to others telling Lyell that if each step in evolution was providentially planned the whole procedure would be a miracle and natural selection superfluous 16 He had also sent a copy to John Herschel and on 10 December he told Lyell of having heard by round about channel that Herschel says my Book is the law of higgledy piggledy What this exactly means I do not know but it is evidently very contemptuous If true this is great blow amp discouragement 15 Darwin subsequently corresponded with Herschel and in January 1861 Herschel added a footnote to the draft of his Physical Geography which while disparaging the principle of arbitrary and casual variation and natural selection as insufficient without intelligent direction said that with some demur as to the genesis of man we are far from disposed to repudiate the view taken of this mysterious subject in Mr Darwin s book 17 Geological time edit It was known that the geologic time scale was incomprehensibly vast if unquantifiable From 1848 Darwin discussed data with Andrew Ramsay who had said it is vain to attempt to measure the duration of even small portions of geological epochs A chapter of Lyell s Principles of Geology described the enormous amount of erosion involved in forming the Weald 18 To demonstrate the time available for natural selection to operate Darwin drew on Lyell s example and Ramsay s data in chapter 9 of On the Origin of Species to estimate that erosion of the Weald s layered dome of Lower Cretaceous rocks must have required 306 662 400 years or say three hundred million years 19 The necessary corrections Darwin made to his drafts for the second edition of the Origin were based on comments from others particularly Lyell and added a caveat suggesting a faster rate of erosion of the Weald 20 perhaps it would be safer to allow two or three inches per century and this would reduce the number of years to one hundred and fifty or one hundred million years 21 22 Copies of the second edition were advertised as ready on 24 December in advance of official publication on 7 January 1860 23 The Saturday Review of 24 December 1859 strongly criticised the methodology of Darwin s calculations 24 On 3 January 1860 Darwin wrote to Hooker about it Some of the remarks about the lapse of years are very good amp the Reviewer gives me some good amp well deserved raps confound it I am sorry to confess the truth But it does not at all concern main argument 25 A day later he said to Lyell You saw I suppose Saturday Review argument confined to Geology but has given me some perfectly just amp severe raps on knuckles 26 In the third edition published on 30 April 1861 Darwin cited the Saturday Review article as reason to remove his calculation altogether 27 28 Friendly reviews edit The December 1859 review in the British Unitarian National Review was written by Darwin s old friend William Carpenter who was clear that only a world of order continuity and progress befitted an Omnipotent Deity and that any theological objection to a species of slug or a breed of dog deriving from a previous one was simply absurd dogma 29 He touched on human evolution satisfied that the struggle for existence tended inevitably towards the progressive exaltation of the races engaged in it On Boxing Day 26 December The Times carried an anonymous review 30 The staff reviewer as innocent of any knowledge of science as a babe gave the task to Huxley leading Darwin to ask his friend how did you influence Jupiter Olympus and make him give three and a half columns to pure science The old fogies will think the world will come to an end Darwin treasured the piece more than a dozen reviews in common periodicals but noted Upon my life I am sorry for Owen he will be so d d savage for credit given to any other man I strongly suspect is in his eyes so much credit robbed from him Science is so narrow a field it is clear there ought to be only one cock of the walk 31 Hooker also wrote a favourable review which appeared at the end of December in the Gardener s Chronicle and treated the theory as an extension of horticultural lore 32 Clerical concern atheist enthusiasm edit In his lofty position at the head of Natural History Collections at the British Museum Owen received numerous complaints about the book The Revd Adam Sedgwick geologist at the University of Cambridge who had taken Darwin on his first geology field trip could not see the point in a world without providence The missionary David Livingstone could see no struggle for existence on the African plains Jeffries Wyman at Harvard saw no truth in chance variations The most enthusiastic response came from atheists with Hewett Watson hailing Darwin as the greatest revolutionist in natural history of this century 33 The 68 year old Robert Edmund Grant who had shown him the study of invertebrates when Darwin was a student at the University of Edinburgh and who was still teaching Lamarckian evolution weekly at University College London brought out a small book on classification dedicated to Darwin With one fell sweep of the wand of truth you have now scattered to the winds the pestilential vapours accumulated by species mongers 34 Widespread interest editIn January 1860 Darwin told Lyell of a reported incident at Waterloo Bridge Station I never till to day realised that it was getting widely distributed for in a letter from a lady today to Emma she says she heard a man enquiring for it at Railway Station at Waterloo Bridge amp the Bookseller said that he had none till new Edit was out The Bookseller said he had not read it but had heard it was a very remarkable book 35 Asa Gray in the United States edit In December 1859 the botanist Asa Gray negotiated with a Boston publisher for publication of an authorised American version however he learnt that two New York publishing firms were already planning to exploit the absence of international copyright to print Origin 36 Darwin wrote in January I never dreamed of my Book being so successful with general readers I believe I should have laughed at the idea of sending the sheets to America and asked Gray to keep any profits 37 Gray managed to negotiate a 5 per cent royalty with Appleton s of New York 38 who got their edition out in mid January and the other two withdrew In a May letter Darwin mentioned a print run of 2 500 copies but it is not clear if this was the first printing alone as there were four that year 39 40 When sending his Historical preface and corrections for the American edition in February Darwin thanked Asa Gray for his comments as a Review from a man who is not an entire convert if fair amp moderately favourable is in all respects the best kind of Review About weak points I agree The eye to this day gives me a cold shudder but when I think of the fine known gradations my reason tells me I ought to conquer the cold shudder 41 In April he continued It is curious that I remember well time when the thought of the eye made me cold all over but I have got over this stage of the complaint amp now small trifling particulars of structure often make me very uncomfortable The sight of a feather in a peacock s tail whenever I gaze at it makes me sick 42 A month later Darwin emphasised that he was bewildered by the theological aspects and had no intention to write atheistically but could not see as plainly as others do amp as I shd wish to do evidence of design amp beneficence on all sides of us There seems to me too much misery in the world I cannot persuade myself that a beneficent and omnipotent God would have designedly created the Ichneumonidae with the express intention of their feeding within the living bodies of caterpillars expressing his particular revulsion at the Ichneumonidae family of parasitic wasps that lay their eggs in the larvae and pupae of other insects so that their parasitoid young have a ready source of food He therefore could not believe in the necessity of design but rather than attributing the wonders of the universe to brute force was inclined to look at everything as resulting from designed laws with the details whether good or bad left to the working out of what we may call chance Not that this notion at all satisfies me I feel most deeply that the whole subject is too profound for the human intellect A dog might as well speculate on the mind of Newton referring to Isaac Newton 43 Erasmus and Martineau edit Darwin s brother Erasmus reported on 23 November that their cousin Henry Holland was reading the book and in a dreadful state of indecision sure that explaining the eye would be utterly impossible but after reading it he hummed amp hawed amp perhaps it was partly conceivable Erasmus himself thought it the most interesting book I ever read 44 and sent a copy to his old flame Miss Harriet Martineau who at 58 was still reviewing from her home in the Lake District Martineau sent her thanks adding that she had previously praised the quality amp conduct of your brother s mind but it is an unspeakable satisfaction to see here the full manifestation of its earnestness amp simplicity its sagacity its industry amp the patient power by wh it has collected such a mass of facts to transmute them by such sagacious treatment into such portentious knowledge I shd much like to know how large a proportion of our scientific men believe he has found a sound road 45 Writing to her fellow Malthusian and atheist George Holyoake she enthused What a book it is overthrowing if true revealed Religion on the one hand amp Natural as far as Final Causes amp Design are concerned on the other The range amp mass of knowledge take away one s breath To Fanny Wedgwood she wrote I rather regret that C D went out of his way two or three times to speak of The Creator in the popular sense of the First Cause His subject is the Origin of Species amp not the origin of Organisation amp it seems a needless mischief to have opened the latter speculation at all There now I have delivered my mind Clerical reaction edit The Revd Adam Sedgwick had received his copy with more pain than pleasure 46 Without Creation showing divine love humanity to my mind would suffer a damage that might brutalise it and sink the human race He indicated that unless Darwin accepted God s revelation in nature and scripture Sedgwick would not meet Darwin in heaven a sentiment that upset Emma The Revd John Stevens Henslow the botany professor whose natural history course Charles had joined thirty years earlier gave faint praise to the Origin as a stumble in the right direction but distanced himself from its conclusions a question past our finding out 47 The Anglican establishment predominantly opposed Darwin Palmerston who became Prime Minister in June 1859 mooted Darwin s name to Queen Victoria as a candidate for the Honours List with the prospect of a knighthood While Prince Albert supported the idea after the publication of the Origin Queen Victoria s ecclesiastical advisers including the Bishop of Oxford Samuel Wilberforce dissented and the request was denied 48 Some Anglicans were more in favour and Huxley reported of Kingsley that He is an excellent Darwinian to begin with and told me a capital story of his reply to Lady Aylesbury who expressed astonishment at his favouring such a heresy What can be more delightful to me Lady Aylesbury than to know that your Ladyship amp myself sprang from the same toad stool Whereby the frivolous old woman shut up in doubt whether she was being chaffed or adored for her remark There was no official comment from the Vatican for several decades but in 1860 a council of the German Catholic bishops pronounced that the belief that man as regards his body emerged finally from the spontaneous continuous change of imperfect nature to the more perfect is clearly opposed to Sacred Scripture and to the Faith This defined the range of official Catholic discussion of evolution which has remained almost exclusively concerned with human evolution 49 Huxley and Owen edit nbsp The combative Thomas Huxley demanded a fair hearing for Darwin s ideas On 10 February 1860 Huxley gave a lecture titled On Species and Races and their Origin at the Royal Institution 50 reviewing Darwin s theory with fancy pigeons on hand to demonstrate artificial selection as well as using the occasion to confront the clergy with his aim of wresting science from ecclesiastical control He referred to Galileo s persecution by the church the little Canutes of the hour enthroned in solemn state bidding that great wave to stay and threatening to check its beneficent progress He hailed the Origin as heralding a new Reformation in a battle against those who would silence and crush science and called on the public to cherish Science and follow her methods faithfully and implicitly in their application to all branches of human thought for the future of England 51 To Darwin such rhetoric was time wasted and on reflection he thought the lecture an entire failure which gave no just idea of natural selection 50 but by March he was listing those on our side as against the outsiders His close allies were Hooker and Huxley and in August he called Huxley his good and kind agent for the propagation of the Gospel i e the devil s gospel 52 The position of Richard Owen was unknown when emphasising to a Parliamentary committee the need for a new Natural History museum he pointed out that The whole intellectual world this year has been excited by a book on the origin of species and what is the consequence Visitors come to the British Museum and they say Let us see all these varieties of pigeons where is the tumbler where is the pouter and I am obliged with shame to say I can show you none of them As to showing you the varieties of those species or of any of those phenomena that would aid one in getting at that mystery of mysteries the origin of species our space does not permit but surely there ought to be a space somewhere and if not in the British Museum where is it to be obtained nbsp Thomas Henry Huxley applied Darwins ideas to humans This showed humans and apes had a common ancestor Huxley s April review in the Westminster Review included the first mention of the term Darwinism in the question What if the orbit of Darwinism should be a little too circular 53 Darwin thought it a brilliant review 54 Overflowing the narrow bounds of purely scientific circles the species question divides with Italy and the Volunteers the attention of general society Everybody has read Mr Darwin s book or at least has given an opinion upon its merits or demerits pietists whether lay or ecclesiastic decry it with the mild railing which sounds so charitable bigots denounce it with ignorant invective old ladies of both sexes consider it a decidedly dangerous book and even savants who have no better mud to throw quote antiquated writers to show that its author is no better than an ape himself while every philosophical thinker hails it as a veritable Whitworth gun in the armoury of liberalism and all competent naturalists and physiologists whatever their opinions as to the ultimate fate of the doctrines put forth acknowledge that the work in which they are embodied is a solid contribution to knowledge and inaugurates a new epoch in natural history Thomas Huxley 1860 53 When Owen s own anonymous review of the Origin appeared in the April Edinburgh Review he praised himself and his own axiom of the continuous operation of the ordained becoming of living things and showed his anger at what he saw as Darwin s caricature of the creationist position and ignoring Owen s pre eminence To him new species appeared at birth not through natural selection As well as attacking Darwin s disciples Hooker and Huxley he thought that the book symbolised the sort of abuse of science to which a neighbouring nation some seventy years since owed its temporary degradation 55 Darwin had Huxley and Hooker staying with him when he read it and he wrote telling Lyell that it was extremely malignant clever amp I fear will be very damaging He is atrociously severe on Huxley s lecture amp very bitter against Hooker So we three enjoyed it together not that I really enjoyed it for it made me uncomfortable for one night but I have got quite over it today It requires much study to appreciate all the bitter spite of many of the remarks against me indeed I did not discover all myself It scandalously misrepresents many parts It is painful to be hated in the intense degree with which Owen hates me 54 He commented to Henslow that Owen is indeed very spiteful He misrepresents amp alters what I say very unfairly The Londoners says he is mad with envy because my book has been talked about what a strange man to be envious of a naturalist like myself immeasurably his inferior 56 Geological time and Phillips edit Darwin s had estimated that erosion of the Weald would take 300 million years but in the second edition of On the Origin of Species published on 7 January 1860 he accepted that it would be safer to allow 150 million to 200 million years 57 Geologists knew the earth was ancient but had felt unable to put realistic figures on the duration of past geological changes Darwin s book provided a new impetus to quantifying geological time His most prominent critic John Phillips had investigated how temperatures increased with depth in the 1830s and was convinced that contrary to Lyell and Darwin s uniformitarianism the Earth was cooling over the long term Between 1838 and 1855 he tried various ways of quantifying the timing of stratified deposits without success 58 On 17 February 1860 Phillips used his presidential address to the Geological Society of London to accuse Darwin of abuse of arithmetic He said 300 million years was an inconceivable number and that depending on assumptions erosion of the Weald could have taken anything from 12 000 years to at most 1 332 000 years well below Darwin s estimate When giving the May 1860 Rede Lecture Phillips produced his own first published estimates of the duration of the whole stratigraphic record 18 using rates of sedimentation to calculate it at around 96 million years 59 Natural persecution edit Most reviewers wrote with great respect deferring to Darwin s eminent position in science though finding it hard to understand how natural selection could work without a divine selector There were hostile comments at the start of May he commented to Lyell that he had received in a Manchester Newspaper a rather a good squib showing that I have proved might is right amp therefore that Napoleon is right amp every cheating Tradesman is also right 60 The Saturday Review reported that The controversy excited by the appearance of Darwin s remarkable work on the Origin of Species has passed beyond the bounds of the study and lecture room into the drawing room and the public street 61 The older generation of Darwin s tutors were rather negative and later in May he told his cousin Fox that the attacks have been falling thick amp heavy on my now case hardened hide Sedgwick amp Clarke opened regular battery on me lately at Cambridge Phil Socy amp dear old Henslow defended me in grand style saying that my investigations were perfectly legitimate 62 While defending Darwin s honest motives and belief that he was exalting amp not debasing our views of a Creator in attributing to him a power of imposing laws on the Organic World by which to do his work as effectually as his laws imposed upon the inorganic had done it in the Mineral Kingdom Henslow had not disguised his own opinion that Darwin has pressed his hypothesis too far 63 In June Karl Marx saw the book as a bitter satire that showed a basis in natural science for class struggle in history in which Darwin recognizes among beasts and plants his English society 64 Darwin remarked to Lyell I must be a very bad explainer Several Reviews amp several letters have shown me too clearly how little I am understood I suppose natural selection was bad term but to change it now I think would make confusion worse confounded Nor can I think of better Natural preservation would not imply a preservation of particular varieties amp would seem a truism amp would not bring man s amp nature s selection under one point of view I can only hope by reiterated explanations finally to make matter clearer 65 It was too illegible for Lyell and Darwin later apologised I am utterly ashamed amp groan over my hand writing It was Natural Preservation Natural persecution is what the author ought to suffer 66 Debate editEssays and Reviews edit Around February 1860 liberal theologians entered the fray when seven produced a manifesto titled Essays and Reviews These Anglicans included Oxford professors country clergymen the headmaster of Rugby school and a layman Their declaration that miracles were irrational stirred up unprecedented anger drawing much of the fire away from Darwin Essays sold 22 000 copies in two years more than the Origin sold in twenty years and sparked five years of increasingly polarised debate with books and pamphlets furiously contesting the issues The most scientific of the seven was the Reverend Baden Powell who held the Savilian chair of geometry at the University of Oxford Referring to Mr Darwin s masterly volume and restating his argument that God is a lawgiver miracles break the lawful edicts issued at Creation therefore belief in miracles is atheistic he wrote that the book must soon bring about an entire revolution in opinion in favour of the grand principle of the self evolving powers of nature He drew attacks with Sedgwick accusing him of greedily adopting nonsense and Tory reviews saying he was joining the infidel party He would have been on the platform at the British Association debate facing the bishop but died of a heart attack on 11 June The British Association debate edit Main article 1860 Oxford evolution debate The most famous confrontation took place at a meeting of the British Association for the Advancement of Science in Oxford on Saturday 30 June 1860 While there was no formal debate organised on the issue Professor John William Draper of New York University was to talk on Darwin and social progress at a routine Botany and Zoology meeting The new museum hall was crowded with clergy undergraduates Oxford dons and gentlewomen anticipating that Samuel Wilberforce the Bishop of Oxford would speak to repeat the savage trouncing he had given in 1847 to the Vestiges published anonymously by Robert Chambers Owen lodged with Wilberforce the night before but Wilberforce would have been well prepared as he had just reviewed the Origin for the Tory Quarterly for a fee of 60 67 Huxley was not going to wait for the meeting but met Chambers who accused him of deserting them and changed his mind Darwin was taking treatment at Dr Lane s new hydropathic establishment at Sudbrooke Park Petersham near Richmond in Surrey nbsp The debate was held in the Oxford University Museum of Natural HistoryFrom Hooker s account Draper droned on for an hour then for half an hour Soapy Sam Wilberforce replied with the eloquence that had earned him his nickname This time the climate of opinion had changed and the ensuing debate was more evenly matched with Hooker being particularly successful in defence of Darwin s ideas In response to what Huxley took as a jibe from Wilberforce as to whether it was on Huxley s grandfather s or grandmother s side that he was descended from an ape Huxley made a reply which he later recalled as being that if asked would I rather have a miserable ape for a grandfather or a man highly endowed by nature and possessed of great means and influence and yet who employs these faculties and that influence for the mere purpose of introducing ridicule into a grave scientific discussion I unhesitatingly affirm my preference for the ape No verbatim record was taken eyewitness accounts exist and vary somewhat 68 69 70 Robert FitzRoy who had been the captain of HMS Beagle during Darwin s voyage was there to present a paper on storms During the debate FitzRoy seen by Hooker as a grey haired Roman nosed elderly gentleman stood in the centre of the audience and lifting an immense Bible first with both and afterwards with one hand over his head solemnly implored the audience to believe God rather than man As he admitted that the Origin of Species had given him acutest pain the crowd shouted him down Hooker s blood boiled I felt myself a dastard now I saw my advantage I swore to myself I would smite that Amalekite Sam hip and thigh he was invited up to the platform and there and then I smacked him amid rounds of applause proceeded to demonstrate that he could never have read your book wound up with a very few observations on the old and new hypotheses Sam was shut up and the meeting was dissolved forthwith leaving you Darwin master of the field after 4 hours battle 71 Both sides came away claiming victory with Hooker and Huxley each sending Darwin rather contradictory triumphant accounts Supporters of Darwinism seized on this meeting as a sign that the idea of evolution could not be suppressed by authority and would be defended vigorously by its advocates Liberal clerics were also satisfied that literal belief in all aspects of the Bible was now questioned by science they were sympathetic to some of the ideas in Essays and Reviews 72 73 William Whewell wrote to his friend James David Forbes that Perhaps the Bishop was not prudent to venture into a field where no eloquence can supersede the need for precise knowledge The young naturalists declared themselves in favour of Darwin s views which tendency I saw already at Leeds two years ago I am sorry for it for I reckon Darwin s book to be an utterly unphilosophical one 74 nbsp 1869 Caricature of Wilberforce His hand washing gesture helped earn the Bishop of Oxford his nicknameWilberforce s Quarterly review edit In late July Darwin read Wilberforce s review in the Quarterly 67 It used a 60 year old parody from the Anti Jacobin of the prose of Darwin s grandfather Erasmus implying old revolutionary sympathies It argued that if transmutations were actually occurring this would be seen in rapidly reproducing invertebrates and since it isn t why think that the favourite varieties of turnips are tending to become men Darwin pencilled rubbish in the margin To the statement about classification that all creation is the transcript in matter of ideas eternally existing in the mind of the Most High Darwin scribbled mere words At the same time Darwin was willing to grant that Wilberforce s review was clever he wrote to Hooker that it picks out with skill all the most conjectural parts and brings forward well all the difficulties It quizzes me quite splendidly by quoting the Anti Jacobin against my Grandfather 75 Wilberforce also attacked Essays and Reviews in the Quarterly Review 76 and in a letter to The Times signed by the Archbishop of Canterbury and 25 bishops which threatened the theologians with the ecclesiastical courts 77 Darwin quoted a proverb A bench of bishops is the devil s flower garden and joined others including Lyell though not Hooker and Huxley in signing a counter letter supporting Essays and Reviews for trying to establish religious teachings on a firmer and broader foundation Despite this alignment of pro evolution scientists and Unitarians with liberal churchmen two of the authors were indicted for heresy and lost their jobs by 1862 77 Geological time Phillips and third edition edit In October 1860 John Phillips published Life on the Earth its origin and succession reiterating points from his Rede Lecture and disputing Darwin s arguments 78 He sent a copy to Darwin who thanked him though sorry but not surprised to see that you are dead against me 79 On 20 November Darwin told Lyell of his revisions for a third edition of the Origin including removing his estimate of the time it took for the Weald to erode The confounded Wealden calculation to be struck out amp a note to be inserted to effect that I am convinced of its inaccuracy from Review in Saturday R amp from Phillips as I see in Table of Contents that he attacks it 80 He later told Lyell that Having burnt my own fingers so consumedly with the Wealden I am fearful for you and advised caution for Heaven sake take care of your fingers to burn them severely as I have done is very unpleasant 81 The third edition as published on 30 April 1861 stated The computation of time required for the denudation of the Weald omitted I have been convinced of its inaccuracy in several respects by an excellent article in the Saturday Review Dec 24 1859 28 Natural History Review edit The Natural History Review was bought and refurbished by Huxley Lubbock Busk and other plastically minded young men supporters of Darwin The first issue in January 1861 carried Huxley s paper on man s relationship to apes showing up Owen Huxley cheekily sent a copy to Wilberforce Darwin at home editAs the battles raged Darwin returned home from the spa to proceed with experiments on chloroforming carnivorous sundew plants looking over his Natural Selection manuscript and drafting two chapters on pigeon breeding that would eventually form part of The Variation of Animals and Plants Under Domestication 27 He wrote to Asa Gray and used the example of fantail pigeons to argue against Gray s belief that variation has been led along certain beneficial lines with the implication of Creationism rather than Natural Selection 82 Over the winter he organised a third edition of the Origin adding an introductory historical sketch Asa Gray had published three supportive articles in the Atlantic Monthly Darwin persuaded Gray to publish them as a pamphlet and was delighted when Gray came up with the title of Natural Selection Not Inconsistent with Natural Theology Darwin paid half the cost imported 250 copies into Britain and as well as advertising it in periodicals and sending 100 copies out to scientists reviewers and theologians including Wilberforce he included in the Origin a recommendation for it available to be purchased for 1s 6d from Trubner s in Paternoster Row The Huxleys became close family friends frequently visiting Down House When their 3 year old son died of scarlet fever they were badly affected Henrietta Huxley brought their three infants to Down in March 1861 where Emma helped to console her while Huxley continued with his working men s lectures at the Royal School of Mines writing that My working men stick with me wonderfully the house fuller than ever By next Friday evening they will all be convinced that they are monkeys 83 Arguments with Owen edit Huxley s arguments with Owen continued in the Athenaeum so that each Saturday Darwin could read the latest ripostes Owen tried to smear Huxley by portraying him as an advocate of man s origins from a transmuted ape and one of his contributions was titled Ape Origin of Man as Tested by the Brain This backfired as Huxley had already delighted Darwin by speculating on pithecoid man ape like man and was glad of the invitation to publicly turn the anatomy of brain structure into a question of human ancestry He was determined to indict Owen for perjury promising before I have done with that mendacious humbug I will nail him out like a kite to a barn door an example to all evil doers 84 Darwin egged him on from Down writing Oh Lord what a thorn you must be in the poor dear man s side 85 Their campaign ran over two years and was devastatingly successful with each slaying being followed by a recruiting drive for the Darwinian cause The spite lingered When Huxley joined the Zoological Society Council in 1861 Owen left and in the following year Huxley moved to stop Owen from being elected to the Royal Society Council as no body of gentlemen should admit a member guilty of wilful amp deliberate falsehood Lyell was troubled both by Huxley s belligerence and by the question of ape ancestry but got little sympathy from Darwin who teased him that Our ancestor was an animal which breathed water had a swim bladder a great swimming tail an imperfect skull and undoubtedly was a hermaphrodite Here is a pleasant genealogy for mankind 86 87 Lyell began work on a book examining human origins Geological time William Thomson Lord Kelvin edit Like the geologist John Phillips the physicist William Thomson later ennobled as Baron Kelvin of Largs thus becoming Lord Kelvin had considered since the 1840s that the physics of thermodynamics required that the Earth was cooling from an initial molten state This contradicted Lyell s uniformitarian concept of unchanging processes over deep geological time which Darwin shared and had assumed would allow ample time for the slow process of natural selection 58 In June 1861 Thomson asked Phillips how geologists felt about Darwin s prodigious durations for geological epochs and mentioned his own preliminary calculation that the Sun was 20 million years old with the Earth at most 200 to 1 000 million years old Phillips discussed his own published view that stratified rocks went back 96 million years and dismissed Darwin s original estimate that the Weald had taken 300 million years to erode In September 1861 Thomson produced a paper On the age of the Sun s heat which estimated that the Sun was between 100 and 500 million years old 88 and in 1862 he used assumptions on the rate of cooling from a molten condition to estimate the age of the Earth at 98 million years The dispute continued for the rest of Darwin s life 89 Continued debate edit nbsp A French caricature around 1878 shows a bearded Darwin breaking through hoops of gullibility superstitions errors and ignorance held up by Emile Littre The reception of Darwin s ideas continued to arouse scientific and religious debates and wide public interest Satirical cartoonists seized on animal ancestry in relation to other topical issues drawing on a long tradition of identifying animal traits in humans In Britain mass circulation magazines were droll rather than cruel and thus presented Darwin s theory in an unthreatening way Due to illness Darwin began growing a beard in 1862 and when he reappeared in public in 1866 with a bushy beard caricatures centred on Darwin and his new look contributed to a trend in which all forms of evolutionism were identified with Darwinism 90 91 See also editDarwin from Orchids to Variation Darwin s life work and influences in the following period References edit Larson 2004 pp 44 45 Bowler 2003 p 149 Desmond amp Moore 1991 pp 313 320 325 326 Desmond amp Moore 1991 pp 403 404 Altholz 1976 Letter 2534 Kingsley Charles to Darwin C R 18 Nov 1859 Darwin Correspondence Project archived from the original on 29 June 2009 LITERATURE 19 November 1859 a b Browne 2002 p 87 Leifchild 1859 Letter 2542 Darwin C R to Hooker J D 22 Nov 1859 Darwin Correspondence Project Letter 2570 Darwin C R to Murray John b 4 Dec 1859 Darwin Correspondence Project Letter 2544 Huxley T H to Darwin C R 23 Nov 1859 Darwin Correspondence Project Darwin 1887 pp 228 232 Letter 2526 Owen Richard to Darwin C R 12 Nov 1859 Darwin Correspondence Project a b Letter 2575 Darwin C R to Lyell Charles 10 Dec 1859 Darwin Correspondence Project Letter 2507 Darwin C R to Lyell Charles 20 Oct 1859 Darwin Correspondence Project Darwin amp Seward 1903 pp 190 191Darwin Charles 23 May 1861 Darwin C R to Herschel J F W Darwin Correspondence Project Cambridge UK Cambridge University Library Letter 3154 Retrieved 28 January 2016 a b Herbert 2005 pp 350 351 Darwin amp Costa 2009 pp 284 287 Burchfield 1974 pp 303 304 Darwin amp Costa 2009 p 287 Darwin 1860 p 287 Freeman 1977a Anon 24 December 1859 Review of On the origin of species Saturday Review pp 775 776 Letter no 2635 Darwin C R to Hooker J D Darwin Correspondence Project 3 January 1860 Retrieved 1 May 2017 Letter no 2637 Darwin C R to Lyell C Darwin Correspondence Project 4 January 1860 Retrieved 1 May 2017 a b Charles Darwin s journal for 1860 Darwin Online a b Darwin 1861 p xii Carpenter 1859 Huxley 1859 Letter 2611 Darwin C R to Huxley T H 28 Dec 1859 Darwin Correspondence Project Hooker 1859 Letter 2540 Watson H C to Darwin C R 21 Nov 1859 Darwin Correspondence Project Letter 3150 Grant R E to Darwin C R 16 May 1861 Darwin Correspondence Project Letter 2650 Darwin C R to Lyell Charles 14 Jan 1860 Darwin Correspondence Project Letter 2592 Darwin C R to Gray Asa 21 Dec 1859 Darwin Correspondence Project archived from the original on 13 February 2009 retrieved 6 December 2008 Letter 2665 Darwin C R to Gray Asa 28 Jan 1860 Darwin Correspondence Project archived from the original on 13 February 2009 retrieved 6 December 2008 Letter 2706 Gray Asa to Darwin C R 20 Feb 1860 Darwin Correspondence Project archived from the original on 13 February 2009 retrieved 6 December 2008 Desmond amp Moore 1991 p 492 Darwin Online On the Origin of Species retrieved 6 December 2008 Letter 2701 Darwin C R to Gray Asa 8 9 Feb 1860 Darwin Correspondence Project retrieved 5 December 2008 Letter 2743 Darwin C R to Gray Asa 3 Apr 1860 Darwin Correspondence Project retrieved 5 December 2008 Letter 2814 Darwin C R to Gray Asa 22 May 1860 Darwin Correspondence Project Letter no 2545 Darwin E A to Darwin C R Darwin Correspondence Project 23 November 1859 Retrieved 3 May 2017 Spelling and abbreviations as Desmond amp Moore 1991 p 486 Letter 2548 Sedgwick Adam to Darwin C R 24 Nov 1859 Darwin Correspondence Project Henslow 1861 Desmond amp Moore 1991 p 488 Harrison Brian W Early Vatican Responses to Evolutionist Theology Living Tradition Organ of the Roman Theological Forum May 2001 quotation from here See also Artigas Mariano Glick Thomas F Martinez Rafael A Negotiating Darwin the Vatican confronts evolution 1877 1902 JHU Press 2006 ISBN 0 8018 8389 X 9780801883897 Google books a b Letter 2696 Darwin C R to Hooker J D 14 Feb 1860 Darwin Correspondence Project retrieved 22 March 2009 Charles Blinderman David Joyce 1998 The Huxley File 4 Darwin s Bulldog Clark University retrieved 22 March 2009 Thomas Henry Huxley On Species and Races and Their Origin 1860 retrieved 22 March 2009 Darwin 1887 p 331Letter 2893 Darwin C R to Huxley T H 8 Aug 1860 Darwin Correspondence Project retrieved 14 August 2009 a b Huxley 1860 a b Letter 2754 Darwin C R to Lyell Charles 10 Apr 1860 Darwin Correspondence Project retrieved 14 August 2009 Owen 1860 Letter 2791 Darwin C R to Henslow J S 8 May 1860 Darwin Correspondence Project retrieved 14 August 2009 Darwin amp Costa 2009 p 286 a b Morrell 2001 pp 87 88 Morrell 2001 p 88 Letter 2782 Darwin C R to Lyell Charles 4 May 1860 Darwin Correspondence Project Retrieved 17 February 2011 Anon 5 May 1860 Professor Owen on the Origin of Species The Saturday Review London p 579 Letter 2809 Darwin C R to Fox W D 18 May 1860 Darwin Correspondence Project retrieved 7 December 2008 Letter 2794 Henslow J S to Hooker J D 10 May 1860 Darwin Correspondence Project retrieved 7 December 2008 Letter from Karl Marx to Engels dated 18 June 1862 cited in Browne 2002 pp 187 188 Letter 2822 Darwin C R to Lyell Charles 6 June 1860 Darwin Correspondence Project retrieved 6 December 2008 Letter 2935 Darwin C R to Lyell Charles 3 Oct 1860 Darwin Correaspondence Project retrieved 6 December 2008 a b Wilberforce 1860 Jenson J Vernon 1991 Thomas Henry Huxley communicating for science U of Delaware Press Newark Chapter 3 is an excellent survey and its notes gives references to all the eyewitness accounts except Newton Wollaston 1921 pp 118 120 Lucas 1979 Letter 2852 Hooker J D to Darwin C R 2 July 1860 Darwin Correspondence Project Jenson J Vernon 1991 Thomas Henry Huxley communicating for science U of Delaware Press Newark See also Alfred Newton Reception of the Origin of Species and Thomas Henry Huxley Debate with Wilberforce James A Secord 20 September 2003 Victorian Sensation The Extraordinary Publication Reception and Secret Authorship of Vestiges of the Natural History of Creation University of Chicago Press p 514 ISBN 978 0 226 15825 9 William Whewell Quotes 38 Science Quotes Dictionary of Science Quotations and Scientist Quotes Letter to James D Forbes 24 Jul 1860 Darwin 1887 pp 324 325 Vol 2 Wilberforce 1861 a b Desmond amp Moore 1991 pp 500 501 Phillips John October 1860 Life on the Earth its origin and succession p 130 Letter no 2983 Darwin C R to Phillips John Darwin Correspondence Project 14 November 1860 Retrieved 25 April 2017 Letter no 2989 Darwin C R to Lyell Charles Darwin Correspondence Project 20 November 1860 Retrieved 25 April 2017 Letter no 2997 Darwin C R to Lyell Charles Darwin Correspondence Project 25 November 1860 Retrieved 25 April 2017 Letter 2998 Darwin C R to Gray Asa 26 Nov 1860 Darwin Correspondence Project Huxley 1903 p 276 Vol 1 Page 190 in the first edition Desmond amp Moore 1991 p 504 Letter 3107 Darwin C R to Huxley T H 1 Apr 1861 Darwin Correspondence Project Desmond amp Moore 1991 p 505 Letter 2647 Darwin C R to Lyell Charles 10 Jan 1860 Darwin Correspondence Project retrieved 13 April 2009 Morrell 2001 pp 88 89 Thomson William 1864 On the secular cooling of the earth read 28 April 1862 Transactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh 23 157 170 Browne 2002 pp 373 379 Freeman 2007 p 76Bibliography editAltholz Josef L 1976 The warfare of conscience with theology in Altholz Josef L ed The Mind and Art of Victorian England University of Minnesota Press pp 58 77 ISBN 0 8166 5693 2 Bowler Peter J 2003 Evolution The History of an Idea 3rd ed University of California Press ISBN 0 520 23693 9 Browne E Janet 2002 Charles Darwin vol 2 The Power of Place London Jonathan Cape ISBN 0 7126 6837 3 Burchfield Joe D 1974 Darwin and the Dilemma of Geological Time Isis University of Chicago Press 65 3 301 321 doi 10 1086 351300 S2CID 55390686 pdf Carpenter William Benjamin December 1859 Darwin on the Origin of Species National Review vol 10 pp 188 214 Published anonymously Darwin Charles Costa James T 2009 The Annotated Origin A Facsimile of the First Edition of On the Origin of Species Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 03281 1 Darwin Charles 1859 On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection or the Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life Nature Full image view 1st ed London John Murray 5 121 318 319 Bibcode 1872Natur 5 318B doi 10 1038 005318a0 PMC 5184128 retrieved 1 March 2011 a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a External link in code class cs1 code edition code help Darwin Charles 1860 On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection or the Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life Nature 2nd ed London John Murray 5 121 318 319 Bibcode 1872Natur 5 318B doi 10 1038 005318a0 PMC 5184128 retrieved 9 January 2009 Darwin Charles 1861 On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection or the Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life Nature 3rd ed London John Murray 5 121 318 319 Bibcode 1872Natur 5 318B doi 10 1038 005318a0 PMC 5184128 retrieved 9 January 2009 Darwin Francis 1887 The Life and Letters of Charles Darwin including an autobiographical chapter 3 Volumes London John Murray retrieved 7 March 2008 Darwin Francis Seward A C 1903 More letters of Charles Darwin 2 Volumes London John Murray retrieved 28 January 2016 Desmond Adrian Moore James 1991 Darwin London Michael Joseph Penguin Group ISBN 0 7181 3430 3 Freeman R B 2007 Charles Darwin A companion 2d online edition compiled by Sue Asscher and edited by John van Wyhe ed The Complete Works of Charles Darwin Online retrieved 26 November 2010 Freeman Richard B 1977a On the Origin of Species The Works of Charles Darwin An Annotated Bibliographical Handlist 2nd ed Folkestone England Dawson ISBN 0 7129 0740 8 Henslow John Stevens 1861 Letter from Professor Henslow Macmillan s Magazine 3 336 Letter dated January 1861 Herbert Sandra January 2005 Charles Darwin Geologist Cornell University Press ISBN 0 8014 4348 2 Hooker Joseph D 31 December 1859 Review of On the origin of species The Gardeners Chronicle 1052 Huxley Leonard 1903 Life and letters of Thomas Henry Huxley 2 Volumes 2nd ed London Macmillan The first edition was published in 1900 Huxley Thomas H 26 December 1859 Darwin on the Origin of Species The Times 8 9 Published anonymously Huxley Thomas H April 1860 Darwin on the Origin of Species Westminster Review 17 541 570 Published anonymously Larson Edward J 2004 Evolution The Remarkable History of a Scientific Theory New York Modern Library ISBN 0 8129 6849 2 Leifchild John R 19 November 1859 Literature Athenaeum no 1673 retrieved 22 November 2008 Lucas J R 1979 Wilberforce and Huxley A Legendary Encounter The Historical Journal vol 22 no 2 pp 313 330 doi 10 1017 S0018246X00016848 PMID 11617072 retrieved 22 November 2008 Morrell Jack 2001 Genesis and geochronology the case of John Phillips 1800 1874 Geological Society London Special Publications Geological Society of London 190 1 85 90 Bibcode 2001GSLSP 190 85M CiteSeerX 10 1 1 973 6253 doi 10 1144 gsl sp 2001 190 01 07 S2CID 129792582 Owen Richard 1860 Review of Darwin s Origin of Species Edinburgh Review 3 April 1860 487 532 Published anonymously Wilberforce Samuel July 1860 Review of On the Origin of Species Quarterly Review 108 215 225 264 Published anonymously Wilberforce Samuel 1861 Review of Essays and Reviews Quarterly Review 109 248 301 Published anonymously Wollaston A F R 1921 Life of Alfred Newton late Professor of Comparative Anatomy Cambridge University 1866 1907 with a Preface by Sir Archibald Geikie New York Dutton Further reading editDarwin Charles 1837 1838 Notebook B Transmutation of species Darwin Online CUL DAR121 retrieved 20 December 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 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 Freeman R B 1977 The Works of Charles Darwin An Annotated Bibliographical Handlist 2nd ed Folkestone Kent England Wm Dawson amp Sons retrieved 15 December 2006 Huxley Thomas H 1863 Six Lectures to Working Men On Our Knowledge of the Causes of the Phenomena of Organic Nature Republished in Volume II of his Collected Essays Darwiniana retrieved 15 December 2006External links editThe Complete Works of Charles Darwin Online Darwin Online Darwin s publications private papers and bibliography supplementary works including biographies obituaries and reviews For a comprehensive set of reviews of On the Origin of Species see Reviews amp Responses to Darwin Works by Charles Darwin at Project Gutenberg Darwin Correspondence Project Text and notes for most of his letters Charles Darwin in the British horticultural press Occasional Papers from RHS Lindley Library volume 3 July 2010 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Reactions to On the Origin of Species amp oldid 1183758617, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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