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HAECKEL AND HIS OPPONENTS1
Authorised Translation from the German by Bertram Keightley
PREFACE
I am convinced that
my work, The Philosophy of Freedom, published some five years ago, gives
the outline of a world-conception which is in complete harmony with the stupendous
results of
the natural science of our time. I am also conscious that I did not intentionally
bring about this harmony. My road was quite independent of that which natural
science follows.
From this independence of my own way of looking at things in regard to
the province of knowledge that is dominant in our day, and from its simultaneous, complete
agreement therewith, I believe myself entitled to draw my justification for presenting the
position of that monumental representative of the scientific mode of thought, Ernst
Haeckel, in the intellectual battle of our time.
Doubtless there are to-day many who feel the need for clearing up
matters with regard to natural science. This need can best be satisfied by penetrating
deeply into the ideas of that seeker into nature who has most unreservedly drawn the full
conclusions of scientific premises. I desire to address myself, in this little book, to
those who share with me a like need in this respect.
RUDOLF STEINER
Berlin, January 1900.
I
Goethe has given glorious expression, in his book upon Winkelmann, to
the feeling which a man has when he contemplates his position within the world:
"When the healthy nature of man works
as a whole, when he feels himself in the world as in a great, beautiful,
worthy, and valuable whole, when harmonious
contentment yields him pure, free rapture, then would the universe, could
it but feel itself, burst forth into rejoicing at having attained its goal,
and admire the summit of
its own becoming and being."
From out of this feeling there arises
the most important question that man can ask himself: how is his own becoming
and being linked with that of the whole
world? Schiller, in a letter to Goethe of 23rd August 1794, admirably characterises
the
road by which Goethe sought to come to a knowledge of human nature. "From
the simple organism you ascend step by step to the more complex, in order finally
to build up the
most complex of all, man, genetically from the materials of the entire structure
of
nature." Now this road of Goethes is also that which natural science has been
following for the last forty years, in order to solve "the question of questions for
humanity." Huxley sees the problem to be the determination of the position which
"man occupies in nature, and his relation to the totality of things." It
is the great merit of Charles Darwin to have created a new scientific basis for
reflection upon
this question. The facts which he brought forward in 1859 in his work, The Origin
of
Species, and the principles which he there developed, gave to natural research
the
possibility of showing, in its own way, how well founded was Goethes conviction that
nature, "after a thousand animal types, forms a being that contains them
allman."
Today we look back upon forty years of
scientific development, which
stand under the influence of Charles Darwins line of thought. Rightly could Ernst
Haeckel say in his book, On our Present Knowledge of Mans Origin, which
reproduces an address delivered by him at the Fourth International Congress of
Zoologists
in Cambridge on 26th August 1898: "Forty years of Darwinism! What a huge
progress in our knowledge of nature! And what a revolution in our weightiest
views, not only in the
more closely affected departments, but also in that of anthropology, and equally
in all
the so-called psychological sciences."
Goethe, from his profound insight into
nature, foresaw to its full extent this revolution and its significance for
the progress of mans intellectual
culture. We see this particularly clearly from a conversation which he had with
Soret on 2nd August 1830. At that time the news of the beginning of the Revolution
of July reached
Weimar and caused general excitement. When Soret visited Goethe, he was received
with the
words:
"Now, what do you think of this great event? The volcano has burst
into eruption; all is in flames, and it is no longer a conference behind closed
doors!" Soret naturally could only believe that Goethe was speaking of the July
Revolution, and replied that under the known conditions nothing else could be expected
than that it would end with the expulsion of the Royal family. But Goethe had something
quite different in his mind. "I am not talking of those people at all; I am concerned
with quite other things. I am speaking of the conflict, so momentous for science, between
Cuvier and Geoffroy de Saint-Hilaire that has come to a public outbreak in the
Academy." The conflict concerned the question whether each species in which organic
nature finds expression possesses a distinct architectural plan of its own, or whether
there is one plan common to them all. Goethe had already settled this question for himself
forty years earlier. His eager study of the plant and animal worlds had made him an
opponent of the Linnaean view, that we "count as many species as different
forms were
created in the beginning (in principio)." Anyone holding such an opinion can
only strive to discover what are the plans upon which the separate species are organised.
He will seek above all carefully to distinguish these separate forms.
Goethe followed another road. "That which Linnaeus strove forcibly
to hold apart was bound, according to the innermost need of my being, to strive after
reunion." Thus there grew up in him the view which, in 1796, in the Lectures
upon the
three first chapters of A General Introduction to Comparative Anatomy, he
summed up
in the sentence: "This, then, we have gained, that we can unhesitatingly maintain
that all complete organic naturesamong which we see fishes, amphibia, birds,
mammals, and, as the head of the last, manhave all been shaped according
to one
original type, which only inclines more or less to this side or the other
in its
constant parts, and yet daily develops and transforms itself by reproduction." The
basic type, to which all the manifold plant-forms may be traced back, had already
been described by Goethe in 1790 in his Attempt to Explain the Metamorphosis
of Plants. This
way of regarding things, by which Goethe endeavoured to recognise the laws of living
nature, is exactly similar to that which he demands for the inorganic world in his essay,
written in 1793, Experiment as Mediator between Object and Subject: "Nothing
happens in nature which is not in some connection with the whole, and if experiences
only appear to us as isolated, if we can only regard experiments as isolated facts, that does not
imply that they actually are isolated; it is only the question: How shall
we find
the connection of these phenomena, these occurrences?" Species also appear to
us only in isolation. Goethe seeks for their connection. Hence it clearly appears
that
Goethes effort was directed to apply the same mode of explanation to the
study of
living beings as has led to the goal in that of inorganic nature.2
How far he had run ahead of his time with such conceptions becomes
apparent when one reflects that at the same time when Goethe published his Metamorphosis,
Kant sought to prove scientifically, in his Critique of Judgement, the
impossibility of an explanation of the living according to the same principles
as hold for
the lifeless. He maintained: "It is quite certain that we cannot even adequately
learn to know, far less explain to ourselves the organised beings and their inner
possibility according to purely mechanical principles of nature; and, indeed, it is so
certain that we can boldly say it is senseless for man even to conceive such a purpose, or
to hope that sometime perhaps a Newton may arise who will make comprehensible the
production of a blade of grass according to natural laws which no purpose has ordered;
rather one must simply and flatly deny any such insight to man." Haeckel repudiates
this thought with the words: "Now, however, this impossible Newton really
appeared seventy years later in Darwin, and, as a matter of fact, solved the
problem whose solution
Kant had declared to be absolutely unthinkable!"
That the revolution in scientific views
brought about by Darwinism must take place, Goethe knew full well, for it
corresponds with his own way of conceiving
things. In the view which Geoffroy de Saint-Hilaire defended against Cuvier,
that all
organic forms carry in them a "general plan modified only here and there," he
recognised his own again. Therefore he could say to Soret: "Now, however, Geoffroy de
Saint-Hilaire is decidedly on our side, and with him all his important disciples and
followers in France. This event is for me of quite extraordinary value, and I rejoice
rightly over the general victory gained at length by a cause to which I have devoted my
life, and which is most especially my very own." Of still greater value for
Goethes view of nature are, however, the discoveries of Darwin. Goethes
view of nature is related to Darwinism in a way similar to that in which the
insights of
Copernicus and Kepler into the structure and movements of the planetary system
are related to the discovery by Newton of the law of the universal attraction
of all heavenly bodies.
This law reveals the scientific causes, why the planets move in the manner which
Copernicus and Kepler had described. And Darwin found the natural causes, why
the common original type of all organic beings, which Goethe assumed, makes its
appearance in the
various species.
The doubt as to the view that there underlies each distinct organic
species a special plan of organisation, unchangeable for all time, took firm hold upon
Darwin upon a journey which he undertook to South America and Australia in the summer of
1831 as naturalist on the ship Beagle. As to how his thought ripened, we get an
idea in reading such communications from him as the following:
"When, during the voyage of the Beagle, I visited the
Galapagos Archipelago, which lies in the Pacific Ocean some five hundred English miles
from the South American coast, I saw myself surrounded by peculiar kinds of birds,
reptiles, and snakes, which exist nowhere else in the world. Yet they almost all bore upon
them an American character. In the song of the mocking thrush, in the sharp cry of the
carrion hawk, in the great chandelier-like Opuntico, I clearly perceived the neighbourhood
of America; and yet these islands were separated from the mainland by so many miles, and
differed widely from it in their geological constitution and their climate. Yet more
surprising was the fact that most of the inhabitants of each separate island of this small
archipelago were specifically different, although closely related to one another. I often
asked myself, then, how these peculiar animals and men had originated. The simplest answer
seemed to be that the inhabitants of the different islands descend from one another, and
in the course of their descent had undergone modifications, and that all the inhabitants
of the archipelago had descended from those of the nearest mainland, viz. America, from
which naturally the colonisation would proceed. But it long remained for me an
unintelligible problem: how the necessary degree of modification could have
been
attained."
As to this "how," it was the
numerous breeding experiments which he tried, after his return home, with
pigeons, fowls, dogs, rabbits, and garden
plants that enlightened Darwin. He saw from them in how high a degree there lies
in organic forms the possibility of continually modifying themselves in the
course of their
reproduction. It is possible, by creating artificial conditions, to obtain from
a given form after a few generations new kinds, which differ much more from
each other than do
those in Nature, whose difference is regarded as so great that one inclines to
ascribe to each a special underlying plan of organisation. As is well known,
the breeder utilises
this variability of kinds to bring about the development of such forms of domesticated
organisms as correspond with his intentions. He endeavours to create the conditions
which guide the variation in a direction answering his purpose. If he seeks
to breed a kind of
sheep with specially fine wool, he seeks out among his flock those individuals
which have
the finest wool.
These he allows to breed. From among their descendants he again selects
for further breeding those which have the finest wool. If this is carried on through a
series of generations, a species of sheep is obtained which differs materially from its
ancestors in the formation of its wool. The same thing can be done with other
characteristics of living creatures. From these facts two things become obvious:
that organic forms have a tendency to vary, and that they pass on the
acquired modifications to their descendants. Owing to this first property of living
creatures, the breeder is able to develop in his species certain characteristics that
answer his purposes; owing to the second, these new characteristics are handed on from one
generation to the next.
The thought now lies close at hand, that
in Nature also, left to itself, the forms continually vary. And the great
power of variation of domesticated
organisms does not force us to assume that this property of organic forms is
confined within certain limits. We may rather presuppose that in the lapse
of vast time periods a
certain form transforms itself into a totally different one, which in its formation
diverges from the former to the utmost extent imaginable. The most natural inference
then, is this, that the organic species have not arisen independently, each
according to a
special plan of structure, alongside each other; but that in course of time they
have evolved the one from the other. This idea gains support from the views
at which Lyell
arrived in the history of the earths development, and which he first published
in
1830 in his Principles of Geology. The older geological views, according
to which the formation of the earth was supposed to have been accomplished in
a series of violent
catastrophes, were thereby superseded. Through this doctrine of catastrophes
it was sought
to explain the results to which the investigation of the earths solid crust had led.
The different strata of the earths crust, and the fossilised organic creatures
contained in them, are of course the vestiges of what once took place on the earths
surface.
The followers of the doctrine of violent
transformations believed that the development of the earth had been accomplished
in successive periods, definitely
distinguished from one another. At the end of such a period there occurred a
catastrophe. Everything living was destroyed, and its remains preserved in
an earth-stratum. On the top
of what had been destroyed there arose a completely new world, which must be
created afresh. In the place of this doctrine of catastrophes, Lyell set
up the view that the
crust of the earth has been gradually moulded in the course of very long periods
of time, by the same processes which still in our time are going on every
day on the earths
surface. It has been the action of the rivers carrying mud away from one spot and
depositing it on another; the work of the glaciers, which grind away rocks and stones,
forward blocks of stone, and analogous processes, which, in their steady, slow working
have given to the earths surface its present configuration. This view necessarily
draws after it the further conclusion that the present-day forms of plants and
animals also have gradually developed themselves out of those whose remains are
preserved for us
in fossils. Now, it results from the processes of artificial breeding that one
form can really transform itself into another. There remains only the question,
by what means are
those conditions for this transformation, which the breeder brings about by artificial
means, created in nature itself?
In artificial breeding human intelligence chooses the conditions so
that the new forms coming into existence answer to the purposes which the breeder
is following out. Now, the organic forms living in Nature are in general purposefully
adapted to the conditions under which they live. A mere glance into Nature will teach one
the truth of this fact. Plant and animal species are so constructed that they can maintain
and reproduce themselves in the conditions under which they live.
It is just this purposeful arrangement which has given rise to the
supposition that organic forms cannot be explained in the same way as the facts of
inorganic Nature. Kant observes in his Critique of Judgement: "The analogy
of the forms, in so far as they seem to be produced in accordance with a common
basic plan,
despite all differences, strengthens the presumption of a real relationship between
them in their generation from a common mother through an approach, step by step,
of one animal species to another. . . . Here,
therefore, it is open to the archaeologist of nature to cause to arise that great
family of creatures (for one would be forced to conceive them thus if the thoroughgoing
connected
relationship spoken of is to hold good) from the traces left over of her older
revolutions, according to all their known and supposed mechanisms. But he must
equally for that purpose ascribe to this common mother an organisation purposely
fitted to all these
creatures, for otherwise the purposive form of the products of the plant and
animal
kingdoms is unthinkable as to its possibility."
If we would explain organic forms after
the same manner in which natural science deals with inorganic phenomena,
we must demonstrate that the particular
arrangement of the organismsdevoid of a purposeful objectcomes into being by
reason of what is practically natural necessity, even as one elastic ball after having
been struck by another is fulfilling a law as it rolls along. This requirement has its
fulfilment in Darwins teachings regarding natural selection. Even in Nature
organic forms must, in accordance with their capacity for assimilating modifications
which have
been brought about by artificial breeding, become transformed. Should there be
nothing available for directly bringing about the change, so that none but the
forms aimed at
should come into existence, there will be, regardless of choice, useless, or
less useful, forms called into being. Now, Nature is extremely wasteful in the
bringing forth of her
germs. So many germs are, indeed, produced upon our earth, that were they all
to attain to
development we should soon be able to fill several worlds with them.
This great number of germs is confronted
with but a comparatively small amount of food and space, the result of this
being a universal struggle for existence
among organic beings. Only the fit survive and fructify; the unfit have to go
under. The fittest, however, will be those who have adapted themselves in
the best possible way to
the surrounding conditions of life. The absolutely unintentional, and yetfrom
natural causesnecessary, struggle for existence brings in its train the
same results as are attained by the intelligence of the breeder with his cultivated
organisms: he
creates purposeful (useful) organic forms. This, broadly sketched, is the
meaning
of Darwins theory of natural selection in the struggle for existence; or, otherwise,
the "selective theory." By this theory, that which Kant held to be
impossible is reached: the thinking out in all its possibilities of a predetermined
form in the animal
and vegetable kingdom, without assuming the Universal Mother to be dowered with
an
organism directly productive of all these creatures.
As Newton by pointing out the general attraction of the heavenly bodies
showed why they moved in the set courses determined by Copernicus and Kepler, so did it
now become possible to explain with the help of the theory of selection how in Nature the
evolution of the living thing takes place, the course of which Goethe, in his Metamorphosis
of Plants, has observed: "We can, however, say this, namely, that proceeding from
a relationship that is hardly distinguishable between animal and plant, creatures do
little by little evolve, carrying on their development in opposite directionsthe
plant finally reaching its maturity in the form of the tree, and the animal finding its
culminating glory in mans freedom and activity."
Goethe has said of his ancestors: "I shall not rest until I have
found a pregnant point from which many deductions may be made; or, rather, one that will
forcibly bestow upon me the overflow of its own abundance." The theory of
selection became for Ernst Haeckel the point from which he was able to deduce
a conception of the
universe entirely in accordance with natural science.
At the beginning of the last century Jean
Lamarck also maintained the
view that, at a certain moment in the earths development, a most simple organic
something developed itself, by spontaneous generation, out of the mechanical, physical,
and chemical processes. These simplest organisms then produced more perfect ones, and
these again others more highly organised, right up to man. "One might therefore quite
rightly name this part of the theory of evolution, which asserts the common origin of all
plant and animal species from the simplest common root-forms, in honour of its most
deserving founder, Lamarckianism" (Haeckel, Natural History of Creation). Haeckel
has given in grandiose style an explanation of Lamarckianism by means of Darwinism.
The key to this explanation Haeckel found
by seeking out the evidences in the individual development of the higher
organismsin their ontogenyshowing
that they really originated from lower forms of life. When one follows out the
form-development of one of the higher organisms from the earliest germ up to
its fully developed condition, the different stages are found to present
configurations
corresponding to the forms of lower organisms.3 At
the outset of his individual existence man and every other animal is a simple
cell. This cell
divides itself, and from it arises a germinal vesicle consisting of many cells.
From that
develops the so-called "cup-germ," the two-layered gastrula, which
has the shape of a cup- or jug-like body. Now, the lower plant-animals (sponges,
polyps, and so on)
remain throughout their entire existence on a level of development which is equivalent
to
this cup-germ. Haeckel remarks thereupon:
"This fact is of extraordinary importance. For we see that man,
and generally every vertebrate, runs rapidly, in passing, through a two-leaved stage of
formation, which in these lowest plant-animals is maintained throughout life" (Anthropogenesis). Such
a parallelism between the developmental stages of the higher organisms and the
developed lower forms may be followed out through the entire evolutionary history.
Haeckel
clothes this fact in the words: "The brief ontogenesis or development of the
individual is a rapid and abbreviated repetition, a condensed recapitulation of the
prolonged phylogenesis or development of the species." This sentence gives
expression to the so-called fundamental biogenetic law. Why then do the higher
organisms in the
course of their development come to forms which resemble lower ones? The natural
explanation is that the former have developed themselves out of the latter; that
therefore every organism in its individual development shows us one after another
the forms which
have clung to it as heirlooms from its lower ancestors.
The simplest organism that once upon a time formed itself on earth,
transforms itself in the course of reproduction into new forms. Of these, the best adapted
in the struggle for existence survive, and transmit their peculiarities to their
descendants. All the formations and qualities which an organism exhibits at the present
time have arisen in the lapse of enormous time-periods by adaptation and inheritance.
Heredity and adaptation are thus the causes of the world of organic forms.
Thus, by investigating the relationship of individual developmental
history (ontogeny) to the history of the race (phylogeny), Haeckel has given the
scientific explanation of the manifold organic forms.4 As
a natural philosopher he has satisfied the human demand for knowledge, which
Schiller had
derived from observation of Goethes mind; he ascended from the simple organisations
step by step to the more complicated, to finally build up genetically the most complex of
all, man, from the materials of the whole structure of nature. He has set forth his view
in several grandly designed worksin his General Morphology (1866), in his Natural
History of Creation (1868), in his Anthropogenesis (1874),in which he
"undertook the first and hitherto the only attempt to establish critically in detail
the zoological family-tree of man, and to discuss at length the entire animal ancestry of
our race." To these works there has been further added in recent years his
three-volumed Systematic Phylogeny.
It is characteristic of Haeckels deeply philosophical nature
that, after the appearance of Darwins Origin of Species, he at once
recognised the full significance for mans entire conception of the Universe,
of the principles therein established; and it speaks much for his philosophical
enthusiasm that
he boldly and tirelessly combated all the prejudices which arose against the
acceptance of the new truth by the creed of modern thought. The necessity that
all modern scientific
thinking should reckon with Darwinism was expounded by Haeckel at the fiftieth
meeting of German scientists and doctors on the 22nd September 1877 in his address,
The Present
Theory of Evolution in relation to Science as a whole. He delivered a widely-embracing
Confession of Faith of a Man of Science on the 9th October 1892 in Altenburg at the
seventy-fifth anniversary of the Society for Natural Science of the Osterland. (This
address was printed under the title, Monism as a link between Religion and Science, Bonn,
1892.) What has been yielded by the remodelled doctrine of evolution and our
present
scientific knowledge towards the answering of the "question of questions," he
has recently expounded in its broad lines in the address mentioned above, On
our
Present Knowledge as to the Origin of Man. Herein Haeckel handles afresh
the conclusion, which follows as a matter of course from Darwinism for every
logical thinker,
that man has developed out of the lower vertebrates, and further, more immediately
from true apes. It has been, however, this necessary conclusion which has summoned
to battle
all the old prejudices of theologians, philosophers, and all who are under their
spell. Doubtless, people would have accepted the emergence of the single animal
and plant forms
from one another if only this assumption had not carried with it at once the
recognition
of the animal descent of man. "It remains," as Haeckel emphasised in
his Natural
History of Creation, "an instructive fact that this recognitionafter the
appearance of the first Darwinian workwas in no sense general, that on the contrary
numerous critics of the first Darwinian book (and among them very famous names) declared
themselves in complete agreement with Darwinism, but entirely rejected its application to
man." With a certain appearance of justice, people relied in so doing on
Darwins book itself, in which no word is said of this application.
Because he drew this conclusion unreservedly,
Haeckel was reproached
with being "more Darwinian than Darwin." True, that held good only till the year
1871, in which appeared Darwins work, The Descent of Man and Sexual Selection, in
which Darwin himself maintained that inference with great boldness and clearness.
It was rightly recognised that with this conclusion must fall a
conception belonging to the most treasured among the collection of older human prejudices:
the conception that the "soul of man" is a special being all
to itself, having quite another, a different, "higher origin" from all other
things in Nature. The doctrine of descent must naturally lead to the view that mans
soul-activities are only a special form of those physiological functions which
are found in his vertebrate ancestors, and that these activities have evolved
themselves with the
same necessity from the mental activities of the animals, as the brain of man,
which is the material condition of his intellect, has evolved out of the vertebrate
brain.
It was not only the men with old conceptions of faith nurtured in the
various ecclesiastical religions who rebelled against the new confession, but also all
those who had indeed apparently freed themselves from these conceptions of faith, but
whose minds nevertheless still thought in the sense of these conceptions. In what follows
the proof will be given that to this latter class of minds belong a series of philosophers
and scientific scholars of high standing who have combated Haeckel, and who still remain
opponents of the views he advocated. To these ally themselves also those who are entirely
lacking in the power of drawing the necessary logical conclusions from a series of facts
lying before them. I wish here to describe the objections which Haeckel had to combat.
II
A bright light is thrown upon the relationship
of man to the higher vertebrates, by the truth which Huxley, in 1863, expressed
in his volume on Mans
Place in Nature, and other Anthropological Essays: "Thus whatever system of
organs be studied, the comparison of their modifications in the ape series leads to one
and the same resultthat the structural differences which separate man from the
gorilla and the chimpanzee are not so great as those which separate the gorilla from the
lower apes" (see Man and the Lower Animals, p. 144). With the help of
this
fact it is possible to establish mans animal line of ancestry in the sense of the
Darwinian doctrine of descent. Man has common ancestors with the apes in some species of
apes that have died out. By a corresponding utilisation of the knowledge which comparative
anatomy and physiology, individual developmental history, and palaeontology supply,
Haeckel has followed the animal ancestors of man lying still more remotely in the past,
through the semi-apes, the marsupials, the earliest fishes, right up to the very earliest
animals consisting only of a single cell. He is fully entitled to ask: "Are
the phenomena of the individual development of man in any way less wonderful
than the
palaeontologica1 development from lower organisms? Why should not man have evolved
in the course of enormous periods of time from unicellular original forms, since
every individual
runs through this same development from the cell to the fully developed organism?"
But it is also by no means easy for the
human mind to construct for itself conceptions in accordance with Nature
as regards the unfoldment of the single
organism from the germ up to the developed condition. We can see this from the
ideas which
a scientist like Albrecht von Hailer (17081777) and a philosopher like Leibnitz
(16461716) formed about this development. Hailer maintained the view that the germ
of an organism already contains in miniature, but fully and completely formed in advance,
all the parts which make their appearance during its development. Thus, development is
taken to be not the formation of something new in what is already present, but the
unfolding of something that was already there but invisible to the eye because of its
minuteness. But if this view were correct, then in the first germ of an animal or
vegetable form all following generations must be already contained like boxes one inside
the other. And Hailer actually drew this conclusion. He assumed that in the first human
germ of our root-mother, Eve, the entire human race was already present in miniature. And
even Leibnitz also can only imagine the development of men as an unfoldment of what
already exists: "So I should opine that the souls, which some day will be human
souls, were already there in germ, like those of other species, that they existed in
mans ancestors up to Adam, therefore from the beginning of things, always
in the
form of organised bodies."
The human understanding has a tendency to imagine to itself that
anything coming into existence was somehow already there, in some form or other, before
its manifestation. The entire organism is supposed to be already hidden in the germ; the
distinct organic classes, orders, families, species, and kinds are supposed to have
existed as the thoughts of a creator before they actually came into existence. Now,
however, the idea of evolution demands that we should conceive the arising of something
new, of something later, from out of something already present, of something earlier. We
are called upon to understand that which has become, out of the becoming. That we cannot
do, if we regard all that has become as something which has always been there.
How great the prejudices are that the
idea of evolution had to face was clearly shown by the reception which Caspar
Friedrich Wolffs Theoria
Generationis, which appeared in 1759, met with among the men of science who
accepted
Hailers views. It was demonstrated in this book that in the human ovum
not even a trace of the form of the developed organism is present, but that its
development consists
in a series of new formations. Wolff defended the idea of a real evolution,
an epigenesis, a becoming from what is not present, as against the view of seeming
evolution.
Haeckel says of Wolffs book that it "belongs, in spite of its small size and
awkward language, to the most valuable writings in the whole field of biological
literature. "Nevertheless, this remarkable book had at first no success whatever.
Although scientific studies, as a result of the stimulus imparted by Linnaeus, flourished
mightily at that time, although botanists and zoologists were soon counted no longer by
dozens but by hundreds, yet no one troubled himself about Wolffs Theory
of
Generation. The few, however, who had read it, held it to be fundamentally
wrong, and especially Hailer. Although Wolff proved by the most accurate observations
the truth of
epigenesis, and disproved the current hypotheses of the preformation doctrine,
nevertheless the "exact" physiologist Hailer remained the most zealous follower
of the latter and rejected the correct teaching of Wolff with his dictatorial edict:
"There is no becoming" (Nulla est epigenesis I). With so much power did
human thinking set itself against a view, of which Haeckel (in his Anthropogenesis) remarks: "Today
we can hardly any longer call this theory of epigenesis a theory, because
we have fully convinced ourselves of the correctness of the fact, and can
demonstrate it at any moment with the help of the microscope."
How deep-rooted is the prejudice against the idea of evolution can be
seen at any moment by the objections which our philosophical contemporaries make against
it. Otto Liebmann, who, in his Analysis of Reality and his Thoughts and Facts, has
subjected the fundamental views of science to criticism, expresses himself in
a remarkable manner about the conception of evolution. In face of the facts,
he cannot deny the justice
of the conception that higher organisms proceed from lower. He therefore endeavours
to represent the range and importance of this conception f the higher need of
explanation as
being as small as possible. "Accepted, the theory of descent . . . granted that be complete, that the great
genealogical register of Natures organic beings lies open before us; and that, not
as an hypothesis, but as historically proven fact, what should we then have? A gallery of
ancestors, such as one finds also in princely castles; only not as a fragment, but as a
completed whole." This means that nothing of any consequence has been accomplished
toward the real explanation, when one has shown how what appears later proceeds
as new
formation from what preceded.
Now it is interesting to see how Liebmanns
presuppositions lead him yet again to the assumption that what arises on
the road of evolution was there
already before its appearance. In the recently published second part of his Thoughts
and Facts he maintains: "It is true that for
us, to whom the world appears in the form of perception known as time, the seed
is there before the plant; begetting and conception come before the animal that
arises from them,
and the development of the embryo into a full-grown creature is a process of
time and drawn out in time to a certain length. In the timeless world-being,
on the contrary, which
neither becomes nor passes away, but is once and for all, maintaining itself
unchangeably amid the stream of happenings, and for which no future, no past,
but only an eternal present exists, this before and after, this earlier and later,
falls away
entirely. . . . That which unrolls itself for us in the course of time as the
slower or more rapidly passing succession of a series of phases of development,
is in the
omnipresent, permanent world-being a fixed law, neither coming into existence
nor passing
away."
The connection of such philosophical conceptions with the ideas of the
various religious doctrines as to the creation may be easily seen. That purposefully
devised beings arise in Nature, without there being some fundamental activity or power
which infuses that purposefulness into the beings in question, is something that neither
these religious doctrines nor such philosophical thinkers as Liebmann will admit. The view
that accords with Nature follows out the course of what happens, and sees beings arise
which have the quality of purposefulness, without this same purpose having been a
codeterminant in their production. The purposefulness came about along with them; but the
purpose did not co-operate in their becoming.5 The
religious mode of conception has recourse to the Creator, who has created the
creatures purposefully according to his preconceived plan; Liebmann turns to
a timeless world-being,
but he still makes that which is purposeful be brought forth by the purpose. "The
goal or the purpose is here not later, and also not earlier than the means; but the
purpose helps it on in virtue of a timeless necessity" (Thoughts and Facts, pt.
ii. p. 268). Liebmann is a good example of those philosophers who have apparently freed
themselves from the conceptions of faith, but who still think altogether on the lines of
such conceptions. They profess that their thoughts are determined purely by reasonable
considerations, but none the less it is an innate theological prejudice which gives the
direction to their thoughts.
Reasoned reflection must therefore agree
with Haeckel when he says: "Either organisms have naturally developed themselves,
and in that case they must all originate from the simplest common ancestral
formsor that is not the case, the
various species of organisms have arisen independently of one another, and in
that case
they can only have been created in a supernatural manner, by a miracle. Natural
evolution or supernatural creation of specieswe must choose between these two
possibilities, for there is no third!" (Free Science and Free Teaching, p. 9).
What has been proffered by philosophers or scientists as such a third alternative against
the doctrine of natural evolution shows itself, on closer examination, to be only a belief
in creation which more or less veils or denies its origin.
When we raise the question as to the origin of species in its most
important form, in that which concerns the origin of man, there are only two answers
possible. Either a consciousness endowed with reason is not present prior to its actual
appearance in the world but evolves as the outcome of the nervous system
concentrated in the brain; else an all-dominating world-reason exists before all other
beings, and so shapes matter that in man its own image comes into being. Haeckel (in Monism
as Link between Religion and Science, p. 21) describes the becoming of the
human mind
as follows: "As our human body has slowly and step by step built itself up from a
long series of vertebra ancestors, so the same thing holds good our soul: as a function of
our brain it h developed itself step by step in interaction with that organ. What we term
for short the human soul is indeed on the sum-total of our feeling, willing,
and thinkingthe sum-total of physiological functions whose elementary organs consist
of the microscopic ganglionic cells of our brain. Comparative anatomy and ontogeny show us
how the marvellous structure of the latter, of our human soul organ, has built itself
upwards gradually in the course of millions of years out of the brain-forms of the higher
and lower vertebrates; while comparative psychology shows us how, hand in hand therewith,
the very soul itselfas a function of the brainhas evolved itself.
The latter shows us also how a lower form of soul activity is already present
in the lowest animals,
in the unicellular protozoa, infusoria, and rhizopods. Every scientist who, like
myself, has observed through long years the life-activity of these unicellular
protista, is
positively convinced that they also possess a soul; this cell-soul, too,
consists of a sum of feelings, representations, and volitions; the feeling, thinking,
and willing of our human soul is only different
therefrom in degree."
The totality of human soul-activities, which find their highest
expression in unitary self-consciousness, corresponds to the complex structure of
the human brain,6 just as simple feeling and willing
do to the organisation of the protozoa. The progress of physiology, which we
owe to
investigators like Goltz, Munk, Wernicke, Edinger, Paul Flechsig, and others,
enables us to-day to assign particular soul-manifestations to definite parts
of the brain as their
special functions. We recognise in four tracts of the grey matter of the cortex
the mediators of four kinds of feeling: the sphere of bodily organic feeling
in the mesocranum
lobule, that of smell in the frontal lobule, that of vision in the chief basal
lobule, that of hearing in the temple lobule. The thinking which connects and
orders the
sensations has its apparatus between these four "sense-foci." Haeckel links the
following remark to the discussion of these latest physiological results: "The
four thought-foci, distinguished by peculiar and highly complicated nerve-structure
from the
intervening sense-foci, are the true organs of thought, the only real tools
of our
mental life" (On our Present Knowledge as to the Origin of Man, p. 15).
Haeckel demands from the psychologists that they shall take such
results as these into account in their explanations about the nature of the soul, and not
build up a mere pseudo science composed of a fantastic metaphysic, of one-sided, so-called
inner observation of soul-events, uncritical comparison, misunderstood perceptions,
incomplete experiences, speculative aberrations and religious dogmas. As against the
reproach that is cast by this view at the old-fashioned psychology, we find in some
philosophers and also in individual scientists the assertion that there cannot in any case
be contained in the material processes of the brain that which we class together as mind
and spirit; for the material processes in the areas of sense and thought are in no case
representations, feelings, and thoughts, but only material phenomena. We cannot learn to
know the real nature of thoughts and feelings through external observation, but only
through inner experience, through purely mental self-observation. Gustav Bunge, for
instance, in his address Vitalism and Mechanism, p. 12, explains: "In
activitytherein lies the riddle of life. But we have not acquired the conception of
activity from observation through the senses, but from self-observation, from the
observation of willing as it comes into our consciousness, as it reveals itself to our
inner sense." Many thinkers see the mark of a philosophical mind in the
ability to rise to the insight that it is a turning upside down of the right
relation of things, to
endeavour to understand mental processes from material ones.
Such objections point to a misunderstanding
of the view of the world which Haeckel represents. Anyone who has really
been saturated with the spirit of this view will never
seek to explore the laws of mental life by any other road than by inner experience,
by self-observation. The opponents of the scientific mode of thought talk
exactly as if its
supporters sought to discover the truths of logic, ethics, aesthetics, and so
forth, not by means of observing mental phenomena as such, but from the results
of brain anatomy. The
caricature of the scientific world-conception thus created by such opponents
for themselves is then termed materialism, and they are untiring in ever
repeating afresh that
this view must be unproductive, because it ignores the mental side of existence,
or at least gives it a lower place at the expense o the material. Otto Liebmann,
whom we may
here cite once more, because his anti-scientific conceptions are typical of the
mode of
thought of certain philosophers and laymen, observes: "But granting, however,
that natural science had attained its goal, it would then be in a position to
show me
accurately the physico-organic reasons why I hold that the assertion twice
two are four is true and assert it, and the other assertion twice two are
five is false and combat it, or why I must, just at this moment, write these
very lines on paper the while I am entangled in the subjective belief that this happens
because I will to write them down on account of their truth as assumed by
me" (Thoughts
and Facts, pt. ii. p. 294 et seq.). No scientific thinker will ever be
of opinion that bodily-organic reasons can throw any light upon what, in the
logical sense,
is true or false. Mental connections can only be recognised from the side of
the mental life. What is logically justified, must always be decided by logic;
what is artistically
perfect, by the aesthetic judgement. But it is an altogether different question
to inquire: How does logical thinking, or the aesthetic judgement, arise as a
function of the
brain? It is on this question only that comparative physiology and brain-anatomy
have anything to say. And these show that the reasoning consciousness does not
exist in
isolation for itself, only utilising the human brain in order to express itself
through it, as the piano-player plays on the piano; but that our mental powers
are just as much
functions of the form elements of our brain, as "every force is a function of a
material body" (Haeckel, Anthropogenesis, pt. ii. p. 853).
The essence of Monism consists in the assumption that all
occurrences in the world, from the simplest mechanical ones upwards to the highest human
intellectual creations, evolve themselves naturally in the same sense, and that everything
which is called in for the explanation of appearances, must be sought within that
same world. Opposed to this view stands Dualism, which regards the pure operation
of natural law as insufficient to explain appearances, and takes refuge in a reasoning
being ruling over the appearances from above. Natural science, as has been shown, must
reject this dualism.
Now, however, it is urged from the side
of philosophy that the means at the disposal of science are insufficient
to establish a world-conception. From its own
standpoint science was entirely right in explaining the whole world-process as
a chain of causes and effects, in the sense of a purely mechanical conformity
to law; but behind
these laws, nevertheless, there is hidden the real cause, the universal world-reason,
which only avails itself of mechanical means in order to realise higher, purposeful
relations. Thus, for instance, Arthur Drews, who follows in the path of Eduard
von
Hartmann, observes: "Human works of art, too, are produced in a mechanical manner,
that is when one looks only at the outward succession of single moments, without
reflecting on the fact that after all there is hidden behind all this only the
artists thought; nevertheless one would rightly take that man for a fool
who would perchance contend that the work was produced purely mechanically .
. . that which presents
itself as the inevitable effect of a cause, on that lower standpoint which contents
itself with merely gazing at the effects and thus contemplates the entire process
as it were from
behind, that very same thing reveals itself, when seen from the front, in
every case
as the intended goal of the means employed" (German Speculation since Kant, vol.
ii. p. 287 et seq.). And Eduard von Hartmann himself remarks about the struggle
for
existence which renders it possible to explain living creatures naturally: "The
struggle for existence, and therewith the whole of natural selection, is only
the servant
of the Idea, who is obliged to perform the lower services in its
realisation, namely, the rough hewing and fitting of the stones that the master-builder
has measured out and typically determined in advance according to their place
in the great building. To proclaim this selection in the struggle for existence
as the essentially
adequate principle of explanation of the evolution of the organic kingdom, would
be on a par with a day-labourer, who had worked with others in preparing the
stones in the
building of Cologne Cathedral, declaring himself to be the architect of that
work of
art" (Philosophy of the Unconscious, 10th ed., vol. iii. p. 403).
If these conceptions were justified, it would be the task of philosophy
to seek the artist behind the work of art. In fact, philosophers have tried the most
various and diverse dualistic explanations to account for Cosmic processes. They have
constructed in thought certain entities, supposed to hover behind the phenomena as the
spirit of the artist rules behind the work of art.
No scientific consideration would be able to rob man of the conviction
that perceptible phenomena are guided by beings outside the world, if he could find within
his own consciousness anything that pointed to such beings. What could anatomy and
physiology accomplish with their declaration that soul-activities are functions of the
brain, if observation of these activities yielded anything which could be regarded as a
higher ground for an explanation? If the philosopher were able to show that a universal
world reason manifests itself in human reason, then all scientific results would be
powerless to refute such knowledge.
Now, however, the dualistic world-conception
is disproved by nothing more effectively than by the consideration of the
human mind. When I want to explain an
external occurrencefor instance, the motion of an elastic ball which has been struck
by another, I cannot stop short at the mere observation, but must seek the law which
determines the direction of motion and velocity of the one ball from the direction and
velocity of the other. Mere observation cannot furnish me with such a law, but only the
linking together in thought of what happens. Man, therefore, draws from his mind the means
of explaining that which presents itself to him through observation. He must pass beyond
the mere observation, if he wants to comprehend it. Observation and thought are the two
sources of our knowledge about things; and that holds good for all things and happenings,
except only for the thinking consciousness itself. To that we cannot add by any
explanation anything that does not lie already in the observation itself. It yields us the
laws for all other things; it yields us at the same time its own laws also. If we want to
demonstrate the correctness of a natural law, we accomplish this by distinguishing,
arranging observations and perceptions, and drawing conclusionsthat is,
we form conceptions and ideas about the experiences in question with the help
of thinking. As to
the correctness of the thinking, thought itself alone decides. It is thus thought
which, in regard to all that happens in the world, carries us beyond mere observation,
though it
does not carry us beyond itself.
This fact is incompatible with the dualistic world-conception. The
point which the supporters of this conception so often emphasise, namely, that the
manifestations of the thinking consciousness are accessible to us through the inner sense
of introspection, while we only comprehend physical and chemical happenings when we bring
into the appropriate connections the facts of observation through logical, mathematical
combination, and so on; in other words, through the results of the psychological domain: this
fact is the very thing which they should never admit. For let us for once draw the
right conclusion from the knowledge that observation transforms itself into
self-observation when we ascend from the scientific into the psychological domain.
If a universal world-reason underlay the
phenomena of nature, or some other spiritual primordial being (for instance,
Schopenhauers will or von
Hartmanns unconscious spirit), then it follows that the human thinking
spirit must also be created by this world-being. An agreement of the conceptions
and ideas which
the mind of man forms from phenomena, with the actual laws proper to these occurrences,
would only be possible if the ideal world-artist called forth in the human soul
the laws according to which he had previously created the entire world. But then
man could only
know his own mental activity through observation of the root-being by whom he
is shaped, and not through self-observation. Indeed, there could be no self-observation,
but only
observation of the intentions and purposes of the primordial being. Mathematics
and logic,
for example, ought not to be developed by means of mans investigating the
inner, proper nature of mental connections, but by his deducing these psychological
truths from
the intentions and purposes of the eternal world-reason. If human understanding
were only the reflection of an eternal mind, then it could never possibly ascertain
its own laws
through self-observation, but must needs explain them from out of the eternal
reason. But whenever such an explanation has been attempted, it is simply human
reason which has been
transferred to the world outside. When the mystic believes that he rises to the
contemplation of God by sinking down into his own inner being, in reality he
merely sees his own spirit, which he makes into God; and when Eduard von Hartmann
speaks of ideas
which utilise the laws of nature as their hodmen-helpers in order to shape the
building of the world, these ideas are only his own, by means of which he explains
the world. Because
observation of the manifestations of mind is self-observation, therefore
it follows
that it is mans own spirit which expresses itself in the mind, and not
any external
reason.
The monistic doctrine of evolution, however,
is in complete agreement with the fact of self-observation. If the human
soul has evolved itself slowly and step by
step along with the organs of the soul out of lower conditions, then it is self-evident
that we can explain its development from below scientifically, though we can
discover the inner nature of that which emerges from the complex structure
of the human brain only from
the contemplation of this very nature itself. Had spirit been always present
in a form resembling the human, and had it at last created its likeness in
man alone, then we ought
to be able to deduce the human spirit from the All-spirit; but if mans
spirit has
arisen as a new formation in the course of natural evolution, then we can
understand its origin by following out its line of ancestry; we learn to know the stage at
which it has at last arrived when we contemplate that spirit itself.
A philosophy that understands itself, and turns its attention to an
unprejudiced contemplation of the human spirit, thus yields a further proof for the
correctness of the monistic world-conception. It is, however, quite incompatible with a
dualistic natural science. (The further development and detailed proof of a monistic
philosophy, the basic ideas of which I can only indicate here, I have given in my Philosophy
of Freedom, Berlin, 1894, Verlag Emil Felber.)
For one who understands aright the monistic world-conception, all the
objections urged against it from the side of ethics lose all significance. Haeckel has
repeatedly pointed out the injustice of such objections, and also called attention to the
fact that the assertion that scientific monism must needs lead to ethical materialism,
either rests upon a complete misunderstanding of the former, or else aims at nothing more
than casting suspicion upon it.
Naturally monism regards human conduct only as a part of the general
happenings of the world.7 It makes that conduct just as
little dependent upon a so-called higher moral world-order, as it makes the happenings in
nature dependent upon a supernatural order.
"The mechanical or monistic philosophy maintains that, everywhere
in the phenomena of human life, as in those of the rest of nature, fixed and unalterable
laws rule, that everywhere there exists a necessary causal connection, a causal nexus of
appearances, and that in accordance therewith the entire world knowable to us constitutes
a uniform whole, a monon. It maintains further that all phenomena
are produced
by mechanical causes, not by preconceived purposive causes. There is
no such
thing as a free will in the ordinary sense. On the contrary,
those very phenomena which we have accustomed ourselves to view as the freest
and most independent,
the manifestations of the human will, appear in the light of the monistic world-conception
as subordinated to just as rigid laws as any other phenomenon of nature" (Haeckel,
Anthropogenesis, p. 851 et seq.). It is the monistic philosophy which first shows the
phenomenon of free will in the right light. As a bit cut out of the general happening of
the world, the human will stands under the same laws as all other natural timings and
processes. It is conditioned according to natural law. But inasmuch as the monistic view
denies the presence of higher, purposeful causes in the course of nature, it at the same
time also declares the will independent of such a higher world-order.
The natural course of evolution leads
the processes of nature upwards to human self-consciousness. On that level
it leaves man to himself; henceforward he can
draw the impulses of his action from his own spirit. If a universal world-reason
were ruling, then man also could not draw his goals from within himself,
but only from this
eternal reason. In the monistic sense mans action is hereafter determined by causal
moments; in the ethical sense it is not determined, because nature as a whole is
determined not ethically but in accordance with natural law. The preliminary stages of
ethical conduct are already to be found among the lower organisms. "Even
though later the moral foundations have in man developed themselves much more
highly, nevertheless
their most ancient, prehistoric source lies, as Darwin has shown, in the social
instincts of the animals" (Haeckel Monism, p. 29).
Mans moral conduct is a product of evolution. The moral instinct
of animals perfects itself, like everything else in nature, by inheritance and adaptation
until man sets before himself moral purposes and goals from out of his own spirit Moral
goals appear not as predetermined by a supernatural world-order, but as a new formation
within the natural process. Regarded ethically, "that only has purpose which man has
first endowed therewith, for only through the realisation of an idea does anything
purposeful arise. But only in man does the idea become effective in a realistic sense. To
the question, What is man's task in life? Monism can only answer, that which he sets
himself. My mission in the world is no (ethically) predetermined one; on the contrary, it
is, at every moment, that which I elect for myself. I do not enter on lifes journey
with a fixed, settled line of march" (cp. my Philosophy of Freedom, p.
172 et seq.). Dualism demands submission to ethical commands derived from
somewhere or other. Monism throws man wholly upon himself. Man receives ethical standards
from no external world-being, but only from the depths of his own being. The capacity for
creating for oneself ethical purposes may be called moral phantasy. Thereby man
elevates the ethical instincts of his lower ancestors into moral action, as through his
artistic phantasy he reflects on a higher level in his works of art the forms and
occurrences of Nature.
The philosophical considerations which result from the fact of
self-observation thus constitute no refutation, but rather an important complement of the
means of proof in favour of the monistic world-conception, derived from comparative
anatomy and physiology.
III
The famous pathologist, Rudolf
Virchow,8
has taken up a quite peculiar position towards the monistic world-conception. After
Haeckel had delivered his address on The Present Theory of Evolution in Relation to
Science as a Whole at the fiftieth congress of German scientists and doctors, in which
he ably expounded the significance of the monistic world-conception for our intellectual
culture and also for the whole system of public instruction, Virchow came forward four
days later as his opponent with the speech: The Freedom of Science in the Modern State.
At first it seemed as if Virchow wanted monism excluded from the schools
only, because, according to his view, the new doctrine was only a hypothesis
and did not
represent a fact established by definite proofs. It certainly seems remarkable
that a modern scientist wants to exclude the doctrine of evolution from school-teaching
on the
ostensible ground of lack of unassailable proofs while at the same time speaking
in favour of Church dogma. Does not Virchow even say (on p. 29 of the speech
mentioned): "Every
attempt to transform our problems into set formulae, to introduce our
suppositions as the basis of instruction, especially the attempt simply to
dispossess the Church and replace its dogmas without more ado by a descent-religion; yes, gentlemen, this attempt must fail entirely, and in its
frustration this attempt will also bring with it the greatest dangers for the whole
position of science!" One must needs, however, here raise the
questionmeaningless for every reasonable thinker,Have we more certain proofs
for the Churchs dogmas than for the "descent-religion"? But it results
from the whole tone and style in which Virchow spoke that he was much less concerned about
warding off the dangers which monism might cause to the teaching of the young than about
his opposition on principle to Haeckels world-conception as a whole. This he has
proved by his whole subsequent attitude. He has seized upon every opportunity that seemed
to him suitable to combat the natural history of evolution and to repeat his favourite
phrase, "It is quite certain that man does not descend from the ape." At
the twenty-fifth anniversary of the German Anthropological Society, on 24th August 1894,
he even went so far as to clothe this dictum in the somewhat tactless words: "On the
road of speculation people have come to the ape theory; one might just as well have
arrived at an elephant theory or a sheep theory." Of course, this utterance has not
the smallest sense in view of the results of comparative zoology. "No
zoologist," remarks Haeckel, "would consider it possible that
man could have descended from the elephant or the sheep. For precisely these
two mammals
happen to belong to the most specialised branches of hoofed animals, an order
of mammalia which stands in no sort of direct connection with that of the apes
or primates (excepting
their common descent from an ancestral form common to the entire class)." Hard as it
may be towards a meritorious scientist, one can only characterise such utterances as
Virchows as empty verbalism.
In combating the theory of descent, Virchow
follows quite peculiar tactics. He demands unassailable proofs for this theory.
But as soon as natural science
discovers anything which is capable of enriching the chain of proofs with a fresh
link, he seeks to weaken its probatory force in every way. The theory of
descent sees in the famous
skulls of Neanderthal, Spy, etc., isolated palaeontological remains of extinct
races of lower men, which form a transition-link between the ape-like ancestor
of man
(Pithecanthropus) and the lower human races of the present day. Virchow declares
these skulls to be abnormal, diseased formations, pathological productions.
He even developed
this contention in the direction of maintaining that all deviations from the
fixed organic root-forms must be regarded as pathological formations. If,
then, by artificial breeding
we produce table-fruit from wild fruit, we have only produced a diseased object
in Nature. One cannot prove more effectively the thesis of Virchow (hostile
to any theory of
evolution), "The plan of organisation is unalterable within the species, kind does
not depart from kind," than by declaring that what shows plainly how kind
departs
from kind, is not a healthy, natural product of evolution, but a diseased formation.
Quite in accord with this attitude of Virchows to the theory of descent
were, further, his assertions in regard to the skeleton remains of the man-ape
(Pithecanthropus
erectus), which Eugen Dubois found in Java in 1894.
It is true that these remainsthe top of the skull, a thigh-bone,
and some teeth were incomplete; and a debate that was most interesting
arose about them in the Zoological Congress at Leyden. Out of twelve zoologists,
three were of opinion
that the remains were those of an ape, three that they were those of a human
being, while six defended the view that they belonged to an extinct transition
form between man
and ape. Dubois set out in a most lucid manner the relation of this intermediate
link between man and ape, on the one hand to the lower races of humanity, on
the other to the
known anthropoid apes. Virchow declared that the skull and the thigh-bone did
not belong together; but that the former came from an ape, the latter from a
human being. This
assertion was refuted by well-informed palaeontologists, who, on the basis of
the conscientious report of the find, expressed themselves as of opinion that
not the smallest
doubt could exist as to the origin of the bony remains from one and the same
individual. Virchow tried to prove that the thigh-bone could only have come from
a man, from the
presence of a bony outgrowth which could only proceed from an illness that had
been cured through careful human nursing. As against that, the palaeontologist
Marsh showed that
similar bony out-growths occur also in wild apes. A third assertion of Virchows,
that the deep groove between the upper edge of the eye sockets and the low roof of the
skull in Pithecanthropus bore witness to its simian nature, was refuted by the
palaeontologist Nehrings showing that the same formation existed in a human
skull
from Santos in Brazil.
Virchows fight against the evolution
doctrine appears indeed somewhat of a riddle when one reflects that this
investigator, at the beginning of his
career, before the publication of Darwins Origin of Species, defended
the doctrine of the mechanical basis of all vital activity. In Wurzburg, where
Virchow
taught from 1848 to 1856, Haeckel sat "reverentially at his feet and first heard with
enthusiasm from him that clear and simple doctrine." But Virchow fights against the
doctrine of transformation created by Darwin, which furnishes an all-embracing principle
of explanation of that doctrine. When, in the face of the facts of palaeontology, of
comparative anatomy and physiology, he constantly emphasises that "definite
proof" is lacking, one can only point out, on the other side, that knowledge of the
facts alone does indeed not suffice for the recognition of the doctrine of evolution, but
there is needed in additionas Haeckel remarksa "philosophical
understanding" as well. "The unshakable structure of true monistic science
arises only through the most intimate interaction and mutual penetration of philosophy and
experience" (Haeckel, Natürliche Schopfungsgeschichte, 34, Vortrag).
In any case, the campaign which Virchow has carried on for many years past against
the doctrine
of descent, with the applause of theological and other reactionaries, is more
dangerous
than all the mischief which a "descent-religion" can cause in unripe
heads. A technical discussion on the point with Virchow is made difficult by
the fact that,
fundamentally, he remains standing on a bare negation, and in general does not
bring
forward any specific technical objections against the doctrine of evolution.
Other scientific opponents of Haeckels
make it easier for us to attain clearness in regard to them because they
give the reasons for their opposition, and
we can thus recognise the mistakes in their inferences. Among these are to be
reckoned
Wilhelm His and Alexander Goette.
His made his appearance in the year 1868 with his Researches as to
the First Beginnings of the Vertebrate Body. His attack was primarily directed
against the doctrine that the form-development of a higher organism from the
first germ to the
fully-developed condition can be explained from the evolution of the type. We
ought not, according to him, to explain this development by regarding it as the
outcome of the
generations from which the single organism descends through inheritance and adaptation,
but we should seek in the individual organism itself the mechanical causes of
its becoming, without regard to comparative anatomy and ancestral history. His
starts from the
view that the germ, conceived as a uniform surface, grows unequally at different
spots, and he asserts that in consequence of this unequal growth the complex
structure of the
organism results in the course of development. He says: Take a simple layer and
imagine that it possesses at different places a different impulse to enlargement.
One will then be
able to develop from purely mathematical and mechanical laws the condition in
which the formation must find itself after a certain time. Its successive forms
will accurately
correspond to the stages of development which the individual organism runs through
from the germ to the perfected condition. Thus we do not need to go beyond the
consideration of
the individual organism in order to understand its development, but can deduce
this from the mechanical law of growth. All formation, whether consisting in
cleavage, in the
formation of folds, or in complete separation, follows as a consequence from
this
fundamental law." The law of growth brings into existence the two pairs of limbs as
follows: "Their disposition is determined, like the four corners of a letter, by the
crossing of four folds which limit and bound the body." His rejects any help drawn
from the history of the species, with the following justification: "When the history
of development for any given form has thoroughly fulfilled the task of its physiological
deduction, then it may rightly say of itself that it has explained this form as an
individual form" (cp. His, Unsere Körperform und das physiologische
Problem ihrer Entstehung). In reality, however, nothing whatever has been accomplished
by such an explanation. For the question still remains. Why do different forces of
growth work at different spots in the germ? They are simply assumed by His to exist. The
explanation can only be seen in the fact that the relations of growth of the individual
parts of the germ have been transmitted by inheritance from the ancestral animals, that
therefore the individual organism runs through the successive stages of its development
because the changes which its forefathers have undergone through long ages continue to
operate as the cause of its individual becoming.
To what consequences the view of His leads
may best be seen from his
theory as to the orbital lobule, by which the so-called "rudimentary organs" of
the organism were to be explained. These are parts which are present in the organism
without possessing any sort of significance for its life. Thus man has a fold of skin at
the inner corner of his eye which is without any purpose for the functions of the organ of
sight. He possesses also muscles corresponding to those by which certain animals can move
their ears at will. Yet most people cannot move their ears. Some animals possess eyes
which are covered over with a skin and thus cannot serve for seeing. His explains these
organs as being such, to which "up to the present it has not been possible to assign
any physiological role, analogous to the snippets, which, in cutting out a dress, cannot
be avoided even with the most economical use of the stuff." The evolution
theory gives the only possible explanation of them. They are inherited from remote
ancestors, in
whom they subserved a useful purpose. Animals which to-day live underground and
have no seeing eyes, descend from such ancestors as once lived in the light and
needed eyes. In
the course of many generations the conditions of life of such an organic stock
have changed. The organisms have adapted themselves to the new conditions in
which they can
dispense with organs of sight. But these organs remain as heirlooms from an earlier
stage of evolution; only in the course of time they have become atrophied, because
they have not
been used. These rudimentary organs9 form one of the
strongest means of proof for the natural theory of evolution. If any deliberate intentions
whatever had ruled in the building up of an organic form, whence came these purposeless
parts? There is no other possible explanation of them, except that in the course of many
generations they have gradually fallen into disuse.
Alexander Goette, also, is of opinion
that it is unnecessary to explain the developmental stages of the individual
organism by the roundabout road through the
history of the species. He deduces the shaping of the organism from a "law of
form" which must superadd itself to the physical and chemical processes
of matter in order to form the living creature. He endeavoured to defend this
standpoint exhaustively
in his Entwickelungsgeschichte der Unke (1875). "The essence of development
consists in the complete but gradual introduction into the existence of certain natural
bodies of a new moment, determined from without, viz. that of the law of form." Since
the law of form is supposed to superadd itself from without to the mechanical and physical
properties of matter, and not to develop itself from these properties, it can be nothing
else but an immaterial idea, and we have nothing given us therein which is substantially
different from the creative thoughts, which, according to the dualistic world-conception,
underlie organic forms. It is supposed to be a motive-power existing outside of organised
matter and causing its development. That means, it employs the laws of matter as
"helpers," just like Eduard von Hartmanns idea. Goette is forced to call
in the help of this "law of form," because he believes that "the individual
developmental history of organisms" alone explains and lies at the basis
of their whole shaping. Whoever denies that the true causes of the development
of the individual
being are an historical result of its ancestral development will be driven of
necessity to
have recourse to such ideal causes lying outside of matter.
Weighty evidence against such attempts
to introduce ideal formative forces into the developmental history of the
individual, is afforded by the achievements
of those investigators who have really explained the forms of higher living creatures
on the assumption that these forms are the hereditary repetition of innumerable
historical
changes in the history of the species, which have occurred during long ages.
A striking
example in this respect is the "vertebral theory of the skull-bones," already
dimly anticipated by Goethe and Oken, but first set in the right light by Carl Gegenbauer
on the basis of the theory of descent. He demonstrated that the skull of the higher
vertebrates, and also that of man, has arisen from the gradual transformation of a
"root-skull" whose form is still preserved by the "root-fishes," or
primordial gastrea, in the formation of the head. Supported by such results, Gegenbauer
therefore remarks rightly: "The descent theory will likewise find a touchstone in
comparative anatomy. Hitherto there existed no observation in comparative anatomy which
contradicts it; all observations rather lead us towards it. Thus that theory will receive
back from comparative anatomy what it gave to its method: clearness and certainty" (cp. the
Introduction to Gegenbauers Vergleichende Anatomie). The descent
theory has directed science to seek for the real causes of the individual development of
each organism in its ancestry; and natural science on this road replaces the ideal laws of
development which might be supposed to superpose themselves on organic matter, by the
actual facts of the ancestral history, which continue to operate in the individual
creature as formative forces.
Under the influence of the theory of descent,
science is ever drawing nearer to that great goal which one of the greatest
scientists of the century, Karl Ernst
von Baer, has depicted in the words: "It is one fundamental thought which runs
through all forms and stages of animal evolution and dominates all particular conditions.
It is the same fundamental thought which gathered together the scattered masses of the
spheres in universal space and formed them into solar systems; the same thought caused the
disintegrated dust on the surface of the planet to sprout forth into living forms. But
this thought is nothing else but Life itself, and the words and syllables wherein it
expresses itself are the various forms of that which lives." Another utterance of
Baers gives the same conception in another form: "To many another
will a prize fall. But the palm will be won by the fortunate man for whom it
is reserved to trace back
the formative energies of the animal body to the general forces and vital functions
of the
universe as a whole."
It is these same general forces of Nature which cause the stone lying
on an inclined plane to roll downwards, which also, through evolution, cause one organic
form to arise from another. The characteristics which a given form acquires through many
generations by adaptation, it hands on by heredity to its descendants. That which an
organism unfolds today, from within outwards, from its germinal dispositions, had
developed itself outwardly in its ancestors in mechanical struggle with the rest of the
forces of Nature. In order to hold this view firmly it is doubtless necessary to assume
that the formations acquired in this external struggle should be actually transmitted by
heredity. Hence the whole doctrine of evolution is called in question by the view,
defended especially by August Weismann, that acquired characteristics are not inherited.
He is of opinion that no external change which has occurred in an organism can be
transmitted to its offspring, but that only can be inherited which is predetermined by
some original disposition in the germ. In the germ-cells of organisms innumerable
possibilities of development are held to lie. Accordingly, organic forms can vary in the
course of reproduction. A new form arises when among the descendants possibilities of
development come to unfoldment other than in the ancestors.
From among the ever new forms arising in this way, those will survive
which can best maintain the struggle for existence. Forms unequal to this struggle will
perish. When out of a possibility of evolution a form develops itself which is specially
effective in the battle of competition, then this form will reproduce itself; when that is
not the case, it must perish. One sees that here causes operating on the organism from
without are entirely eliminated. The reasons why the forms change lie in the germ. And the
struggle for existence selects from among the forms coming into existence from the most
diverse germ-dispositions those which are the fittest. The special characteristic of an
organism does not lead us up to a change which has occurred in its ancestors as its cause,
but to a disposition in the germ of that ancestor. Since, therefore, nothing can be
effected from outside in the upbuilding of organic forms, it follows that already in the
germ of the root-form, from which a race began its development, there must have lain the
dispositions for the succeeding generations.
We find ourselves once more in face of
a doctrine of Chinese boxes one within another. Weismann conceives of the
progressive process through which the germs
bring about evolution, as a material process. When an organism develops, one
portion of the germ-mass out of which it evolves is solely employed in forming
a fresh germ for the
sake of further reproduction. In the germ-mass of a descendant, therefore, a
part of that of the parents is present, in the germ-mass of the parents a
portion of that of the
grandparents, and so on backwards to the root-form. Hence through all organisms
developing one from another there is maintained an originally present germ-substance.
This is
Weismann s theory of the continuity and immortality of the germ-plasm. He believes
himself to be forced to this view, because numerous facts appear to him to contradict the
assumption of the inheritance of acquired characteristics. As one specially noteworthy
fact he cites the presence of the workers, who are incapable of reproduction, among the
communal insectsbees, ants, and termites. These workers are not developed
from special eggs, but from the same as those from which spring the fruitful
individuals. If
the female larvae of these animals are very richly and nourishingly fed, they
then lay eggs from which queens or males proceed. If the feeding is less generous,
the result is
the production of sterile workers. Now, it is very easy and obvious to seek the
cause of
this unfruitfulness simply in the less effective nourishment.
This view is represented among others by Herbert Spencer, the English
thinker, who has constructed a philosophical world-conception on the basis of natural
evolution. Weismann holds this view to be mistaken. For in the worker-bee the reproductive
organs do not merely remain behindhand in their development, but they actually become
rudimentary; they do not possess a large proportion of the parts necessary for
reproduction.
But now, he contends, one can demonstrate in the case of other insects
that defective nourishment in no way entails such a degeneration of organs. Flies are
insects related to bees. Weismann reared the eggs laid by a female bluebottle in two
separate batches, and fed the one plentifully, the other meagrely. The latter grew slowly
and remained strikingly small. But they reproduced themselves. Hence it appears that in
flies insufficient nourishment does not produce sterility. But then it follows also that
in the root-insect, the common ancestral form, which in line with the evolution doctrine
must be assumed for the allied species of bees and flies, this peculiarity of being
rendered unfruitful by insufficient nourishment cannot have existed. On the contrary, this
unfruitfulness must be an acquired characteristic of the bees. But at the same time
there can be no question of any inheritance of this peculiarity, for the workers which
have acquired it do not reproduce themselves, and accordingly, therefore, can pass on
nothing by heredity. Hence the cause must be sought for in the bee-germ itself, why at one
time queens and at another workers are developed. The external influence of insufficient
nourishment can accomplish nothing, because it is not inherited. It can only act as a stimulus,
which brings to development the preformed disposition in the germ.
Through the generalisation of these and
similar results, Weismann comes
to the conclusion: "The external influence is never the real cause of the difference,
but plays the part of the stimulus, which decides which of the available dispositions
shall come to development. The real cause, however, always lies in preformed changes of
the body itself, and these since they are constantly purposefulcan be referred
in their development only to processes of selection," to the selection of the fittest
in the struggle for existence. The struggle for existence (selection) "alone is the
guiding and leading principle in the development of the world of organisms" (Aüssere
Einflusse der Entwickelungsreize, p. 49). The English investigators Francis Galton and
Alfred Russel Wallace hold the same view as Weismann as to the non-inheritance of acquired
characteristics and the omnipotence of selection.
The facts which these investigators advance are certainly in need of
explanation. But they cannot receive such an explanation in the direction indicated by
Weismann without abandoning the entire monistic doctrine of evolution. But the objections
urged against the inheritance of acquired characteristics are the least capable of driving
us to such a step. For one only needs to consider the development of the instincts in the
higher animals to convince oneself of the fact that such inheritance does occur. Look, for
instance, at the development of our domestic animals. Some of them, as a consequence of
living together with men, have developed mental capacities which cannot even be mentioned
in connection with their wild ancestors. Yet these capacities can certainly not proceed
from an inner disposition. For human influence, human training, comes to these animals as
something wholly external. How could an inner disposition possibly come to meet exactly an
arbitrarily determined action of man? And yet training becomes instinct, and this is
inherited by the descendants. Such an example cannot be refuted. And countless others of
the same kind can be found. Thus the fact of the inheritance of acquired characteristics
remains such; and we must hope that further investigations will bring the apparently
contradictory observations of Weismann and his followers into harmony with monism.
Fundamentally, Weismann has only stopped half way to dualism. His inner
causes of evolution only have a meaning when they are ideally conceived. For, if
they were material processes in the germ-plasm, it would be unintelligible why these
material processes and not those of external happenings should continue to
operate in the process of heredity. Another investigator of the present day is
more logical than
Weismannnamely, J. Reinke, who, in his recently published book, Die Welt
als
That; Umrisse einer Weltansicht auf naturwissenschaftlicher Grundlage, has
taken unreservedly the leap into the dualistic camp. He declares that a living
creature can
never build itself up from out of the physical and chemical forces of organic
substances. "Life does not consist in the chemical properties of a combination, or a number of
combinations. Just as from the properties of brass and glass there does not yet emerge the
possibility of the production of the microscope, so little does the origination of the
cell follow from the properties of albumen, carbo-hydrates, fats, lecithin, cholesterin,
etc." (p. 178 of the above-named work). There must be present besides the material
forces also spiritual forces, or at least forces of another order, which give the former
their direction, and so regulate their combined action that the organism results
therefrom. These forces of another order Reinke calls "dominants." "In the
union of the dominants with the energiesthe operations of the physical and chemical
forcesthere unveils itself to us a spiritualisation of Nature; in this mode of
conceiving things culminates my scientific confession of faith" (p. 455).
It is now only logical that Reinke also assumes a universal world-reason, which
originally brought
the purely physical and chemical forces into the relation in which they are operative
in
organic beings.
Reinke endeavours to escape from the charge
that through such a reason working from outside upon the material forces,
the laws which hold good in the inorganic kingdom are
rendered powerless for the organic world, by saying: "The universal reason, as also
the dominants, make use of the mechanical forces; they actualise their creations only by
the help of these forces. The attitude of the world-reason coincides with that of a
mechanician, who also lets the natural forces do their work after he has imparted to them
their direction." But with this statement the kind of conformity to law
which expresses itself in mechanical facts is once more declared to be the helper
of a higher
kind of law, in the sense of Eduard von Hartmann.
Goettes law of form, Weismanns inner causes of development, Reinkes
dominants are fundamentally just nothing else but derivatives of the thoughts of the
world-creator who builds according to plan. As soon as one forsakes the clear and simple
mode of explanation of the monistic world-conception, one inevitably falls a victim to
mystical-religious conceptions, and of such Haeckels saying holds good, that
"then it is better to assume the mysterious creation of the individual species" (Uber
unsere gegenwartige Kenntniss vom Ursprung des Menschen, p. 30).
Besides those opponents of monism who are of opinion that the contemplation of the
phenomena of the world leads up to spiritual beings, who are independent of material
phenomena, there are still others10 who
seek to save the domain of a supernatural order hovering over the natural one,
by denying entirely to mans power
of knowing the capacity to understand the ultimate grounds of the world-happenings.11 The ideas of these opponents have found their most
eloquent
spokesman in Du Bois-Reymond. His famous "Ignorabimus" speech, delivered at the
Forty-filth Congress of German Scientists and Doctors (1872), is the expression of their
confession of faith. In this address Du Bois-Reymond describes as the highest goal of the
scientist the explanation of all world-happenings, therefore also of human thinking and
feeling, by mechanical processes. If some day we shall succeed in saying how the parts of
our brain lie and move when we have a definite thought or feeling, then the goal of
natural explanation will have been reached. We can get no further. But, in Du
Bois-Reymonds view, we have not therewith understood in what the nature of our
spirit consists. "It seems, indeed, on superficial examination, as though,
through the knowledge of the material processes in the brain, certain mental
processes and
dispositions might become intelligible. Among such I reckon memory, the flow
and association of ideas, the consequences of practice, the specific talents,
and so on. A
minimum of reflection, however, shows that this is a delusion. Only with regard
to certain inner conditions of the mental life, which are somehow of like significance
with the outer
ones through sense impressions, shall we thus be instructed, not with regard
to the coming
about of the mental life through these conditions.
"What thinkable connection exists
between the definite movements of definite atoms in my brain on the one hand;
and, on the other, those for me primary, not further
definable, not to be denied facts:
I feel pain, I feel pleasure, I taste something sweet, smell the
odour of roses, hear the sound of an organ, see red, and the equally immediate
certainty flowing therefrom, therefore I am!? It is just entirely
and for ever incomprehensible that it should not be indifferent to a number of
carbon, oxygen,
nitrogen, hydrogen, etc., atoms, how they lie and move, how they lay and moved,
how they
will lie and move."
But who asked Du Bois-Reymond first to
expel mind from matter, in order then to be able to observe that mind is
not in matter? The simple attraction and repulsion of the tiniest
particle of matter is force, therefore a spiritual cause proceeding from the
substance. From the simplest forces we see the complicated human mind building
itself up in a series
of developments; and we understand it from this its becoming. "The problem of the
origin and nature of consciousness is only a special case of the general problem in chief:
that of the connection of matter and force" (Haeckel, Freie Wissenschaft
and freie
Lehre, p. 80). As a matter of fact, the problem is not at all, How does mind
arise out of mindless matter? but, How does the more complex mind develop itself
out of the simplest
mental (or spiritual) actions of matterout of attraction and repulsion? In the
preface which Du Bois-Reymond has written to the reprint of his "Ignorabimus"
speech, he recommends to those who are not contented with his declaration of the
unknowableness of the ultimate grounds of being, that they should try to get along with
the faith-conceptions of the supernatural view of the world. "Let them, then, make a
trial of the only other way of escape, that of supernaturalism. Only that where
supernaturalism begins, science ceases." But such a confession as that of Du
Bois-Reymond will always open the doors wide to supernaturalism. For whenever one sets a
limit to the knowledge of the human mind, there it will surely start the beginning of its
belief in the "no longer knowable."
There is only one salvation from the belief in a supernatural world-order, and that is
the monistic insight that all grounds of explanation for the phenomena of the world lie
also within the domain of these phenomena. This insight can only be given by a philosophy
which stands in the most intimate harmony with the modern doctrine of evolution.
Original footnotes converted to endnotes
1. Taken from the
second of Three Essays on Haeckel and Karma by
Rudolf Steiner, London Theosophical Publishing Society, 1914, pp 52 - 166.
Originally published by J. C. C. Bruns Verlag, Minden
i. W., 1900.
2. Goethe and Kant. I
have characterised the
contrast that exists between Goethes and Kants world-conceptions, in the
Introductions to my edition of Goethes Scientific Writings (in Kurschner, Deutsche
National-Litteratur) and in my book, Goethes Conception of the World (p.
37 et seq.). It shows itself also in the attitude of the two personalities
towards the explanation of organic nature. Goethe seeks for this explanation
along the road which
modern science has also trodden. Kant -holds such an explanation to be impossible.
Only
one who penetrates deeply into the nature of Goethes view of the world can acquire a
correct judgement as to its position in regard to the Kantian philosophy. Goethes
own testimony is not conclusive, because he never devoted himself to a closer study of
Kant. "The portal (of the Critique of Pure Reason) it was that pleased
me, into the labyrinth itself I could not adventure : now it was my poetic gift
that hindered
me, now my common-sense, and I nowhere found myself any the better." Single passages
in Kants Critique of Judgement pleased him, because he so interpreted
their meaning that they agreed with his own view of the world. It is, therefore,
only too easily
understood why his conversations with followers of Kant appear somewhat peculiar. "
They certainly listened to me, but could give me no answer, nor in any way help me on.
More than once it happened to me, that one or the other confessed with smiling admiration:
it may be something analogous to the Kantian mode of conception, but a rather strange
one." Karl Vorländer, in his essay Goethes Verhältnis zu Kant in seiner
historischen Entwickelung (Kantstudien, i., ii.), has judged this relationship
according to the actual words of Goethes own testimony, and has reproached me with
the fact that my conception thereof is "in contradiction with the clear testimony of
Goethe himself," and, at the very least, "strongly one-sided." I would have
left this objection unanswered, because I saw from the explanations of Herrn Karl
Vorländer that they proceed from a man who finds it quite impossible to understand a mode
of thinking which is strange to him; however, it still seemed to me needful not to leave
without answer a remark which he couples thereto. Herr Vorländer belongs to those men who
regard their own opinion as absolutely right, and therefore as proceeding from the highest
possible insight, and who therefore stamp every other view as a product of ignorance.
Because I think otherwise about Kant than he does, he gives me the sage advice to study
certain portions of Kants works. Such a mode of criticising other peoples
opinions cannot be too strongly repudiated. Who gives anyone the right, not to criticise
me for an opinion differing from his own, but to schoolmaster me? I have therefore told
Herrn Karl Vorländer my opinion as to his schoolmastering in the fourth volume of my
edition of Goethes Scientific Writings. Thereupon, in the third volume of Kantstudien,
he has discussed my book, Goethes Conception of the World, in a fashion
which not only far surpasses in point of form what he had previously said against me, but
which is also full of objective untruths. Thus he speaks of an "isolated and
embittered opposition" in which I find myself against the whole of modern philosophy
(naturally exclusive of Nietzsche) and science. There at once one has three objective
untruths. Anyone who reads my writingsand whoever, like Herr Vorländer, pronounces
judgement upon me, should at the least read themwill perceive that I do
indeed criticise technically particular views of modern science and endeavour
to deepen others
philosophically; but that to talk of an embittered opposition is simply absurd.
In my Philosophie
der Freiheit I have expressed my conviction to the effect that in my views
is given
the philosophical completion of the structure which " Darwin and Haeckel have erected
for Natural Science" (p. 186). That I am the one who has sharply emphasised the
fundamental deficiency in the world of Nietzsches ideas is indeed known
to the Frenchman Henri Lichtenberger, who observes in his book La Philosophie
de Nietzsche:
"R. Steiner is the author of Truth and
Science and The Philosophy of
Freedom. In the latter work he completes Nietzsches theory on an important
point." He emphasises the point which I have shown that Nietzsches
Superman is
not that which he ought to be. The German philosopher, Karl Vorländer, has either
not read my writings, and none the less passes judgement upon me; or else he
has done so, and
still writes the above and other similar objective untruths. I leave it to the
judgement of the competent public to decide whether his contribution, which was
found worthy of
acceptance in a serious philosophical review, is a proof of his complete lack
of judgement
or a dubious contribution to the morality of German scholarship.
3. Fundamental Biogenetic Law. Haeckel has proved in a series
of works the general validity and far-reaching significance of the fundamental biogenetic
law. The most important explanations and proofs will be found in his Biology of the
Corals (1872) and in his Studies in the Gastrula Theory (187384). Since
then other zoologists have extended and confirmed this doctrine. In his latest work, Die
Welträtsel (1899), Haeckel is able to say of it (p. 72): "Although this
doctrine was at the outset almost generally rejected, and for some ten years
fiercely combated by
numerous authorities, yet, at the present time (for about fifteen years past),
it has been
accepted by all well-informed specialists in the subject."
4. Haeckels latest
book. In his recently published
book, Die Welträtsel, Gemeinverständliche
Studien über Monistische Philosophie (Bonn,
Emil Strauss, 1899), Haeckel has given
without reserve the "further development, proof, and completion of the
convictions" which throughout a full generation he has represented. To anyone
who has absorbed the scientific knowledge of our time, this work must appear
as one of the most
important manifestos of the end of the nineteenth century. It contains in ripened
form a complete analytical discussion of the relations of modern science with
philosophical
thinking from the mind of the most original, farsighted investigator of our time.
5. Purposefulness and Purpose. Those
who would willingly cling in faith to the existence of purposes in Nature,
are constantly
emphasising the fact that Darwins views do not by any means exclude the
idea of purpose, but rather make full use thereof, inasmuch as they show how
the linking of causes
and effects of necessity by themselves lead to the arising of the purposeful.
The important point, however, is not whether or no one admits the existence of
purposeful
formations in Nature, but whether one assumes or rejects the idea that the purpose,
the
goal, co-operates as a cause in the development of these formations. Anyone
who makes this assumption defends teleology, or the doctrine of purpose. Whoever
says, on the
contrary, purpose is in no way whatever operative in the production of the organic
world; living creatures com into existence according to necessary laws just as
dc inorganic
phenomena, and purposefulness is only there because that which is not purposeful
cannot maintain itself; it is not the cause of what happens but its consequence
: he makes
confession of Darwinism. No heed is paid to this by anyone who asserts, like
Otto
Liebmann, "Charles Darwin is one of the greatest teleologists of the present
day (Thoughts
and Facts, pt. i. p. 113). No, he is the greatest anti-teleologist, because he would
show to such minds as Liebmann, if they understood him, that the purposeful can be
explained without assuming the action of operative purposes.
6. Organs of Thought. Quite recently Paul
Flechsig has succeeded in proving that in one portion of the human organs of thought,
complicated structures are found which are not present in other mammalia. These obviously
are the organs of those mental activities by which man is distinguished from the animal.
7. Human and Animal Psychology. The merit of having proved
that there is no real contrast between the soul of man and that of animals, but that the
mental activities of man are linked to those of animals as a higher form thereof in a
perfectly natural chain of development, belongs to George Romanes, who, in a comprehensive
work, Mental Evolution in Animals (vol. i.) and Mental Evolution in Man and the
Origin of Human Faculties (vol. ii.), has shown, "that the psychological
barrier
between animal and man has been surmounted."
8. Virchow and Darwin. On 3rd October 1898 Virchow delivered
the second of the Huxley Lectures in the Charing Cross Hospital Medical School,
in
London, wherein he said: "I venture to assume that such a duty would not have been
assigned to me if those who did so had not known how deep the feeling of veneration for
Huxley is in my soul, if they had not seen how I have recognised his achievements from the
first pioneer publications of the deceased master, and how greatly I have valued the
friendship which he bestowed upon me personally." Now, these pioneer publications of
Huxleys mean precisely the first great step towards the building up of the theory of
mans descent from the ape, which Virchow combats, and about which, moreover,
in his
Huxley address, The more recent Advances of Science, he has nothing more
to say than a few words, which are wholly meaningless in face of the present
position of this
question: " One may think as one chooses about the origin of man, the
conviction as to the fundamental coincidence of the human and the animal organisation
is
at present generally accepted . . ." etc.
9. Purposeless organs. As
to these organs Haeckel observes in
his book Die Welträthsel, p. 306 " All higher animals and plants, indeed
all those organisms whose bodies are not quite simply built, but are composed
of several
organs working purposefully together, reveal on attentive examination a number
of useless or ineffective, yes, even of dangerous and harmful, arrangements.
. . . The explanation of
these purposeless arrangements is quite simply given by the theory of descent.
It shows
that these rudimentary organs are atrophied, and that by want of use. . .
. The blind struggle for existence between the organs conditions just as much
their historical
destruction, as it originally caused their arising and development."
10. Other opponents of Haeckel. Here
we can
only speak of such objections to Haeckels doctrines as are, to a certain extent,
typical and have their origin in antiquated, although still always influential, circles of
thought. The numerous " refutations of Haeckel, which present themselves merely as
variants of the main objections cited, have to be left unnoticed equally with those which
Haeckel himself has disposed of in his book on Die Welträthsel, by saying
to these
valiant warriors, "Acquire by a diligent five years study of natural
science, and in particular of anthropology (especially the anatomy and the physiology
of the brain!), that indispensable empirical prior knowledge of the facts, which
you still lack entirely."
11. Limits of knowledge. In my Philosophie
der Freiheit I have shown the misunderstanding upon which is based the assumption
of
limits of knowledge.
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