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The Origin of Species Charles Darwin
Chapter V
To admit this view is, as it seems to me,
to reject a real for an unreal, or at least for an unknown, cause.
It makes the work of God a mere mockery and deception; I would almost
as soon believe with the old and ignorant cosmogonists, that fossil
shells had never lived, but had been created in stone so as to mock
the shells now living on the sea-shore.
Summary
Darwin attempts to explain how variations in species occur,
which was one of the main questions left unanswered in his analysis
of natural selection. Variations do not occur by chance; rather,
they are somehow related to the conditions of life that exist in
species' geographical environments. Though actual environmental
factors such as the availability of food and the climate of a region
do not directly create variations in species, variations will develop
in animals and plants that will allow them to better survive in
an environment. These variations will be naturally selected over
less beneficial variations, prompting the advantageous variations
to reappear in subsequent generations.
Darwin provides a few ideas about how these variations
might occur. First, he imagines that use and disuse of particular
organs play a role. He gives numerous examples of animals with unused organs,
such as ground-living birds, insects with wings that are useless
for flight, underground-living rodents with eyes that have been covered
by skin or fur, and cave-living animals that are blind. Darwin says
lack of use may cause organs to be modified. Similarly, large wings
can be found in flying birds and insects, which may be a result
of the animals' increased use of the organs. Darwin accounts for
these variations as effects of habit. In other words, he suggests that
significant use of an organ can modify its structure in an advantageous
way. These modifications from use and disuse must be inherited for
natural selection to work. Ultimately, the heredity of variations,
no matter how it occurs, drives natural selection, and Darwin argues
that natural selection of hereditary variations can take precedence
over the effects of habit.
Darwin also points out that variations in one organ of
a species may cause variations in a different organ of the same
species. These variations often occur in homologous organsorgans
that form together during embryonic development, such as arms and
legs. However, Darwin cannot explain other coexisting variations,
such as the relationship between blue eyes and deafness in cats.
This mode of variation is important, as it explains how some modifications
that seem useless to the species may have occurred. The useless modification
simply remains, while another more advantageous modification develops,
and both modifications are incorporated into the species through
natural selection. Variations, therefore, often correspond, even
if naturalists do not understand why.
Darwin also notes that variations seem to occur mostly
in a particular species' highly developed organs. The organs that
a species uses the most, such as wings in flying birds, have been
susceptible to variation in the past and still exhibit high levels
of variability. The comparison between the variability of a particular
organ in one species and the lack of variability of an organ in
a similar species marks the relationship between the two species:
Both must have descended from a common ancestor, with the variation
in the organ of one causing its divergent development from the other.
Darwin notes that occasionally a species will revert to the characteristics
of its early ancestor. For example, stripes can appear on horses
descended from zebras, or bluish colors can appear on pigeons descended
from the blue rock pigeon. While the reasons for these reversions
remain unknown, Darwin hypothesizes that the tendency toward these
past characteristics must remain in a species, even if the characteristics are
dormant for hundreds of years.
Darwin argues that these laws of variability call into
question the concept of the independent creation of species. If
each species were independently created, wouldn't all organs be
equally susceptible to variation, rather than the ones most highly
developed and most useful to the species? And how would variations
from one species randomly occur in another species in the same pattern
and color? Darwin argues that these patterns of variation illustrate
the validity of his theory of natural selection and disprove the
notion that species were created separately.
Analysis
Although he attempts to explain how variations occur,
Darwin presents hypotheses that are ultimately confusing and contradictory, because
he himself does not fully understand the mechanisms of variation
and heredity. Darwin concludes that variations must be hereditary
for natural selection to work. However, without understanding the
laws of heredity, Darwin cannot provide us with much of an explanation
for how variations even occur, let alone how they are passed from
generation to generation. He argues that the environment cannot
itself create the variationsbut then, what does? Darwin attempts
to explain the creation of variations by falling back on some of
Lamarck's notions of use and disuse of organs. Still, he clearly
does not believe Lamarck's explanation to be sufficientit is the
mechanisms of heredity that drive natural selection, not adaptation
to the environment. Darwin knows that if his theory of natural selection
is to hold any water, he must present at least some potential explanation
for the causes of variation. But ultimately, because he cannot muster
a convincing case for the causes of variation, his analysis remains
weak and open to attack.
Darwin does a much better job of analyzing the relationships between
species through their differences in variation. He illustrates his
case for descent with modification by explaining how developed organs
in particular species are highly variable compared to the undeveloped
organs in similar species, and by describing how modification can
separate species over time. Darwin's discussion of the reversion
to characteristics from previous species shows evidence of how one
species can be related toor, in his terms, descended froma parent
species through the reappearance of characteristics from the parent
species in subsequent generations. Although Darwin still does not
explain how variations occur, his analysis of hereditary variation
helps to bolster the theory of natural selection by explaining how
variations link separate species through heredity. Here, Darwin
the scientist is at his best, using particular facts and examples
to draw conclusions that create broad scientific principles (an
effective usage of inductive reasoning) and showing the ways variations
help to prove the relationship between species.
Darwin also uses this analysis to attack the separate
creation of species theory. Somewhat paradoxically, he invokes religion
to bolster his own theory of the origin of species. He argues that
some naturalists who might ignore his theory and cling to the notion
of the separate creation of species are making a mockery of the
work of God. Darwin challenges natural theologiansthose naturalists who
believe that the natural world shows the beauty of God's independent
creation of each speciesby suggesting that their theory of independent
creation is not the only one that can invoke the greatness of God.
Implicitly, Darwin argues that the system of natural selection is
just as brilliant and wondrous as a system of independently created
species. Darwin implies that religion must not turn its back on
scientific reasoning. Facts and analysis have led him to his theory,
and the evidence cannot simply be ignored because of devotion to
a set dogma, be it religious or scientific in nature. Anticipating
the resistance to his theory, Darwin emphasizes that a shift in scientific
and theological reasoning must occur before his theory can be accepted
as scientifically valid.
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