Darwin sought to not only produce a new scientific truth, but also to put an end to polygenism, the current scientific discourse on human origins that gave tacit and at times explicit support for slavery: ‘... when the principle of evolution is generally accepted, as it surely will be before long, the dispute between the monogenists and polygenists will die a silent and unobserved death.’ (Charles Darwin, Descent of Man, p. 235)
Showing posts with label Agassiz. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Agassiz. Show all posts

Sunday, September 7, 2014

The "American School": A brief timeline of the Monogenist / Polygenist Debate on human origins, variation, and the meaning of race.



Chronology
1809
12 February Darwin is born in Shrewsbury, England, the son of Robert Waring Darwin and Susannah Wedgwood. The same day as the birth of Abraham Lincoln.

1831
Darwin meets Captain Robert FitzRoy and makes preparations for the voyage. Begins Beagle diary.

Rev John Bachman meets James Audubon and begins a life-long friendship and collaboration.

Bachman's wife Maria Martin becomes Audubon's assistant and paints many of the backgrounds, plants, and insects used in Birds of North America.

1832
In mid-January, Beagle reaches St Jago, Cape Verde Islands. Darwin begins the field notebooks that he will continue to use throughout his life. From February 1832 to May 1834 the Beagle surveys the east coast of South America.

1834
Early part of the year is spent surveying in Tierra del Fuego and the Falkland Islands. April to May Darwin and Fitz-Roy travel inland along the River Santa Cruz. From June 1834 to September 1835 the Beagle surveys the west coast of South America.

1835
Beagle departs Lima, Darwin spends 16 September to 20 October exploring the Galapagos Archipelago, then traveled on to spend November in Tahiti and New Zealand.

1836
Beagle drops anchor at Falmouth, England, on October 2 and on October 4 Darwin returns home to Shrewsbury. Begins to publish scientific papers.

1837
George Gliddon and Samuel G. Morton begin corresponding. Gliddon obtains several specimens for Morton's work.

Darwin publishes The Zoology of the Voyage of the Beagle (1838-43). In July begins his first notebook on the transmutation of species.

1839
Samuel G. Morton, Crania Americana; or a Comparative view of the Skulls of various Aboriginal Nations of North and South America; to which is prefixed an essay on the Varieties of the Human Species (Philadelphia, 1839)

George Combe, Notes on the United States of America during a Phrenological Visit in 1838-1840.

Darwin marries Emma Wedgwood on 29 January; publishes Journal of Researches, later known as Voyage of the Beagle. Elected a Fellow of the Royal Society.

1840
Based upon many errors, the US Census suggests that Negroes are prone to violence and insanity in the North. Despite many efforts of Jarvis to correct the results, Secretary of State John C. Calhoun prevents any challenges and the results remain official. The attempts to overturn the Census result in the founding of the American Statistical Association.

1840-1852
Gliddon undertakes a series of widely popular lectures on Egyptology around the United States using a 800 foot long moving backdrop and many artifacts.

1841
Samuel G. Morton, “Distinctive Characteristics of the Aboriginal Man of America,”Annual Address before the Boston Society of Natural History.

George R Gliddon, Ancient Egypt: a series of chapters on early Egyptian history, archaeology, and other subjects connected with hieroglyphical literature.

1844
Samuel G. Morton, Crania Ægyptiaca; or Observations on Egyptian Ethnography, derived from History and the Monuments, dedicate to Gliddon.

Darwin expands an early sketch of the theory of natural selection into a longer essay. He writes a note to Emma Darwin requesting that this essay should be published if he should die unexpectedly, providing some funds as well as the names of possible editors.

1845
Josiah Nott, “On the Pathology of Yellow Fever,” American Journal of the Medical Sciences, 9, new series, 277-293. Nott argues that those “hybrids” of “mixed” race are less likely to contract Yellow fever than Whites or Negroes.

Josiah Priest. Slavery, as it relates to the Negro... and Causes of his State of Servitude ... with strictures on Abolitionism.

Rev. John Bachman, having newly taken over as minister, actively recruits African Americans to join St. John's Lutheran Church in Charleston. Black membership reaches 200. A segregated Sunday School for African-Americans is established with 150 pupils and 30 teachers and staff.

1846
Josiah Nott, “Unity of the Human Race,” Southern Quarterly Review, January 1846.

Louis Agassiz arrives in Boston.

1847
Louis Agassiz in Charleston.

Thomas S. Savage and Jeffries Wyman. "Notice of the External Characteristics and Habits of Trolodytes Gorilla, A New Species of Orang from the Gaboon River." Boston Journal of Natural History. The first anatomical description of a gorilla in the United States, compares its anatomy with that of the Caucasian and the Negro. 

1848
Charles Pickering, a supporter of the polygenic theory, publishes The Races of Mankind and their Geographical Distribution.

Josiah Nott, “Yellow Fever Contrasted with Billious Fever --- Reason for Believing it a Disease of Sui Generis... Probably Insect or Animalcular Origin,” New Orleans Medical and Surgical Journal. Nott correctly suggests that Yellow Fever is transmitted by an insect.

E. George Squire and Edwin Hamilton Davis, Ancient Monuments of the Mississippi Valley: Comprising the Results of Extensive Original Surveys and Explorations.

1849
Josiah Nott, Two Lectures on the Connection Between the Biblical and Physical History of Man Nott advances the polygenic argument against Biblical authority and for what he called “free scientific inquiry.”

George Robins Gliddon, Handbook to the American Panorama of the Nile: being the original transparent picture exhibited in London at Egyptian Hall, Piccadilly, purchased from its painter and proprietors, Messrs. H. Warren, J. Bonomi and J. Fahey.

John Bachman and John J. Audubon, Viviparous Quadrupeds of North America.

1850
Louis Agassiz, “The Diversity of Origin of Human Races” Christian Examiner XVIII.

Josiah Nott, “Ancient and Scriptural Chronology” Southern Quarterly Review.

De Bow, “Physical Characteristics of the Negro" De Bow’s Review IX.

1851
De Bow, “Diversity of the Human Race,” DeBow's Review X.

Samuel G. Morton, “Value of the Word Species in Zoology,” American Journal of Science and Arts11, 2nd Series, 275-276, 1851.

Josiah Nott, An Essay on the Natural History of Mankind, Viewed in Connection with Negro Slavery (Mobile, 1851).

Herbert Spencer, originator of the term “survival of the fittest” and advocate of cosmic evolution, publishes his Social Statics.

Samuel G. Morton dies.

John James Audubon dies.

1853
Josiah Nott, “Geographical Distributions of Animals and the Races of Man” New Orleans Medical and Surgical Journal, IX

John H. Van Evrie, M.D., Negroes and Negro “Slavery”; the first an Inferior Race --- the Latter, its Normal Condition. (Baltimore, 1853)

Josiah Nott “Aboriginal Races of America” Southern Quarterly VIII 1854 - 1855

Josiah C. Nott and George R. Gliddon. 1855. Types of Mankind: or, Ethnological Researches, based upon the ancient monuments, paintings, sculptures, and crania of races, and upon their natural, geographical, philological and Biblical history:/ illustrated by selections from the inedited papers of Samuel George Morton ... and by additional contributions from Prof. L. Agassiz, LL. D., W. Usher, M. D., and Prof. H. S. Patterson.

John Bachman, “Types of Mankind.” Review, Charleston Medical Journal, IX

1856
Samuel F. Haven, Archaeology of the United States; or Sketches, Historical and Bibliographical, of the Progress of Information and Opinion respecting the Vestiges of Antiquity in the United States. Smithsonian Institution.

1856 - 1857
Darwin begins writing up his views for a projected big book called 'Natural Selection'.

Louis Agassiz, Essay on Classification.

Josiah C. Nott, George R. Gliddon, and Louis Ferdinand Alfred Maury, Indigenous races of the earth; or, New chapters of ethnological inquiry; including monographs on special departmentsPhiladelphia, J. B. Lippincott & co.

George Gliddon dies.

1858
Josiah Nott translates and publishes the first English edition of Gobineau’s Essay on the Inequality of the Races.

1859
Charles Darwin publishes On the Origin of Species. It will go through six editions in Darwin's lifetime.

Newberry College, a liberal arts college in Newberry, S.C., is founded by Rev. John Bachman

1860
Rev. John Bachman leads the opening prayer at Institute Hall in Charleston as South Carolina votes for secession. Though opposed to secession and a social reformer in terms of slavery, Bachman fiercely defended the South and lambasted profiteering in wartime writings for South and North Carolina newspapers.

Josiah Nott admits that Darwin's theory is correct and that the polygenic theory has been refuted, but says that “at least it [Darwin's theory] is a capital dig at the parsons.”

At his church in Charleston, Bachman baptizes 67 Euro-Americans & 76 African-Americans and confirms 19 Euro- Americans and 40 African-Americans; African-Americans now constitute 35% of the membership of St. John's Lutheran Church.

1861
Attack on Fort Sumter in Charleston Harbor, begins Civil War.

John Bachman and Josiah Nott would both lose sons fighting in the opposing armies.

1863
Emancipation Proclamation signed by Lincoln.

1864
John Bachman, Characteristics of Genera and Species, as Applicable to the Doctrine of Unity in the Human Race.

1865
Sherman begins his March to the Sea.

Charleston is evacuated and later is destroyed. Bachman attempts to move his collections and his wife's work to Newberry College for safe-keeping. Most are lost in the destruction of Charleston. Bachman is severely beaten when he encounters a detachment of Union soldiers and left partially paralyzed.

The Civil War ends.

John James Audubon and Rev. John Bachman, The Quadrupeds of North America.

1871
Charles Darwin publishes The Descent of Man, and Selection in Relation to Sex.

1873
Louis Agassiz dies.

Josiah Nott dies.

1874
Rev. John Bachman dies, supposedly saying at the end: “Little children... love one another.” He is buried under the alter of St. John's Lutheran Church in Charleston.

1882
Charles Darwin dies at Down House on April 19 and is buried in Westminster Abbey. His supposed last words were "I am not in the least afraid to die."

Monday, June 30, 2014

Louis Agassiz and the Bridgewater Treatises



NOTES And NOTICES


  Louis Agassiz's note on the importance of the Bridgewater Treatises, taken from his Essay on Classification, 1962[1857].

Agassiz: “The argument for the existence of an intelligent Creator is generally drawn from the adaptation of means to ends, upon which the Bridgewater treatises, for example, have been based.  But this does not appear to me to cover the whole ground; for we can conceive that the natural action of objects upon each other should result in a final fitness of the universe, and thus produce an harmonious whole"*  --Essay on Classification, 1962[1857]:11.

*****

*[Editor’s note: Named for Francis Henry Egerton, 8th Earl of Bridgewater, who left 8,000 pounds for the writing of treatises on the ‘Power, Wisdom and Goodness of God, as Manifested in the Creation.’ They included the first eight titles in Agassiz's note and the Fragment by Babbage.]



Thomas Chambers, The Adaptation of External Nature to the Moral and Intellectual Constitution of Man (2 vols., Glasgow, 1989);

John Kidd, The Adaption of External Nature to the Physical Condition of Man (London, 1833);

William Whewell, Astronomy and General Physics Considered with Reference to Natural Theology; (London, 1839);

Charles Bell, The Hand, its Mechanism and Vital Endowments, as Evincing Design (London, 1833);

Peter M. Roget, Animal and Vegetable Physiology Considered with Reference to Natural Theology (2 vols., London, 1834);

William Buckand, Geology and Mineralogy considered with Reference to Natural Theology (2 vols., London, 1836, 2d ed., 1837);

William Kirby, The History, Habits, and Instincts of Animals... [On the power, wisdom and goodness of God, as manifested in the creation of animals, and in their history, habits and instincts] (2 vols., London, 1835);

William Prout, Chemistry, Meteorology, and the Function of Digestion Considered with Reference to Natural Theology (London, 1834).

Compare also,
Hercule Strauss-Durkheim, Theologie de la Nature (3 vols., Paris 1852);

Hugh Miller, Footprints of the Creator (Edinburgh 1849; 3d ed. with a Memoir of the Author by Louis Agassiz, Boston 1853);

Charles Babbage, The Ninth Bridgewater Treatise, a Fragment (2d ed., London, 1838).

 From Nott and Gliddon, Types of Mankind (1852).

Thursday, April 4, 2013

Note: Louis Agassiz "Against the Transmutation Theory" from Methods of Study in Natural History (1886)

NOTES And NOTICES
Louis Agassiz
"Against the Transmutation Theory"
from Methods of Study in Natural History. Boston: Houghton, Mifflin and Company, 1886. [Updated]

"...the resources of the Deity cannot be so meager, that, in order to create a 
 human being endowed with reason, he must change a monkey into a man..." Preface, iv.

A brief excerpt from Agassiz's Methods of Study in Natural History, which begins with his restatement of his opposition to Darwin's work, materialism in general, and to the Darwinian theories that had already, he writes, become generally accepted.  One of the last of the great 19th century naturalists to defend creationism and polygenism, which he did to the bitter end.

"The series of papers collected in this volume may be considered as a complement ... to my 'Essay on classification'....I have also wished to avail myself of this opportunity to enter my earnest protest against the transmutation theory, revived of late with so much ability, and so generally received. It is my belief that naturalists are chasing a phantom, in their search after some material gradation among created beings, by which the whole Animal Kingdom may have been derived by successive development from a single germ, or from a few germs.  It would seem, from the frequency with which this notion is revived, — ever returning upon us with hydra- headed tenacity of life, and presenting itself under a new form as soon as the preceding one has been exploded and set aside, — that it has a certain fascination for the human mind. This arises, perhaps, from the desire to explain the secret of our own existence; to have some simple and easy solution of the fact that we live....These chapters were first embodied in a course of lectures delivered at the Lowell Institute in Boston."(Preface, p. iii-vi.)
Agassiz begins the work with this note expressing his understanding of the progress of Natural History... at the very moment when Natural History and not coincidentally political economy were being swept away by new fields of knowledge: biology, ecology, sociology, economics, political science, etc.
CHAPTER I. GENERAL SKETCH OF THE EARLY PROGRESS IN NATURAL HISTORY.
 It is my intention, in this series of papers, to give the history of the progress in Natural History from the beginning, — to show how men first approached Nature, — how the facts of Natural History have been accumulated, and how these facts have been converted into science. In so doing, I shall present the methods followed in Natural History on a wider scale and with broader generalizations than if I limited myself to the study as it exists to-day. (p.1.)

Thursday, January 24, 2013

Darwin, Slavery, and Science (2009)

Darwin, Slavery, and Science (draft)
for The Civil War and Reconstruction Era: 1850s-1877 in the series Conflicts in American History, edited by Brian L. Johnson and Edward J. Blum. Manly, 2009.




In an era of revolutions, tucked away on the Down House estate, Darwin was the most reclusive of revolutionary figures. His theories were based upon direct observation, rather than philosophical speculation. Yet his views on the origin and variation of species transformed our understanding of natural and human history. While Darwin's work is often seen in terms of its conflict with Christian doctrines on creation and design, this was not the controversy that Darwin sought to engage. The Biblical chronology had been under siege for quite some time. The great naturalists that preceded him--- Linneaus, Cuvier, Blumenbach, and Lamarck--- all placed humans in the natural order, and the wide variety of new species of plants and animals, and new varieties of humans, confronting Europeans on their voyages of discovery and conquest, scientific research came to center on what was referred to as the species question. What could explain the rich variety of species found in the world? Why is there such variety to a divinely created and designed world? If the variety of nature was too great to allow one to answer these questions, then humans could serve as a model. If we could understand why humans vary, then we would have the key to the species question. A decade before the publication of the Origin of Species, the American craniologist Samuel G. Morton stated flatly that “the question of the origin of species is of the human species.” In the years between 1830 and 1859, a new scientific theory of human origins known as polygenesis ---which held that humans were divided into races,each with a separate origin and with fixed characteristics--- had come to dominate the understanding of human origins. Advocated most vigorously by a group of naturalists and doctors that came to be known as the American School, the polygenic theory of human origins was used by many as scientific justification for slavery and used against the abolitionists who often turned to the Biblical account of humans as having one single origin, or monogenesis, to support their cause. Although Darwin's work is often associated with the challenge it posed to Christian doctrine, this was not the opponent Darwin had in mind when he wrote the Origin of Species. His scientific intervention was against the polygenic theory and its implicit justification of slavery. To do this, Darwin proposed scientific, and not religious, monogenic theory of the origin and variation of species. Although humans are not mentioned at all in the work, its argument led to an unavoidable conclusion that humans are one species. The scientific foundation for slavery was ripped away, much to Darwin's satisfaction.

The American School, associated with such naturalists and doctors such as Morton, Josiah Nott,George Gliddon, and Louis Agassiz were perhaps the first American scientist to be fully recognized by their European peers. By 1850, the American School's polygenic theory had succeeded in challenging the Biblical chronology of the history of the earth and its inhabitants. Freed from doctrine, the American School hailed a new era of “free scientific inquiry” into human origins was upon us. The proponents of the American School elaborated the polygenic theory with such rigor that it was taken as the accepted scientific truth in the two decades before the publication of the Origin.  

The debate between the monogenists and polygenists was between two powerful explanations human variety. It would be simplistic to think that the polygenic/monogenic debate was between pro and anti-slavery advocates who wanted to wrap themselves in the veneer of scientific respectability. This debate went to the very core of the ethics of scientific inquiry. Supporters of slavery could be found on each side, as could abolitionists. The monogenist and co-author with James Audubon, the Rev. John Bachman of Charleston supported slavery, while those opposed to slavery included George Squire, polygenists and founder of the New York Anthropological Society.  

It is often uncritically accepted that the ideas and concepts Darwin brought together so masterfully in the Origin of Species had been “in the air” as part of the “spirit of the age.” But was everything already neatly in place and pointing to the same inevitable conclusion? Was Darwin's work the mere assembling and making intelligible insights already available? What is certain is that Natural History had reached a crisis amidst the disputes over fixity, variation, and classification. If a puzzle was before Darwin, it had been laid before him by the polygenists.

Darwin purposely avoided the use of the term evolve or evolution until the very last sentence in order to avoid any confusion of his work with the already well know use of the term. Evolution at the time of Origin of Species was most often used in the sense of an inevitable and determined unfolding over time of characteristics already present from the beginning. The homunculus, or the little man  in the head of each sperm, best represented this type of evolutionary view: “all future generations had been created in the ovaries of Eve or testes of Adam, enclosed like Russian dolls, one within the next---a homunculus in each of Eve’s ova, a tinier homunculus in each ovum of the homunculus, and so on.” Darwin redefined evolution to mean indeterminate change over time, i.e., change directed only by the needs of the individual to survive its struggle for existence and its ability of the species to adapt and vary in the course of the struggle for life. Instead of a movement towards an end or a higher stage, the history of nature became the struggle of life to perpetuate itself, in part through “natural selection” ---defined by Darwin as “the preservation of slight changes.”

Darwin put to rest the scientific discourse on the species question, which dominated the study on human origins. Darwin's work was grounded not only in the elements that he carried forward --- the importance of the fossil record, embryology, and rudimentary organs --- but also in the debates and discourses which he would either transform or destroy. The Origin of Species asks the central question of Darwin's time: What explains the origins and variety of species? That variation exists is obvious to any observer, Darwin notes at the beginning of his work. In 1842, a reviewer of recent polygenic works was led to begin by asking “[i]n surveying the globe in reference to the different appearances of mankind, the most extraordinary diversities are apparent to the most superficial observer.... Hence arises the question ---  Have all these diverse races descended from a single stock?” Human variety held the key to the species question precisely because the question always referred to human variety,and because Linneaus, Cuvier, and Lamarck had the wisdom to place humans in the animal kingdom.  Variation in one could explain variation in all because the process was at work on all. The struggle for life points to a commonality that is fundamentally genealogical. Darwin's theory, though, was neither eugenic nor teleological; and for him genealogy rather than Spirit connected all life.  


The Origin is structured as an argument for the theory. It begins with an exposition on variation as it exists under domestication, and without the intervention of humans. Instead of fixity, Darwin's takes variation to be the norm: individuals, even those classified as belonging to the same species vary across time and space. Variation is the central theme and the essential product of the struggle for life,and variation is generated by the struggle. Natural selection, amongst other forces is the basis of this law of variability. At the heart of nature rests variation. Life, embroiled in the struggle for existence, maintains itself through variation.

The remaining portion of the Origin is given over to anticipating objections to the theory.  Instinct, especially discussed in terms of slave-making ants and mutualistic aphid/ant relationships, hybridity approached as the permanent production of variety, and not as a violation of fixity. Other  problems of the geological record (fossils and catastrophe and extinction); the succession of organic beings (preformism, teleology) and geographic distribution (design and special creation) are addressed as possible areas from which objections will be heard. In spite of these difficulties, or perhaps because of them, Darwin proposes a new science arising from genealogy, morphology (the comparative study of function, behavior, and environment), embryology, and the study of rudimentary organs. This is the structure of the Origin which reveals the transvaluation of Natural History into the science of life. "All true classification is genealogical, that community of descent is the hidden bond which naturalists have been unconsciously seeking, and not some unknown plan of creation, or the enunciation of general propositions, and the mere putting together and separating objects more or less alike." Darwin’s  genealogical tree of evolution represents the history of Nature, and that species are an expression of continuity, but also of this discontinuity of past extinctions and adaptations. 


History is not the striving of different species for supremacy, but the conflict within one species in particular as it confronts its own conditions of life. To Darwin, the torments of the rest of nature are rare and brief, only humans have learned to make suffering itself into a way of living. To see this, one needed only to observe, he often remarked, the torment of animals under the whip of the driver, or the knife of the vivisectionist,or the wars and enslavement of humans themselves.

Darwin did not engage in the active defense of his theory, leaving it to his friends Thomas Huxley and Asa Gray to respond to the more heated attacks. There were many reasons for this,including his health, which had been severely compromised during the five year circumnavigation of the H.M.S. Beagle.  It was not known at the time what caused his chronic illness and bouts of intense pain, but it is now speculated that he contracted a disease akin to sleeping sickness while on his excursions inland. Much of Darwin's work was shaped by his voyage. He had begun the voyage a believer in fixity and creation, and by the end had already begun to sketch the outlines of the theory. He had also begun the voyage as an ardent opponent of slavery, and related how he was often told that experiences in the slave countries would prove to him the inferiority of the Negro. He wrote to his sister that his experiences in Brazil in particular only hardened his opposition to slavery.  
 
Darwin was not the Beagle's naturalist, but more the social companion for Captain Fitz-Roy. British naval commanders were drawn from the upper class and it was forbidden for them to socialize even with their own junior officers. It was a lonely life for a ships captain, made all the more apparent by the suicide of the Beagle's first Captain while sheltering in a harbor in the Straits of Magellan. Fitz-Roy took Darwin even though he was concern, given his interest in craniology, that the shape of Darwin's nose suggested that he was not up to the hardships of the voyage. Reluctantly, Fitz-Roy took Darwin aboard and they shared the cramped quarters of the ship for five years. The smallness of the cabin became even more pronounced when the two discovered their opposing views of slavery. Fitz-Roy shared the common view that slavery was a necessary evil because of the inherent inferiority of the enslaved races. Slavery would ultimately raise the Negro to civilization, he thought. Fitz-Roy was himself returning three captives taken from Tierra del Fuego during the previous voyage to be trained as missionaries and potential colonial agents. The attempt ended in failure and tragedy.

 
But it was in Brazil that Darwin observed slavery for himself, and his experiences never left him. His son Francis remembered that his father was often awaken by nightmares of his Brazilian experiences, and he would become enraged at the mere suggestion that slavery might have any redeeming value. Those who thought so, he wrote, had never put themselves in the position of the slave. When his friend and mentor Charles Lyell wrote to Darwin about the forced separation of a slave family, Darwin's response was brutal, though once he realized that Lyell was only relating the views of another, he excused himself by saying that only the subject of slavery made his emotions get the better of him.  During the period between Darwin's return from the Beagle and the publication of his major works, it could not have been lost on anyone at the time ---especially one who like Darwin maintained a voluminous international correspondence--- that they were seeing the transformation of scientific knowledge --- and the “Spirit of the Age” is really only the structure of knowledge and its disciplines.Physics and chemistry were already becoming the province of specialists. The laboratory was becoming the locale for organizing the production of scientific knowledge. The rapid foundation of new learned associations and societies reflected both the move towards specialization and the speedier dissemination of results and theories. Science had finally turned to the study life. Just one governing principle remained to be overthrown:  the view of Man as the apex of creation. In this regard, the Origin of Species is a profound argument for human humility. The history of the Earth could no longer be thought of as identical with the history of Man, but it was now possible to assert that it was key to understanding the history of life. 
“As all the organic beings, extinct and recent, which have ever lived on this earth have to be classed together, and as all have been connected by the finest gradations,the best, or indeed, if our collections were nearly perfect, the only possible arrangement, would be genealogical. Descent being on my view the hidden bond of connection which naturalists have been seeking under the term of the natural system.”
 The Tree of Life was transformed into the tree of genealogical affinities: “I believe this simile largely speaks the truth” Darwin modestly stated. The Tree of Life, as well as his evocation of the “tangled bank,” represented a dynamic and indeterminate Nature.


Darwin executed more than just a rhetorical maneuver with the naming of The Origin of Species. Darwin choose to avoid the question of human origins, because to do so would have been to play on his opponents board and make his work a part of the monogenic-polygenic debate. To make a break with that controversy, Darwin answered the species question by demanding that we consider humans to be just one of an infinite variety of living organisms, all of which were created by the same processes that could even now be seen at work. Darwin shifts man from a central place in understanding variety in nature, and so produces a break with the polygenic/monogenic debate. If humans can tell us so much about the origins of the vast cacophony of nature, then there was no reason to privilege humans as the special key to knowledge. Any species could answer some or all of the question of origins. Darwin combined the genealogical classification of species with the gradual accumulation of small variations --- “a grain of sand is enough to tip the balance”--- and a theory of  population. With these he destroyed the theory of the fixity of species and the multiple origins of humans. Even Cuvier's theory of a series of creations could no longer be accepted.

Darwin was profoundly materialistic. With his intervention into the monogenic/polygenic controversy, the fixed, closed systems of classification of Natural History could no longer adequately describe the world. Now the Earth could only be seen as a planet where life “from so simple a beginning endless forms most beautiful and most wonderful have been, and are being evolved.” This,the last sentence of the book, is the only instance in the Origin of Species where evolution is used. It is significant that it is used in this passage to juxtapose the fixity of the law of gravity with the plasticity of descent with modification, a plasticity that is due in large part to the workings of chance.  

Most simply put, Darwin made the question of human origins a matter of the origin of any species.  Humans were no longer at the center. Linneaus may have placed Man in the chart of classification and as the measure and explanation for its origins, but Darwin placed humans in the genealogical tree of life, that is, directly in nature itself, and allowed that other species shall now explain the origin of man.  Darwin's work opens us to the infinity of nature, and makes humans just one of many species joined in life's great struggle for existence “whilst this planet has gone cycling according to the fixed law of gravity.” 
 
We should not think of Darwin's intervention as the triumph of reason over false-science, for with the new theory came also new forms of knowledge such as degeneracy and eugenics, and new forms of control that relied on new systems of classification which never quite left behind those of the late period of Natural History. These were not new forms of unreason, and neither was polygenesis merely a false and wretched knowledge that was a perversion of reason. It constituted scientific reason in relation to Man. Our present everyday knowledge of race owes much to it, but so too the the same degree do the sciences of life such as biology and sociology insofar as they came in the late 19th and early 20th centuries to buttress the eugenic movement.  
 
Life and its struggle now occupied the center, and the displacement of Man could not be sustained under the guise of Natural History. New fields such as biology, sociology, and ecology would now supplant Natural History with the new study of life. The end of Natural History came along with the end of the dispute between the monogenists and polygenists. The polygenic theory was turned on its head by Darwin's account of a single common line of descent shaped by natural selection, among other conditions of life.

Darwin does not directly refer to polygenism until ten years later in the Descent of Man, and by then the polygenists had already been eclipsed by the combined forces of Darwin's critique and the American Civil War. That we do not remember the monogenic/polygenic debate is what Darwin hoped would be one of his most notable achievements.

Monday, November 14, 2011

Diversity, Culture, Theory, and Data: Science on Human Variety. --- B. Ricardo Brown and Christopher X J. Jensen --- SLAS Faculty Research Seminar.


Diversity, Culture, Theory, and Data: Science on Human Variety. 
B. Ricardo Brown and Christopher X J. Jensen
SLAS Faculty Research Seminar
Monday, November 7, 2011
[CLICK to enlarge any image.]
 ______________

[Note: my colleague Chris Jensen has posted his presentation from the talk.  Please see http://www.christopherxjjensen.com/community/outreach/#Hum-Diff  
for his slides and discussion. Added February 8, 2013.]

UNTIL (AND A BIT AFTER) DARWIN
B. Ricardo Brown, Ph. D.
Associate Professor of Cultural Studies
SLAS Faculty Seminar Series
November 7, 2011
While I was preparing for this talk, I ran across a January 1894 letter by Engels. It is nice to come across an earlier text that speaks directly to something you are actively thinking about. This letter is one of many that he wrote attempting --- as he neared his end --- to explain what he understood by the term “economic relations” and their determinations. These determinations comprise, he wrote, “the entire technique of production,” its geographical setting, “and traditions and the remnants of earlier social orders that survive “by force of inertia.”
“Political, juridical, philosophical, religious, literary, artistic, etc. development is based on economic development. But all these react upon each other and also upon the economic basis. It is not that the economic situation is cause, [or] solely active while everything else is only passive effect. There is, rather interaction on the basis of economic necessity which ultimately always asserts itself... so it is not, as people here and there conveniently imagine, that the economic situation produces an automatic effect.” Engels to W. Borgius (London, January 25, 1894).

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 I bring this up because Engels correspondent seems to have asserted that the development of technique was dependent on the state of scientific knowledge rather than social production. Engels disagreed, of course, and presented an approach that resembles the one I have taken in looking into the subject of human variety.
If as you say, technique largely depends on the state of science, science depends far more on the state and the requirements of technique. If a society has a technical need, that helps science forward more than ten universities. The whole of hydrostatics (Torricelli, etc.) was called forth by the necessity for regulating the mountain streams of Italy in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries. We have known anything reasonable about electricity only since its technical applicability was discovered. But unfortunately it has become the custom in Germany to write the history of the sciences as if they had fallen from the skies.” Engels, ibid.
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I think that this statement, with a few tweaks here and there, resembles my own approach to the critique of what might be called the Sciences of Life, but I came across this letter only recently. 
Instead, I came to this work via my dissertation on the concept of community in sociological theory. While looking into that topic, I noticed intersecting topic: degeneracy and degeneration. Following back from Eugenics to early Natural History, it became clear that degeneracy is one moment in the history of an even more elaborate and complex set of scientific ideologies. Moreover, the ubiquity of degeneracy meant that there were multiple discourses on it as well. However, it did seem that we can mark a divide between degeneracy in the works of Naturalists such as Blumenbach and Buffon, and degeneracy as it later appeared in the work of the Criminal Anthropologists and popular followers of Max Nordau. In the earlier Natural History, degeneracy served as an explanation for variety, including human variety. It marked not so much decay or decline but instead deviation from the norm of an original type. Later, degeneracy became the primary sign of moral, physical, and social decay and disorganization.
It would be convenient to be able to say that this break occurred because of Darwin’s work. This is attractive and seemingly easy because much of the work in Criminal Anthropology aligned with the many emerging interpretations of Darwin. However, almost 15 years before Darwin’s Origin, we find Marx writing in the Holy Family on the increasingly popular view that crime and immorality are caused by degeneracy. Marx is dismissive of this idea and expected that nothing would come of it. In fact, despite Darwin degeneracy became a powerful explanation for social disorder, while before his time, degeneracy was a powerful explanation for variety in nature, i. e., for for the groupings we refer to as species and races.
And so to really understand degeneracy, one needed to examine a closely related area of inquiry usually referred to as “the species question.”
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What accounts for the variety of nature? Are species fixed or do they change? The species question animated Natural History until Darwin produced the definitive answer with his Origin of Species. Two aspects were key for today, 1st, the debate over the nature of a species and 2nd the debate on the fixity of species, i. e., if species exist, then have they ever changed? This 2nd concern was in particular prompted by the gradual recognition of the importance and meaning of fossils.

The question that animated Natural History would also be its undoing, relegating Natural History to travel/literary excursions into the wild or to the domain of amateurs such as birders. But even here Natural History’s emphasis on the experienced amateur and the practice of observation continues. If the species question animated Natural History, it is good to remember that this was a time when science looked very different and when the scientific disciplines that we take for granted were either new or had not yet emerged. Science itself was organized very differently, with amateurs and learned societies serving a centers of learning and scientific exchange. In fact, the term “scientist” was at this time a rather new one. Dating from the early 1830s and finally codified as one who “cultivates science in general” in 1840 by Whewell. [who Darwin quotes in the front piece of the Origin]

So remember that unlike Chris’s part of this talk, science as you know it did not really exist during the era I am discussing, not only was a different question animating scientific inquiry, but also there was a very different formation of scientific knowledge and ideologies. Of course, the necessities of social production and the contradictions which followed from these social conflicts were rapidly creating the need and desire for our science.

Looking at the period from which Darwin emerged and from which he was largely cut off during the five year voyage of the Beagle, we find Natural History at its apex, with such luminaries as Linne, Blumenbach, Cuvier, Buffon, Lyell, but also figures like Thomas Jefferson and Samuel G. Morton, James Audubon and John Bachman, and Louis Agassiz. We find that the species question had been largely resolved by the naturalists on both sides of the Atlantic, but that those in the United States, referred to as the American School, dominated the discussion of the species question. In the Natural History of Darwin’s time, humans were thought to hold the key to understanding variety in nature and thus to resolving the species question and disclosing the rational order that Natural History had always sought. A decade before the publication of the Origin of Species, Samuel Morton stated flatly that “the question of the origin of species is [a question of the origin] of the human species.” In the years between 1780 and 1859, the scientific theory known as polygenesis --- which held that humans were divided into races and each race had a separate origin and fixed characteristics --- came to dominate the understanding of human history. Advocated most vigorously by those in the American School, but widely accepted, the Polygenic theory of human origins was acknowledge by proponents and opponents alike as a rational, scientific theory as well as a powerful justification for slavery. It was used against the abolitionists who had of course turned to the Biblical story of creation to stress a single origin, or the monogenesis of humans, in support of their cause.

So let me turn to mention how human variety was addressed within this debate over the species question and how Darwin came to intervene in this debate. In a sense, I am saying Darwin’s Origin should be approached not only as a great work of science and materialism, but also as one of the great abolitionist works. It is in relation to the prevailing Polygenic theory that we see the far reaching social effects of Darwin’s work and understand Darwin's lasting achievement as more than simply a new theory of nature. It is in the dispute over the scientific validity of the Polygenic theory that Darwin places his own work ten years later in The Descent of Man:

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Whether primeval man, when he possessed but a few arts, and those of the rudest kind, and when his power of language was extremely imperfect, would have deserved to be called man, must depend on the definition which we employ. In a series of forms graduating insensibly from some ape-like creature to man as he now exists, it would be impossible to fix on any definite point where the term ‘man’ ought to be used. But this is a matter of very little importance. So again, it is almost a matter of indifference whether the so-called races of man are thus designated, or are ranked as species or subspecies; but the latter term appears the more appropriate. Finally, we may conclude that when the principle of evolution is generally accepted, as it surely will be before long, the dispute between the monogenists and the polygenists will die a silent and unobserved death.
Source: Darwin, Charles. The Descent of Man and Selection in Relation to Sex, first edition. London: John Murray, volumes 1 and 2, 1871, pp. 243–248; The Complete Works of Charles Darwin Online, Cambridge University <http://darwin-online.org.uk/> (viewed April 9, 2008).


That the era of the Polygenic theory was also the era of slavery was hardly coincidental, as the polygenic theory cloaked slavery in the aegis of scientific respectability. The apologists for Southern slavery did not have to look only to Greek and Roman slavery for ideological justification. Now for many the rationality of Natural History itself underwrote the rationality of slavery.

So for the rest of my talk I want to give you a sketch of the scientific study of human variety in the period before Darwin’s intervention into the species question.. I will have to leave off consideration of a couple of things that I wish I had the time to go over. It would be helpful to be able to say more about ideas of human variety in classical and medieval times. Pliny the Elder is particularly important in this regard, as he had no concept of race and an expansive view of what constituted a human, as befits one in a vast Empire. It is also difficult to find Roman texts wherein any mention is made of the color of a person’s skin. It would be well to note in passing that according to Herodotus and Homer, the Persians and Trojans both drew on allies from as far away as India and Ethiopia. The last great defenders of Troy’s walls were after all an Ethiopian king and his troops. It would also be nice to delve into the contrasts between Aristotle on slavery and the body (a good soul displays a good body, a slave soul displays a slave body) and writers such as Xenophon and Seneca, who found no essential difference between humans or between freemen and slaves, and the radical egalitarianism of the Epicureans.

Also, I can only briefly mention that Darwin’s supposed debt to Spencer and to Malthus is greatly exaggerated. Although the nickname the Beagle’s crew gave him was “Philosopher,” Darwin’s had little interest in such matters. As he noted to Marx in thanking him for a gift of a copy of Capital, he really knew nothing about political economy his copy of Capital ultimately went unread. With Malthus, Darwin takes a idea, the continual increase in population and with it increasing scarcity, and makes it an agent for change in nature, whereas the decidedly anti-Enlightenment Malthus used it to argue that nothing actually changes. Darwin stood Malthus on his head just as he does Herbert Spencer, who wrote to Darwin that he did not recognize his “survival of the fittest” or “evolution” as it appeared in Darwin. Darwin insisted that the phrase was a metaphor and used because of the popularity of Spencer’s work.1*** He does not even use the phrase until the 5th edition of the Origin of Species and even then at the insistence of Wallace that he substitute the phrase “survival of the fittest” for “natural selection” in any later editions of the Origin of Species. Darwin wrote to Wallace of his belief that the term natural selection “was of great advantage to bring into connection natural and artificial selection.” Although Darwin agreed to use the phrase “survival of the fittest,” he would consistently couple it with Natural Selection. He will also consistently refer to survival of the fittest not as “a plain expression of fact,” but as “a metaphor for effect and change. And so, despite his promise to use “survival of the fittest” in the future, he wrote back to Wallace with characteristic irony: “Natural Selection has now been so largely used abroad and at home, that I doubt whether it could be given up, and with all its faults I should be sorry to see the attempt made. Whether it will be rejected must now depend on the survival of the fittest.”

Now, we can move own to the period just before the publication of the Origin, a period that is dominated by polygenic theories of human origins championed by American naturalists and physicians. The crowning work of the American School, Types of Mankind, by Josiah Nott and George Gliddon, with a chapter by Darwin's nemesis, Louis Agassiz, epitomized the thinking regarding human origins in the time. Now for many Natural History itself underwrote the rationality of slavery, but the debate between mongenic and polygenic theories had been a long one, beginning with Linne’s classification of Nature.

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The first place to begin in Natural History is with Linne’s System of Nature. As most of you know, Linne is often credited as being the first to classify humans as part of the natural world. Linne's first classification was replaced in his later editions by a far more detailed description of the varieties of human beings.

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But the descriptions rely on Medieval ideas of the different “complextions” of Humans. Linne also retained remnants of the earlier prodigious humans described by Pliny the Elder in the 7th book of his Natural History..... and which persisted through the Middle Ages and down to the modern era in our representations of the Monstrous Races.” The Wild Man (Homo ferus) the Conehead’s of China, etc. But the characteristics of each race are elaborately detailed anthropological notes and not only a matter of anatomical comparisons.

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Linne might have placed humans in nature, but Blumenbach gave us what we recognize as our conventional classification of human variety: Five Races, distinguished by continent, color and temperament. Blumenbach, I should note was a monogenist He believed in a common origin of all human varieties, and was quite progressive for his day. He owned what was perhaps the largest collection of African and Black literature in Europe, which he used to rebut contemporaries such as a fellow named Hegel, who believed that Africans were not truly human and possessed no sense of self or culture. So it is somewhat ironic that his legacy is most profound in our continuation of his scheme of racial classification, rather than his opposition to the belief in the intellectual inferiority of Africans. Notice two that Blumenbach’s description of Caucasians is quite brief: Beautiful in form.
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There is always a aesthetic dimension in these discussions, and Blumenbach’s classification was in opposition to those who would classify humans based purely on aesthetic judgment, especially employing the “facial angle,” and not anatomical and anthropological data.
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 Blumenbach also coined the term Caucasian based upon his examination of a skull in is collection from the Caucuses Mountain region.
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We can mention Lamarck, who had much influence on Darwin, but Lamarck’s ideas on the transformation of species had at this time been eclipsed by the doctrine of the fixity of species supported by Cuvier and many others.
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And Cuvier, gave us much, from his Animal Kingdom and work on fossils to his theory of cataclysmic revolutions of the Earth and the theory of extinction. We also owe to him the strongest arguments for the fixity of species in relation to human variety. Comparing a specimen of the Sacred Ibis with mummified remains found in tombs and depictions of the animal in temple drawings, Cuvier concluded that the species had not changed over the entire period of the present era. Now the implications of Cuvier's research was profound, for it was quickly pointed out that there were recognizable depictions of Negroes in some of the same ancient drawings.
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It seemed that the Sacred Ibis had not changed and neither had the Negro. The estimated 6000 years since the Creation or the last revolution of the earth, was not long enough to account for the differences in species or for the general variety of nature. Cuvier argued that whenever one has no physical data, one must turn to the Biblical accounts and to archeology, especially Egyptian archeology. It was not lost on Cuvier and others that the polygenic theory also contradicted the biblical account of creation. The free scientific inquiry that the American School demanded had already set the polygenic theory and religion on a collision course long before Darwin’s Origin.
Egypt was a very popular subject during this time in America. George Gliddon, who had served as an American Consul in Egypt, undertook a series of popular and well attended lectures on Egyptian history and culture, during which an 800 foot long tapestry of scenes from Egyptian life would scroll by behind him. He also unwrapped a mummy at the end of each nights lecture, which cause him some embarrassment when one that he billed as a male prince turned out to be female. But more than just a showman, Gliddon was fascinated by the species question and human origins. While in Egypt he had read Samuel Morton’s the work on craniology and set to robbing Egyptian graves and tombs for Morton's collection of crania, helping Morton amassed the worlds largest collection of human crania, with over 700 skulls. Many of the skull depicted in Morton’s Crania Egyptia were plundered by Gliddon.

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Gliddon was a character in real life and in fiction, appearing in Edgar Allen Poe’s “Conversation with a Mummy,” but Morton was perhaps America’s first internationally recognized scientist. When Louis Agassiz came to the U.S., he first went to visit Morton, who he held equal to Cuvier as a naturalist and scientist. With Morton’s stature came also the authority of the polygenic theory and the formation of “The American School.”
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In 1842 a reviewer of recent polygenic works asked: “In surveying the globe in reference to the different appearances of mankind, the most extraordinary diversities are apparent to the most superficial observer. . . . Hence arises the question—Have all these diverse races descended from a single stock?

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Josiah Nott, who did pioneering work on Yellow Fever, lectured on the species question and wrote on the contradictions inherent in the Biblical account of creation. Either the world is quite a bit older than 6,000 years, giving time for the variation in humans to work itself out into its present races, or one would have to admit that each race was created as it now is. In his estimation, only the polygenic theory could reconcile the history of the Earth with the obvious and fixed differences in the races. Neither God nor Nature had created men equal. Even Mulattoes were not proof that we were the same species, for Mulattos became hybrids doomed to die off from illness, increased sterility, and because mulatto women did not make good mothers.

It is often uncritically accepted that the ideas and concepts Darwin brought together in The Origin of Species were in the air and merely part of the spirit of the age.

Well, yes and no. Was Darwin’s work the mere assembling and making intelligible insights already available? What is certain is that Natural History had reached a crisis amidst the disputes over fixity, variation, and classification. 
 
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In the midst of this crisis, the debate between the monogenists and polygenists was a choice between two powerful explanations for human variety. Although certainly related to the debate over slavery, it would be simplistic to think that the polygenic/monogenic debate was between pro- and antislavery advocates who wanted to wrap themselves in the veneer of scientific respectability. 

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The debate of one versus many species went to the very core of the ethics of scientific inquiry. Supporters of slavery could be found on each side, as could abolitionists. Those opposed to slavery included the polygenist George Squire, who founded the short lived but significant New York Anthropological Society. 
 

Supporters included John Bachman of Charleston, Audubon’s co-author [( Audubon, John James, and John,Bachman. The Quadrupeds of North America, 3 vols. New York: V. G. Audubon, 1851-54..)]
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Bachman was the principle scientific opponent of the polygenic theory in America and he and Morton carried on a long public debate. Bachman was an interesting fellow, too. He founded a liberal arts college Newberry College, had a church and school which welcomed both Blacks and Whites, ordained the first three Black Lutheran ministers in America. Bachman's wife Maria painted many of the backgrounds, insects, and plants in Audubon's works. Their daughters married Audubon's sons and Audubon named several species for his friend, such as the now extinct Bachman’s Warbler.
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He also owned 5 slaves, gave the prayer for the opening of the Secessionist S. C. legislature, and during the war wrote in the popular press about the need to apply the knowledge of Natural History to support the Southern cause. 
By 1850 the American School had succeeded in challenging the biblical chronology of the history of the earth and its inhabitants. Freed from doctrine, the American School hailed a new era of “free scientific inquiry” into Nature in general, and human origins and racial variation in particular. It is precisely at this moment that Darwin intervenes.
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Now if we turn to Darwin, we first note that
The Origin of Species is structured as one continuous argument. It begins with an exposition on variation as it exists under domestication, followed by an examination of variation without the intervention of humans. Instead of focusing on fixity, Darwin took variation and chance to be the norm. They are the central causes and essential products of the struggle for life. Natural selection is one basis of this of variability. In the struggle for existence, life maintains itself through variation.
Darwin argued instead that Nature permanently produces variety. He proposed a new science arising from genealogy, morphology (the comparative study of function, behavior, and environment), embryology, and the study of rudimentary organs. This is the structure of The Origin of Species that reveals Darwin transvaluation of Natural History into the Science of Life. Contrary to other naturalists of his time, he sees all living things not only as being connected by descent, but also as being transformed over time.

Classification, then, is not about finding the order of the creator but about tracing the lines of descent: “All true classification is genealogical, that community of descent is the hidden bond which naturalists have been unconsciously seeking, and not some unknown plan of creation, or the enunciation of general propositions, and the mere putting together and separating objects more or less alike.”

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Darwin did not engage in the active defense of his theory, leaving it to friends like Thomas Huxley and Asa Gray to respond to the more heated attacks. There were many reasons for his reticence, including his health, which had been severely compromised during the five-year circumnavigation of the Beagle. It was not known what caused his chronic illness and bouts of intense pain. Still, much of Darwin’s work was shaped by his Beagle voyage. As we all know, he had begun the voyage something of a a believer in fixity and creation, and by the end, he had already begun to sketch the outlines of the theory. But he was always an opponent of slavery.

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Darwin was not the Beagle’s naturalist, but more the social companion for Captain Fitz-Roy. British naval commanders were drawn from the upper class, and it was forbidden for them to socialize even with their own junior officers. It was a lonely life for a ship’s captain, made all the more apparent by the suicide of the Beagle’s first captain while sheltering in a harbor near the Straits of Magellan. Fitz-Roy took Darwin, even though the captain was concerned (given his interest in craniology) that the shape of Darwin’s nose suggested that he was not up to the hardships of the voyage. Together they shared the cramped quarters of the ship for five years—the limited size of which became even more pronounced when the two discovered their opposing views on slavery. Fitz-Roy held the common view that slavery was a necessary evil because of the inherent inferiority of the enslaved races. Slavery would ultimately civilize the Negro, he argued, and introduce global trade that would make colonialism and slavery unnecessary.
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He later founded the Met Office in the U.K and everyday we repeat a phrase he coined: the weather forecast.

In Brazil in 1832, Darwin observed slavery for himself, and his experiences never left him. His son Francis remembered that his father was often awakened by nightmares of his Brazilian experiences, and that his father would become enraged at the mere suggestion of an apology for slavery. Those who thought so, Darwin wrote, had never put themselves in the position of the slave. He had begun the voyage as an ardent opponent of slavery and related how he was often told by others that experience in the slave countries would prove to him the inferiority of the Negro. From Brazil he wrote to his sister that his experiences in Brazil in particular only hardened his opposition to slavery.


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In the years between Darwin’s return from the Beagle voyage and the publication of his major works, a transformation was occurring in scientific knowledge. Physics and chemistry were already becoming the provinces of specialists. The laboratory as well as the field was becoming the locale for organizing the production of scientific knowledge. The rapid foundation of new learned associations and societies reflected both the move toward specialization and the speedier dissemination of results and theories. Science had finally turned to the study life. Just one governing principle remained to be overthrown: the view of humanity as the apex of creation. In this regard, The Origin of Species is a profound argument for human humility.

“As all the organic beings, extinct and recent, which have ever lived on this earth have to be classed together, and as all have been connected by the finest gradations, the best, or indeed, if our collections were nearly perfect, the only possible arrangement, would be genealogical. Descent being on my view the hidden bond of connection which naturalists have been seeking under the term of the natural system.”

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The Great Chain of Being was transformed into the tree of genealogical affinities: “I believe this simile largely speaks the truth,” Darwin stated. The concluding paragraph describes a “tangled bank” teeming with life and the remains of past lives, all representing a dynamic and indeterminate Nature.

Darwin executed more than just a rhetorical maneuver with the naming of The Origin of Species or the Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life. Darwin chose to avoid the question of human origins because to mention it would have made his work a part of the monogenic-polygenic debate. To make a break with that controversy, Darwin answered the species question by demanding that we consider humans to be just one of an infinite variety of living animals, all of which were created by the same processes that could still be seen at work. There was no reason to privilege humans as the special key to knowledge for any species could answer some or all of the questions of origins.

With Darwin’s intervention into the monogenic/polygenic controversy, the fixed, closed systems of classification of natural history could no longer adequately describe the world. The Earth had to be seen as a planet where life “from so simple a beginning endless forms most beautiful and most wonderful have been, and are being evolved.” This, the last sentence of the book, is the only instance in The Origin of Species where Darwin mentions evolution. [It is significant that “evolved” is used in a passage where Darwin juxtaposes the fixity of the law of gravity with the in indeterminate variation of descent with modification. Most simply put, Linnaeus may have placed humans in the fixed chart of classifications, but Darwin placed humans in the genealogical tree of life; that is, directly in nature itself, and allowed that other species could explain the origin of man.] Darwin’s work makes us just one of many species joined in life’s great but indeterminate struggle for existence “whilst this planet has gone cycling according to the fixed law of gravity.”
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We should not think of Darwin’s intervention as the triumph of reason over false science, for with the new theory came also new scientific ideologies such as degeneracy as a hereditary taint and eugenics as a means to free us from those taints. New forms of social control which relied on new systems of classification appear but also never quite left behind those of the past. These were not forms of irrationality, and polygenesis was not a mere perversion of reason. In fact, polygenism constituted scientific reason in its era. Our present everyday understanding of race and identity owe much to it in the form of “traditions and remnants” and “by the force of inertia.” And so too do the sciences of life such as biology and sociology insofar as they came in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries to buttress eugenics.
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To conclude, the end of Natural History came with the end of the dispute between the monogenists and polygenists—and the polygenic theory was turned on its head by Darwin’s account of a single common line of descent shaped by natural selection and the conditions of life. Variation and chance became essential aspects of Nature.

That the monogenic/polygenic debate has largely faded from history is what Darwin hoped would be one of his notable achievements. That it has not completely disappeared but is instead constantly invoked not only in the sciences whenever they forget their own history, but also by those who cling to notions of essential differences and unchanging identities --- this sad fact of everyday life would no doubt disappoint him.
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1A letter we know about because its contents were preserved by Darwin’s friend and mentor the geologist Charles Lyell in the extensive set of notebooks on the species question he kept between 1855 and 1860.