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Darwin’s “Sacred” Cause: How Opposing Slavery Could Still Enslave

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Those who follow the Darwin industry are very familiar with Darwin: The Life of a Tormented Evolutionist by Adrian Desmond and James Moore. In that biography they were one of the few biographers to highlight young Charles’ Edinburgh years (October 1825 to April 1827) and show the powerful influences that experience had on the teenager. Here too in Desmond and Moore’s new Darwin’s Sacred Cause, Edinburgh becomes the substantive starting point. This is as it should be since the freethinkers he would be exposed to in the radical Plinian Society (a largely student-based group Darwin seemed to relish given his attendance at all but one of its 19 meetings during his stay there) would have a profund influence on his thinking for the rest of his life. Desmond and Moore correctly acknowledge this, observing that this period “helped condition his life’s work on the deepest social — and scientific — issues” (17). Indeed the Plinians would steep Charles in a radical materialism that the present biographers admit was “mirrored” in his work a decade later (35).

All well and good so far. But not quite.  This is a book with its own cause. From the outset the authors explain frankly that , “We show the humanitarian roots that nourished Darwin’s most controversial and contested work on human ancestry” (xviii). And those “humanitarian roots,” we are told again and  again throughout its 376 narrative pages was Darwin’s passionate and unwavering hatred of slavery.  “No one has appreciated the source of that moral fire that fuelled his strange, out-of-character obsession with human origins. Understand that,” they insist, “and Darwin can be radically reassessed” (xix).  And what is that reassessment?  The reader is not left waiting:  “Ours is a book about a caring, compassionate man who was affected for life by the scream of a tortured slave” (xx).

At issue, of course, isn’t the horrific abomination of slavery nor Darwin’s abhorrence of it (this has long been known and acknowledged by historians) but rather the purported impact that Desmond and Moore claim his abolitionism had on his theory’s development and purpose.  In short, the question is, does the anti-slavery Darwin necessarily make for a “kinder, gentler” Darwin? An affirmative answer must rest upon two supports, one conceptual and the other factual. The remainder of this essay will examine both to answer this question.

One of the more interesting trajectories of this book is it anchoring in Darwin’s early Edinburgh years, a comparatively short period but one fraught with significance for Darwin.  In this starting point I fully concur with Desmond and Moore.  While many look to his voyage on the Beagle (December 1831 to October 1836) as introducing the young naturalist to the fullness of nature’s laboratory that would culminate in his theory of natural selection and a wholly naturalistic evolutionary theory, these authors point to the earlier Edinburgh experiences as establishing the seminal backdrop for all else that would follow.  They point out that Edinburgh was rife with discussions of race, cranial size, and phrenology.  Some attempted to demonstrate the validity of scientifc racism, others the opposite. All — or nearly all — were cast in materialistic terms. Desmond and Moore’s summary is quite accurate:

So this wasn’t the barren period Darwin in his biography would have us believe.  Issues of environmental versus anatomical determinism, and a self-animated versus a Creatively animated nature, were being thrashed out all around him, issues which would have repurcussions for generations, inside and outside Darwin’s own work.  Arguments about brain sizes, innate dispositions and racial categories were still raging, putting a consensus some way off.  Groups were competing to sway the students and Darwin was at the center of it. But the young innocent probably wasn’t so much embroiled as wide-eyed.  Still, many of these themes would later resurface in his own work on human racial descent (43).

During Darwin’s stay at Cambridge, he too was exposed to many ideas, not the least of which was a vocal but conflicted anti-slavery impluse.  Through it all, insist Desmond and Moore, Darwin “held fast with radically pliant ‘brotherbood’ science and shackle-breaking ideology in true Whig tradition” (57).  Indeed Darwin would, according to the authors, reject the measuring, weighting, calculating racial anthropologists (those self-important, confident phrenologists and physiognomists)  he had found in Edinburgh.  “No skull collecting would mark his science,” they insist.” He would find a very different way of approaching black and white, slave and free” (110).

It is important to keep this claim in mind since it is crucial to Desmond and Moore’s thesis that while he became a “secret materialist — happy to have brains secrete even religious notions as physiological byproducts” (132), he would eschew the scientific racism implicit (and more often than not explicit) in this radical materialism in favor of a wholly naturalistic theory confirming a common descent and botherhood of all mankind. They refer to it as generations of “brotherly common descents” (141).

How he accomplishes this forms a considerable part of Darwin’s Sacred Cause. Basically, by establishing common descent as a viable scientific paradigm, Darwin was able to settle the old monogenist/polygenist debate once and for all.  The monogenists viewed human development on earth as emanating from a common pair — this was, for some, most eloquently described in the opening chapters of Genesis.  But there were non-biblical monogenists as well.  Polygenists, however, believed in multiple origins for humanity.  As America headed towards Civil War, the polygenists held the upper hand.  The biblical monogenism of James Cowles Prichard (1786-1848) looked antiquated against the “scientific” racism of Josiah Clark Nott (1804-1873), George R. Gliddon (1809-1857), and others. Desmond and Moore describe in detail how Darwin sought to establish a viable counter to the polygenists with an explanation of human origins that was at once naturalistic and based upon a common descent.  In effect, a science of human oneness and brotherhood.  They describe how the publication of Darwin’s Origin in 1859 tipped the scales permanently in his favor, citing the example of Charles Loring Brace (1826-1890), an abolitionist firebrand who claimed to have read the book thirteen times.

All this is true.  Darwin was adamantly opposed to slavery, Darwin did end — eventually — the polgenists’ claim to scientific respectability.  But this alone would hardly warrant a book.  As mentioned before, historians have long known of Darwin’s consistent antipathy towards slavery.  As for his role in settling the monogenist/polygenist dispute, that too has long been known (n. 1). The essential problem with Desmond and Moore’s effort is their naive assumption that anti-slavery means egalitarian and humanitarian.  This is a conceptual problem that haunts the book throughout. There really is no reason to assume an immediate and direct relationship between the one and the other, and the example of Charles Loring Brace given above goes not only to this point but to demonstrate the selective treatment they give to this whole subject.  Charles Loring Brace was indeed a vocal opponent of slavery and also and ardent Darwinist. What Desmond and Moore do not say is that Brace viewed blacks as inherently inferior and was himself a vocal opponent of miscegenation.  In the words of historian George M. Fredrickson, Brace made “the Darwinian case for differentiation of the races by natural selection . . . [and] ended up with a view of racial differences which was far from egalitarian in its implications” (n. 2). Brace held out little hope for “the mullato” and finished up by declaring, “there is nothing in the gradual diminution and destruction of a savage or inferior race in contact with a more civilized and powerful which is ‘mysterious’ . . . . The first gifts of civilization are naturally fatal to a barbarous people . . . . (n. 3). Fredrickson quite accurately points out that “Brace’s pioneering effort to devolop a Darwinist ethnology in opposition to the American School, although animated to some degree by antislavery humanitarianism, had demonstrated that most of the hierarchical assumptions of the polygenists could be justified just as well, if not better, in Darwinian terms” (n. 4).

The example of Josiah Clark Nott underscores this point.  Desmond and Moore spend considerable time showing how the Alabamian’s rabid polygenism formed the basis for an extreme racism and justification for slavery; they fail to point out that in the end Nott was able to reconcile with Darwinism.  Nott recognized at once that he had been outdone by Darwin’s irreligious formulations.  Writing to Ephraim Squire in the summer of 1860, Nott quipped, “the man [Darwin] is clearly crazy, but it is a capital dig into the parson — it stirs up Creation and much good comes out of such thorough discuassions” (n. 5).  In the end, Nott came to accept Darwin’s theory of man’s common descent.  Indeed he claimed nothing of what he wrote on the race question was negated but simply refined, and who was not to say that even in Darwin’s world races might not be “permanent varieties” (n. 6).  The point, of course, isn’t whether or not any of this is true — it is obvious nonsense and most of Nott’s contemporaries recognized it as such — but whether Darwin’s defeat of polygenist theory and its replacement with his common descent really had any difference in the end toward establishing a science of brotherhood is doubtful.  Brace, Nott, and many others could enbrace common descent precisely because it suggested nothing close to racial brotherhood.

This poor conceptualization of anti-slavery and ipso facto humanitarianism is compounded by a misunderstanding of Darwin himself.  Desmond and Moore correctly point out the crucial impact that the Edinburgh freethinkers had upon him and his theory, but they are simply wrong in contending that he distanced himself from their emerging racial craniology.  Their denials notwithstanding, there were skulls in Darwin’s science.  In his Descent of Man (1871) Paul Boca’s crantiometry is referenced approvingly.  While Darwin was careful to avoid the implication that “the intellect of any two animals or of any two men can be accurately gauged by the cubic contents of their skulls,” he seemed to give accumulated aggregate craniometric data some evidentiary weight.  “The belief that there exists in man some close relation between the size of the brain and the development of the intellectual faculties is supported by the comparison of skulls of savage and civilized races, of ancient and modern people, and by the analogy of the whole vertebrate series” (n. 7).  Citing the work of physician/craniologist Joseph Barnard Davis (1801-1881), Darwin noted that Europeans had a cranial capacity of 92.3, Americans 87.5, Asiatics 87.1, and Australians 81.9 cubic inches.  Clearly, if Darwin did in fact believe in a brotherhood of man it was a very unequal brotherhood.

Darwin’s “bullbog defender” Thomas Henry Huxley provides yet another example.  A devoted Darwinian, Huxley did not translate common descent into common equality.  Like Brace, Huxley was relieved to witness the end of America’s “peculiar institution.”  Writing at the end of the war that had raged for four years across the Atlantic, Huxley said, “But whatever the position of stable equilibrium into which the laws of social gravitation may bring the negro, all responsibility for the result will henceforward lie between nature and him. The white man may wash his hands of it, and the Caucasian conscience be void of reproach for evermore.  And this, if we look to the bottom of the matter, is the real justification for the abolition policy” (n. 8). Even Desmond and Moore must admit that Huxley “shared none of Darwin’s ‘man and brother’ sympathy” (275).

But how keen really was that “man and brother” sympathy for Darwin himself?  After well over 300 pages of explication designed to show how Darwin’s anti-slavery passion led to his “brotherly common descent” we find the crux of the matter:  “It was a humanitarianism that Darwin took pride in. His anti-slavery and anti-cruelty ethic was inviolate. Yet the incongruity of his class holding this ethic sacrosanct while disparaging the ‘lower’ classes (even as colonists displaced or exterminated them) [emphasis added] is impossible to comprehend by twenty-first century standards” (370).  Darwin was indeed a product of his class as any reading of his Descent will prove; in fact, it formed the very basis of his conception of man as a social animal (n. 9).  But it will take more than Desmond and Moore’s eight pages of dismissive discussion of Descent to see that.  Instead the quotation above would imply they’re trying get Darwin off the hook by pleading he was just a “man of his times” and failure to appreciate this dichotomy is mere presentism.  Frankly, it would have been incomprehensible for some in the nineteenth century as well — Thaddeus Stevens (1792-1868), Theodore Weld (1803-1895), William Lloyd Garrison (1805-1879), Wendell Phillips (1811-1884), John Marshall Harlan (1833-1911), and George Frisbie Hoar (1826-1904) found this kind of hypocracy repugnant.  Darwin’s work was supposed to be prescient, path-breaking, revolutionary.  But by book’s end Darwin looks pretty conventional, even compliantly if somewhat minimally racist himself.  Writing to former slave-holder Charles Kingsley, Darwin admits, “It is very true what you say about the higher races of men, when high enough, will have spread & exterminated whole nations.”  Desmond and Moore admit, “racial genocide was now normalized by natural selection and rationalized as nature’s way of producing ‘superior’ races. Darwin ended up calibrating human ‘rank’ no differently from the rest of his society.  After shunning talk of ‘high’ and ‘low’ in his youthful evolution books, he had ceased to be unique or interesting on the subject” (318).

So in the end we find Darwin’s “sacred” cause was, well, not all that sacred. His cause was less about slavery and more about common descent, which in the final analysis had nothing whatsoever to do with equality.  In fact, it could easily be argued Darwin cleared out the polygenists to give way to a new generation of racial discriminators and engineers.  Based upon Darwinian principles, Darwin’s fascination with breeder and domestic stocks, opened the door to manipulating human “stock,” of managing and even culling the “unfit.” Not that Darwin himself would have condoned that, but surely, Francis Galton (1822-1911), took the evolutionary ball handed him by his cousin and ran with it.  In the end, Darwin’s cause was hardly humanitarian and by no means sacred.  As the lampooning cartoon that opens this essay suggests, if Darwin proved that man is a mere animal related (however distantly) to his ape ancestors then, like the domestic pigeons he was so fond of studying and analogizing from, mankind was capable of being bred, manipulated, and “improved.”  That sort of biological historicism unleashed by Darwinian theory has exacted an enormous price.

Of course, this suggests a connection between Darwin and the more unseemly Social Darwism.  I have likely imposed upon the reader’s time long enough, but for those who would like to explore this in greater detail, Mike Hawkin’s Social Darwinism in European and American Thought, 1860-1945 (Cambridge UP, 1997) is highly recommended.  For now, I will simply say that Darwin’s Sacred Cause has proved not what its authors intended, but instead that passionate opposition to slavery could — indeed did — enslave this Victorian elitist who was shackled (if not by racism) by a theory that was crafted to support his own class and prejudice.  History is full of irony!

Notes

1. See Herbert H. Odum, “Generalizations on Race in Nineteenth-Century Physical Anthropology,” Isis 58.1 (Spring 1967): 4-18.

2. George M. Fredrickson, The Black Image in the White Mind: The Debate on Afro-American Character and Destiny, 1817-1914 (New York: Harper Torchbook, 1971), p. 234.

3. Quoted in Ibid., p. 235.

4. Ibid.

5. John S. Haller Jr., Outcasts from Evolution: Scientific Attitudes of Racial Inferiority, 1859-1900, 2nd ed. (Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press, 1995), p. 80.

6. Ibid.

7. Charles Darwin, Descent of Man and Selection in Relation to Sex (1871; reprinted, New York: Barnes & Noble, 2004), p. 42.

8. Thomas Henry Huxley, “Emancipation — Black and White” (1865),  http://aleph0.clarku.edu/huxley/CE3/B&W.html accessed 2/15/09.

9.  Like his fellow Victorian imperialists, Darwin could view the extinction of indigenous peoples with an unsettling indifference. There is considerable evidence to support the view that Darwin saw struggle as product of culture and class more than race:  “When civilized nations come into contact with barbarians the sturggle is short, except where a deadly climate gives its aid to the native race. Of the causes which lead to the victory of civilized nations, some are plain and simple, others complex and obscure. We can see that the cultivation of the land will be fatal in many ways to savages, for they cannot, or will not, change their habits. . . . The grade of their civilization seems to be a most important element in the success of competing nations.” Descent, op. cit., p. 156.

Darwin always viewed indigenous peoples with the Eurocentric eyes of power and class, and he had thought this long before writing Descent. In The Voyage of the Beagle he wrote the following of the natives he encountered on Tierra del Fuego:

The perfect equality among the individuals composing the Fuegian tribes must for a long time retard their civilization. As we see those animals, whose instinct compels them to live in society and obey a chief, are most capable of improvement, so it is with the races of mankind. Whether we look at it as a cause or consequence, the more civilized always have the more artificial governments. For instance, the inhabitants of Otaheite, who, when first discovered, were governed by hereditary kings, had arrived at a far higher grade than another branch of the same people, the New Zealanders, — who, although benefited by being compelled to turn their attention to agriculture, were republicans in the most absolute sense. In Tierra del Fuego, until some chief shall arise with power sufficient to secure any acquired advantage, such as the domestication of animals, it seems scarcely possible that the political state of the country can be improved. At present, even a piece of cloth given to one is torn into shreds and distributed; and no one individual becomes richer than another. On the other hand, it is difficult to understand how a chief can arise till there is property of some sort by which he might manifest his superiority and increase his power.

I believe, in this extreme part of South America, man exists in a lower state of improvement than in any other part of the world. — Charles Darwin, The Voyage of the Beagle, 2nd ed. (1845; reprinted, New York: Tess Press, n.d.), pp. 214-215.

Basing Darwin’s humanitarianism on his abhorrence of slavery and a purported “brotherhood of man” largely misses the point. Historians have long known that Darwin’s racial classifications were based more upon levels of cultural attainment than ethnic groups. See, for example, Goria McConnaughey, “Darwin and Social Darwinism,” Osiris 9 (1950): 397-412.

Comments
And BTW Huxley isn't my hero, nor Darwin for that matter.JT
February 17, 2009
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Just to clarify, slavery would be a state of unequal protection under the law, so that amendment casts slavery in a legally defined context and bans it. But the "seperate but equal" interpretation was able to persist for a hundred years before that was overturned as well.JT
February 17, 2009
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Tribune7, that was the amendment that overturned slavery. Darwin was against slavery, so was Huxley. They both would have been in favor of that amendment. You could have mentioned Fredrick Douglass, but then he probably didnt accept Darwin's common descent.JT
February 17, 2009
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A devoted Darwinian, Huxley did not translate common descent into common equality.” . . .Who did from this era. Those Republicans who wrote the 14th Amendment.tribune7
February 17, 2009
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As for investigating the evolution of whales (or any other living organism), none of the paleontologists that I know (and I know quite a few) view what they're doing as "confirming" or "disconfirming" anything, and especially not for political or religious purposes. They're motivated by curiosity and the desire to find out about how nature works, not in "scoring points for our side". In the minds of most working scientists, doing research isn't something we do to "score a major victory", much less a "battle in a culture war". No, it's an occupation and an avocation, something we got into because we really like working with "real stuff", going out in the field or into the laboratory and finding out something that we didn't know before. And you won't be able to do that if you've already made up your mind about what you might discover.Allen_MacNeill
February 17, 2009
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In #25, Barb asks:
"...why is [Galileo] not as adored as the one who made it possible to be an intellectually fulfilled atheist?"
Darwin isn't celebrated by most evolutionary biologists because he "made it possible to be an intellectually fulfilled atheist". Darwin is celebrated because he revolutionized the science of biology. We had a week of seminars, symposia, presentations, etc. on Darwin's scientific work at Cornell, and at not one of them was "making it possible to be an intellectually fulfilled atheist" the subject. And if someone were to put together a "Galileo Day/Week" celebration at Cornell, do you think people (especially in the astronomy department) wouldn't participate? Is it some kind of indictment of biologists that we have our act together enough to put together a "festshrift" around the work of a fellow biologist?Allen_MacNeill
February 17, 2009
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Joseph: Don't undervalue the importance of disconfirming whale evolution. If we can show that the "transitionals" are simply land dwelling organisms and not precursors to whales we will win a major victory. In the popular mind whale evolution is the ultimate symbol of the reality of macroevolution. It is that important.Platonist
February 17, 2009
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To follow up, should Otto Hahn and Lisa Meitner be held responsible for the atomic bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki? If not, should Darwin be held responsible for the Nuremberg laws and the Holocaust (sorry about the Godwin, but we can all see where this is going...)?Allen_MacNeill
February 17, 2009
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Oops, I meant to write "eugenics", not "euthanasia" in the preceding comment.Allen_MacNeill
February 17, 2009
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"One wonders if he was also for the humane treatment of animals."
Yes, he was. Indeed, Darwin was an unusually sympathetic and gentle (even meek) person, especially for his gender and social class. And yes, as a youth he was a hunter (mostly of birds' eggs, game birds, and rats). So was I, and like Darwin I gave it up when I got older. And yes, Darwin continued to eat meat as an adult, and so do I. None of these things contradict the conclusion that most people who have read his autobiography or collected correspondence would come to: that Darwin would have been horrified by some of the uses to which his ideas were put (such as involuntary euthanasia or deliberate genocide), and would have publicly opposed them, as he publicly opposed slavery throughout his life.Allen_MacNeill
February 17, 2009
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Darwin's use of the term "race" is quite clear, especially in the Origin of Species. by "race" he clearly means essentially the same thing as "variety" (or, if one is referring to domesticated animals and plants, a "breed"). That is, a taxonomic division below the level of sub-species, but above the level of specific populations (what would now be referred to as "demes"). In other words, "the preservation of favored races means "the persistence of particular varieties (within species)", which in the fullness of time can (if they continue to persist) become new species. Throughout the Origin, Darwin refers to "races", but never mentions human "races" at all. He refers, quite clearly, to "races" in the biological sense. As to Darwin's prognostications about the eventual extermination of "primitive" peoples and the great apes, he was predicting these outcomes, not prescribing or (worse) advocating them. And he was very nearly correct; both the "primitive" peoples of the world and the great apes were very nearly driven to extinction during the latter half of the 19th century. The difference between prediction and prescription is a fundamental one, but one often mistaken or (worse again) deliberately conflated by people for political purposes. To understand the difference, ask yourself, if I predict that it will rain tomorrow (on the basis of my understanding and application of the science of meteorology), does that mean that I want it to rain tomorrow? Of course not, but that is exactly the same reasoning as employed by O'Leary and the authors of the very confused criticism of the book by Desmond and Moore that heads this thread. So, to sum up, I (and my colleagues in evolutionary biology at Cornell) agree that by today's standards, some of Darwin's comments in the Descent of Man are racist and sexist (hence our symposium at Cornell on precisely this topic). We also understand that this was not unusual for his time period or social class, and would certainly find similar statements made by anyone today to be racist, sexist, and unwarranted given our current knowledge about human nature. However, we do not confuse Darwin's opinions about different genders or "races" of humans with his scientific theories, which (although quite dated in some respects) still constitute a revolution in the biological sciences. And we do not "worship" nor "deify" Darwin, nor any other human. We simply admire his work, as we admire the work of any dedicated scientist. Is there a problem with doing these things? By the way, there was also a series of symposia at Cornell celebrating Lincoln's birthday and accomplishments last week (Cornell is a big place, with lots of people interested in lots of different things). I didn't mention them because they were not the topic of this thread. Indeed, the Freshman Reading Project this year was on Lincoln, not Darwin (despite my urging that freshman be encouraged to read about both, given the propinquity of their births).Allen_MacNeill
February 17, 2009
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H'mm: Looks like we need to look at some actual text here; as citation of fact to be addressed. Pardon Mrs O'Leary: _____________ 1] CRD, Descent of Man, Ch 6, with my parentheses: Man is liable to numerous, slight, and diversified variations [Random Variation, check], which are induced by the same general causes, are governed and transmitted [i.e. natural selection etc, check] in accordance with the same general laws, as in the lower animals. Man has multiplied so rapidly, that he has necessarily been exposed to struggle for existence [Malthusian positive checks, check], and consequently to natural selection. [NS, explicit, check] He has given rise to many races ["preservation of favoured races . . . " check -- subtitle, Origin], some of which differ so much from each other, that they have often been ranked by naturalists as distinct species [origin of species, check] . . . . At some future period, not very distant as measured by centuries, the civilised races of man will almost certainly exterminate, and replace, the savage races throughout the world. ["Scientific" prediction per presumed acting laws, & subject to empirical test, check . . . all too nearly fulfilled 1939 - 45 . .. ] At the same time the anthropomorphous apes, as Professor Schaaffhausen has remarked, will no doubt be exterminated. The break between man and his nearest allies will then be wider, for it will intervene between man in a more civilised state, as we may hope, even than the Caucasian, and some ape as low as a baboon, instead of as now between the negro or Australian and the gorilla. [Note what he means by "races," in a SCIENTIFIC context . . . and by "Natural Selection" too.]] 2] Original title of Origin, by CRD: On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection, or the Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life. ______________ Seems to me that the race -- regarded as the relevant competing sub-population unit -- was the heart of Darwin's thesis on evo by RV + NS in a Malthusian contest for survival. And the price of failing was: EXTINCTION. Thus, the sting in H G Wells' warning of 1897/8 in the opening chapter -- opening page actually -- of War of the Worlds, on genocidal war as a consequence of such "SCIENTIFIC" ([im-]moral equivalency games on Luther et al are simply distractors from the material issue) racist thought:
No one would have believed in the last years of the nineteenth century that this world was being watched keenly and closely by intelligences greater than man's and yet as mortal as his own; that as men busied themselves about their various concerns they were scrutinised and studied, perhaps almost as narrowly as a man with a microscope might scrutinise the transient creatures that swarm and multiply in a drop of water . . . across the gulf of space, minds that are to our minds as ours are to those of the beasts that perish, intellects vast and cool and unsympathetic, regarded this earth with envious eyes, and slowly and surely drew their plans against us . . . . looking across space with instruments, and intelligences such as we have scarcely dreamed of, they see, at its nearest distance only 35,000,000 of miles sunward of them, a morning star of hope, our own warmer planet, green with vegetation and grey with water, with a cloudy atmosphere eloquent of fertility, with glimpses through its drifting cloud wisps of broad stretches of populous country and narrow, navy-crowded seas. And we men, the creatures who inhabit this earth, must be to them at least as alien and lowly as are the monkeys and lemurs to us. The intellectual side of man already admits that life is an incessant struggle for existence, and it would seem that this too is the belief of the minds upon Mars. Their world is far gone in its cooling and this world is still crowded with life, but crowded only with what they regard as inferior animals. To carry warfare sunward is, indeed, their only escape from the destruction that, generation after generation, creeps upon them. And before we judge of them too harshly we must remember what ruthless and utter destruction our own species has wrought, not only upon animals, such as the vanished bison and the dodo, but upon its inferior races. The Tasmanians, in spite of their human likeness, were entirely swept out of existence in a war of extermination waged by European immigrants, in the space of fifty years. Are we such apostles of mercy as to complain if the Martians warred in the same spirit?
There is a serious issue on the table -- one reeking of rivers of blood shed within living memory -- and it must not be ducked or distracted from or obfuscated. GEM of TKIkairosfocus
February 17, 2009
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I have no purpose to introduce political and social equality between the white and the black races. There is a physical difference between the two, which in my judgment will probably forever forbid their living together upon the footing of perfect equality, and inasmuch as it becomes a necessity that there must be a difference, I, as well as Judge Douglas, am in favor of the race to which I belong, having the superior position. --Abraham LincolnJT
February 17, 2009
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Liberals use to denigrate the founding fathers for the supposed hypocrisy in owning slaves and yet saying "All men are created equal." Of course conservatives would decry such lack of historical perspective. Emerson said "Consistency is the Hobgoblin of Little Minds." (Admittedly, the saying is also catchy and thus easy to remember for little minds.)
[Desmond and Moore:]We show the humanitarian roots that nourished Darwin’s most controversial and contested work on human ancestry...” (xviii).
[Flannery:]And those “humanitarian roots,” we are told again and again throughout its 376 narrative pages was Darwin’s passionate and unwavering hatred of slavery. .. The essential problem with Desmond and Moore’s effort is their naive assumption that anti-slavery means egalitarian and humanitarian
You can take away "egalitarian" maybe, but certainly anti-slavery does equate to humanitarianism. Furthermore, you did not quote a single source from this era that did think blacks were equal to whites. It seems evident from the examples you gave that even the most ardent abolitionists were not in a position to entertain such a self-evidently erroneous idea. What would you call Darwin's opposition to slavery other than "humanitarian"? If his theory on close inspection doesn't seem to cohere with his anti-slavery, all the more credit he deserves for being able to divest himself from political convictions within the context of scientific pursuits.
The biblical monogenism of James Cowles Prichard (1786-1848) looked antiquated against the “scientific” racism of Josiah Clark Nott (1804-1873), George R. Gliddon (1809-1857), and others. Desmond and Moore describe in detail how Darwin sought to establish a viable counter to the polygenists with an explanation of human origins that was at once naturalistic and based upon a common descent... All this is true. Darwin was adamantly opposed to slavery, Darwin did end - eventually - the polgenists’ claim to scientific respectability.
OK here, you seem to accept that Darwin's specific goal was to overturn the polygenists explanation of human origins, even though this explanation was materialistic. What could be his motivation for doing this other than the polygenists' association with racism? It matters little how others might have twisted and subverted Darwin's ideas to their own ends. Here you seem to be admitting that Darwin's personal goal was to supplant the racist ideas of a competing materialist ideology.
Brace viewed blacks as inherently inferior and was himself a vocal opponent of miscegenation. In the words of historian George M. Fredrickson, Brace made “the Darwinian case for differentiation of the races by natural selection . . . [and] ended up with a view of racial differences which was far from egalitarian in its implications” (n. 2). Brace held out little hope for “the mullato” and finished up by declaring, “there is nothing in the gradual diminution and destruction of a savage or inferior race in contact with a more civilized and powerful which is ‘mysterious’ . . . . The first gifts of civilization are naturally fatal to a barbarous people
Just the phrase "savage or inferior race" by itself would be considered inappropriate in the extreme today, not to mention a relic of an another era, which it is. The fact that even an ardent abolitionist would casually toss this out should tell you all about the tenor of the times. But was it really inaccurate? Would the Romans describe the Germanic Barbarians in a similiar way? Would it be inaccurate, at least from the perspective of the Romans? But even while voicing this seemingly incendiary assessment, Brace is actually expressing concern for Blacks, saying essentially that contact with whites will destroy them as a culture. Furthermore, I don't know who would have been pushing miscegenation in this era (namely because you don't tell us) but they must have been perceived as quite extreme, even avant garde. Its not as if even blacks would be for that. The whole miscegenation is utterly irrelevant. The PBS series on the first black heavyweight champion Jack Johnson described how even blacks were infuriated by his association with white women. (And let's not forget George Jefferson.)
Brace’s pioneering effort to devolop a Darwinist ethnology in opposition to the American School, although animated to some degree by antislavery humanitarianism, had demonstrated that most of the hierarchical assumptions of the polygenists could be justified just as well, if not better, in Darwinian terms” (n. 4).
But you've already admitted that Darwin's personal motivation was out of antipathy for the racist ideology of the polygenists. And here you characterize Brace himself as a humanitarian, but now its just getting confusing because you imply he was a polygenist as well.
In the end, Nott came to accept Darwin’s theory of man’s common descent. Indeed he claimed nothing of what he wrote on the race question was negated but simply refined, and who was not to say that even in Darwin’s world races might not be “permanent varieties” (n. 6). The point, of course, isn’t whether or not any of this is true — it is obvious nonsense and most of Nott’s contemporaries recognized it as such – but whether Darwin’s defeat of polygenist theory and its replacement with his common descent really had any difference in the end toward establishing a science of brotherhood is doubtful.
So now you're judging Darwin apparently because he failed in his attempt to establish a science of brotherhood and you somehow equate that to being opposed to it. And you judge him based on the ideas of someone he probably didn't even know personally, whose ideas you say were recognized as nonsense.
but they are simply wrong in contending that he distanced himself from their emerging racial craniology. Their denials notwithstanding, there were skulls in Darwin’s science. In his Descent of Man (1871) Paul Boca’s crantiometry is referenced approvingly. While Darwin was careful to avoid the implication that “the intellect of any two animals or of any two men can be accurately gauged by the cubic contents of their skulls...”
The above statement is flatly contradictory. I could quote it as proof, but there it is already.
A devoted Darwinian, Huxley did not translate common descent into common equality."
Who did from this era. You haven't quoted a single one. And you also admit that Huxley was against slavery. Let's not forget that the entire South at least was for it.
Thaddeus Stevens (1792-1868), Theodore Weld (1803-1895), William Lloyd Garrison (1805-1879), Wendell Phillips (1811-1884), John Marshall Harlan (1833-1911), and George Frisbie Hoar (1826-1904) found this kind of hypocracy repugnant.
OK prove it. All you've done is quote several ardent abolitionists who nevertheless didn't believe in the equality of races. Its hard to believe anyone form this era would believe in equality if even abolitionists did not. How about a single relevant quote from one of those guys above.
Darwin admits, “It is very true what you say about the higher races of men, when high enough, will have spread & exterminated whole nations.”
So Darwin was adamantly opposed to slavery but was in favor of the extermination of races. This two statements are contradictory and you've already admitted he was adamantly opposed to slavery. (Note: Darwin's statement above doesn't necessarily indicate approval.)
So in the end we find Darwin’s “sacred” cause was, well, not all that sacred. His cause was less about slavery and more about common descent,
Or maybe they were merely two seperate spheres of his existence. You've already admitted he was adamantly opposed to slavery.
Darwin proved that man is a mere animal related (however distantly) to his ape ancestors then, like the domestic pigeons he was so fond of studying and analogizing from, mankind was capable of being bred, manipulated, and “improved.” That sort of biological historicism unleashed by Darwinian theory has exacted an enormous price... it could easily be argued Darwin cleared out the polygenists to give way to a new generation of racial discriminators and engineers... Darwin’s fascination with breeder and domestic stocks, opened the door to manipulating human “stock,” of managing and even culling the “unfit.” Not that Darwin himself would have condoned that,
These metaphors about "unleashed" "opening the door" and "clearing the way" are evidently intended to suggest merely through the vehicle of rhetoric that Darwin was somehow complicit by proxy in regard to these things.JT
February 16, 2009
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Seversky @ 20 - "What I find odd is that some believers seem incapable of understanding that there are some of us who have no need to worship - whatever that might mean - anything. They seem to assume that if another is not worshiping the Christian God they must needs be worshiping someone or something else." The online dictionary definition of worship: wor·ship (wûrshp) n. 1. a. The reverent love and devotion accorded a deity, an idol, or a sacred object. b. The ceremonies, prayers, or other religious forms by which this love is expressed. 2. Ardent devotion; adoration. 3. often Worship Chiefly British Used as a form of address for magistrates, mayors, and certain other dignitaries: Your Worship. v. wor·shiped or wor·shipped, wor·ship·ing or wor·ship·ping, wor·ships v.tr. 1. To honor and love as a deity. 2. To regard with ardent or adoring esteem or devotion. See Synonyms at revere1. v.intr. 1. To participate in religious rites of worship. 2. To perform an act of worship. Take note of what's (hopefully) bolded. Atheists are just as capable of worship as theists are. "To me Darwin was a human being who, after many years of hard, plodding work produced what is now generally accepted as a seminal theory in biology. It was incomplete and imperfect but still became one of the foundations of a field which has, nonetheless, moved on a long way since then. As a scientist, his work and methods were exemplary but nothing to be worshiped let alone deified." Then how come there's no Galileo Day? Linus Pauling Day? Copernicus Day? Arguably, Galileo is a greater scientist than Darwin; why is he not as adored as the one who made it possible to be an intellectually fulfilled atheist?Barb
February 16, 2009
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"One wonders if he was also for the humane treatment of animals." This sounds like something Denyse said actually.JT
February 16, 2009
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Flannery [21]: My brief comment in 19 was more directed specifically at Denyse in 17, and her article on the same subject from yesterday. If you're looking for a more detailed critique of your specific conclusions I could take a stab at it later. But briefly, Darwin's Theory would be greatly lessened if Desmond and Moore have indeed shown that it was basically an outgrowth of deeply held feelings he had about slavery or an attempt at scientific justification of such. This would be especially true, if he himself wasn't forthright about such a connection, or even worse, was unaware of it. But its clear that Darwin did see the blood of savages flowing in the veins of Europeans. There probably was a sincere though patronizing impulse in his opposition to slavery. One wonders if he was also for the humane treatment of animals.JT
February 16, 2009
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O'Leary @ 17
Charles Darwin was a racist, like most Brit toffs of his generation.
By today's standards, some of this "Brit toff's" attitudes certainly look racist at first glance - not so much if you read them carefully - but much the same could be said of Canuck hacks or Yankee carpetbaggers of that same period.
He was NOT the answer to racism; he was one of its significant examples.
He is not held up as an answer to racism but neither was he a secret member of the Ku Klux Klan.
And his example was fruitful because he helped provide a basis for the false knowledge of eugenics.
And for Southern Baptists the Bible provided scriptural justification for slavery.
Why can’t Darwinists just admit this fact and get past it?
Why can't Roman Catholics admit that their church had a hand in slavery and get past it?
I must hope that they do not actually agree with the thesis of his Descent of Man.
I am prepared to be more considerate in that I credit contemporary Catholics with being opponents rather than proponents of slavery.
But do they repudiate it? Where? How? I would be happy to publicize a genuine, serious repudiation. I mean, with details, not just some general anti-racism uplift. WHAT don’t they agree with about Descent of Man? Details, please.
There are no doubt many who would be happy to discuss The Descent Of Man. My only stipulation would be that you make it quite clear that this sustained attack on Darwin's alleged racism is not in any way a black propaganda campaign really intended to discredit his theory of evolution.Seversky
February 16, 2009
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Permit me to reiterate the point of the review. The question really at hand is, what have Desmond and Moore brought to the historiographical table? They promise at the outset that their purpose is to show "the humanitarian roots that nourished Darwin's theory." They further promise that their book would serve as a lens through which his life could be "radically reassessed." They failed on both counts, admitting in the end that with Darwin “racial genocide was now normalized by natural selection and rationalized as nature’s way of producing ’superior’ races. Darwin ended up calibrating human ‘rank’ no differently from the rest of his society." Their words not mine. Is this the "radical reassessment" they've come to? Actually, I think their conclusion is essentially correct, but then what of "Darwin's 'Sacred' Cause"? The only thing they did prove was that Darwin ended the old monogenist/polygenist debate, but as I mentioned, we already knew that. Desmond and Moore's book reminds me of Samuel Johnson's famous review, which I will recast to suit the occasion: Dear sirs, Your book was both good and orginal. But the part that was good was not original and the part that was original was not good.Flannery
February 16, 2009
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uoflcard @ 3
Your comment seems pointless. This post is talking about unjustified, incorrect racist stereotypes by Darwin and how it relates to a skewed theory of evolution. What does bringing up Catholic Church history have to do with anything? The church was not founded on a racist agenda, but rather the life and death of the Son of God. Do mistakes and sin of church leaders and members over the centuries undermine its pillar (Jesus Christ)? No. It only proves the imperfection and sinful nature of mere humans.
Exactly my point. No, the "mistakes and sin of church leaders and members over the centuries" do not undermine the truth or value of the core teachings of Christianity. That being the case, what is so difficult about acknowledging that Darwin's all-too-human failings and mistakes have no bearing on whether his account of evolution through natural selection is an accurate and productive theory?
The point is, Darwinists are now at the level of worshipping a racist.
What I find odd is that some believers seem incapable of understanding that there are some of us who have no need to worship - whatever that might mean - anything. They seem to assume that if another is not worshiping the Christian God they must needs be worshiping someone or something else. To me Darwin was a human being who, after many years of hard, plodding work produced what is now generally accepted as a seminal theory in biology. It was incomplete and imperfect but still became one of the foundations of a field which has, nonetheless, moved on a long way since then. As a scientist, his work and methods were exemplary but nothing to be worshiped let alone deified.Seversky
February 16, 2009
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It would not be racism for Western Europeans of that era to observe that they were more advanced than "aboriginal" peoples living in a hunter-gatherer state (that is the people that they were enslaving.) Rather it would be a self-evident statement of fact. For people of that era to tie it to the quite evident phyisological differences, though incorrect, would not be irrational. Furthermore, Europeans understood that they themselves descended from such a barbarian state of existence. It was this recognition that Darwin sought to exploit when making the appeal that they should consider they might be descended from an even more primitive state (for example apes): "He who has seen a savage in his native land will not feel much shame, if forced to acknowledge that the blood of some more humble creature flows in his veins.” Darwin's observations touching on eugenics seems to be more in the spirit of dispassionate intellectual observation, going where the evidence leads, etc. They does not seem to indicate someone with a social agenda, at all. Also eugenics is in reference to the sick and infirm and unfit, not to race as such. Darwin does by no means limits such observations to minority races. Also don't his observations have the ring of self-evident truth? Isn't it true that for example medicines that cure genetic diseases contribute greatly to the perpetuation of those diseases? By observing this, am I espousing mass murder? To set aside Darwin's very vocal anti-slavery stance and say that doesn't prove he wasn't a racist, and them tie him to Hitler for example seems absurd. Also what counterexample can we point to from his own era who held what we would consider enlightened racial views. Also let's slam Martin Luther for his remarks about Jews and Einstein for the atom bomb.JT
February 16, 2009
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crater @ 3
Seversky, wasn’t Saint Augustine the person who advised Christians that when science disagreed with the plain reading of the Bible, that we should hold science to be correct? If so, I have no idea why we should care what he says since he was obviously one of the first, if not the first, religious figure to sell out their faith to get in good with materialist scientists.
You may be referring to this passage from a work titled De Genesi ad litteram libri duodecim (The Literal Meaning of Genesis):
Usually, even a non-Christian knows something about the earth, the heavens, and the other elements of this world, about the motion and orbit of the stars and even their size and relative positions, about the predictable eclipses of the sun and moon, the cycles of the years and the seasons, about the kinds of animals, shrubs, stones, and so forth, and this knowledge he hold to as being certain from reason and experience. Now, it is a disgraceful and dangerous thing for an infidel to hear a Christian, presumably giving the meaning of Holy Scripture, talking nonsense on these topics; and we should take all means to prevent such an embarrassing situation, in which people show up vast ignorance in a Christian and laugh it to scorn. The shame is not so much that an ignorant individual is derided, but that people outside the household of faith think our sacred writers held such opinions, and, to the great loss of those for whose salvation we toil, the writers of our Scripture are criticized and rejected as unlearned men. If they find a Christian mistaken in a field which they themselves know well and hear him maintaining his foolish opinions about our books, how are they going to believe those books in matters concerning the resurrection of the dead, the hope of eternal life, and the kingdom of heaven, when they think their pages are full of falsehoods and on facts which they themselves have learnt from experience and the light of reason? Reckless and incompetent expounders of Holy Scripture bring untold trouble and sorrow on their wiser brethren when they are caught in one of their mischievous false opinions and are taken to task by those who are not bound by the authority of our sacred books. For then, to defend their utterly foolish and obviously untrue statements, they will try to call upon Holy Scripture for proof and even recite from memory many passages which they think support their position, although they understand neither what they say nor the things about which they make assertion.
Remember that, at the time Augustine was writing, science in the modern sense did not exist. If anything, he was warning against the sin of pride, that simply being Christian and being knowledgeable about the Bible does not entitle one to speak authoritatively about matters on which one is otherwise ignorant. Humility, in the sense of being honest about one's own limitations, is a virtue whether Christian or not.Seversky
February 16, 2009
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Sticking to the point I raised: Charles Darwin was a racist, like most Brit toffs of his generation. He was NOT the answer to racism; he was one of its significant examples. And his example was fruitful because he helped provide a basis for the false knowledge of eugenics. Why can't Darwinists just admit this fact and get past it? I must hope that they do not actually agree with the thesis of his Descent of Man. But do they repudiate it? Where? How? I would be happy to publicize a genuine, serious repudiation. I mean, with details, not just some general anti-racism uplift. WHAT don't they agree with about Descent of Man? Details, please.O'Leary
February 16, 2009
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sparc, I'm fairly quiet. But I do read the comments and comment myself on occasion. Maybe you did miss my inauguration, I really don't know if you did or not.Clive Hayden
February 16, 2009
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200th anniversary of his birth and the fact that Cornell had a Darwin week. And Allen, what did Cornell do to celebrate Lincoln's birthday? Again not a trick or a trap, just curious.tribune7
February 16, 2009
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. You made several uncomplimentary references about tribune 7, Trbune7 is a big boy and he's not upset. :-) And he doesn't want to see Allen banned until Allen answers this question from the Darwin Reader: Darwin's Racism thread:
What new observations would be required to model how many advantageous mutations it would take for the original eukaryote to develop lungs, limb, spine etc. ?
And it's not a trick or a trap. He just made a claim there that has me curious.tribune7
February 16, 2009
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Since years I am familiar with posts and comments by Dr. Dembski, DaveScot, Trib7, Jerry, KF, DaveScot, Denyse O'Leary, Barry A. I even remember those days when SCordova, JAD, Joel Barofsky, Galapagos Finch and Botnik were arround. But who are you, Clive? According to the white background of your comments you are an UD official. Did I miss your inauguration?sparc
February 16, 2009
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Allen, Rather than resorting to judgments about people on this site when the themes attack Darwin as a person or his integrity or character, say something like the following:: "Can't you people leave Darwin alone. The constant drumbeat against the man's character indicates that you have to attack him and not the science associated with him. It weakens your case. You look petty and foolish to those who are trying to convince." However, your past protestations that Darwin's ideas are dead somehow are not in sync with the celebrations that have taken place in various places because of the 200th anniversary of his birth and the fact that Cornell had a Darwin week. I asked if you protested such an event but you never answered. For a guy whose ideas are dead, he gets an amazing following.jerry
February 16, 2009
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Clive, Allen couldn't be more happier if he was banned from this site. Allen is a professor at a major university and intellectually committed to behave within a certain standard. One that all of us here can tolerate. We actually give a good deal back to his blustering. He is actually a font of information and we would sorely be shorted if for some reason he was moderated or banned. He exaggerates but I have never found him to lie to us or to attack anyone personally except Denyse who I believe is quite capable of defending herself. If he remains we are all the better off. Because he is more often wrong than right and we actually benefit from his over reaching. I personally do not have a high opinion of Darwin but the constant repetition of attacks on him have nothing to say about his theory. That should be judged on its scientific merits and it is to that we should press Allen.jerry
February 16, 2009
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Allen, mutual irritation can escalate even over the internet. It usually starts when one person questions another person's level of education or reasoning capacity. You made several uncomplimentary references about tribune 7, and, sorry to say, I made a couple of snippy remarks at you, thought they were a bit more low key. Why don't we just start over, because it is not too late to make peace. On matters of substance, I continue to hold that a design inference does not depend on analogies. I am prepared to debate that matter on substance with no distractions or personal references.StephenB
February 16, 2009
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