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Was Blyth the true scientist and Darwin merely a plagiarist and charlatan?

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Edward Blyth
Edward Blyth (1810-1873)

Of course today, for biologists, Darwin is second only to God, and for many he may rank still higher.

— Michael White, 2002

1. Was Darwin a plagiarist and charlatan of limited intellect rather than the deity his followers portray him to be?

2. Was the creationist Edward Blyth the true pioneer of natural selection?

3. Was Blyth’s conception of natural selection as a mechanism of preservation versus a mechanism of innovation the more accurate characterization of what natural selection really is?

I wish to remain open-minded on these issues as they deal with history, and history is difficult to reconstruct. I assert is that these hypotheses are worth exploring, though not necessarily absolute truth. However, as I studied the topic further, it became clear a cloud of suspicion regarding Darwin could not be put to rest.

I now turn to the work of a very prominent anthropologist and ecologist by the name of Loren Eiseley (1907-1977). Eiseley was the head of the Anthropology Department at University of Pennsylvania and president of the American Institute of Human Paleontology before becoming the Provost of the University of Pennsylvania. By all counts he was a first rate scholar. He published several books about Darwin: Charles Darwin, Darwin’s Century, and Darwin and the Mysterious Mr. X: New Light on the Evolutionists.

Edward Blyth in Wikipedia:

Loren Eiseley, Professor of Anthropology and the History of Science at the University of Pennsylvania, spent decades tracing the origins of the ideas attributed to Darwin. In a 1979 book, he claimed that “the leading tenets of Darwin’s work “the struggle for existence, variation, natural selection and sexual selection” are all fully expressed in Blyth’s paper of 1835. He also cites a number of rare words, similarities of phrasing, and the use of similar examples, which he regards as evidence of Darwin’s debt to Blyth.

The above is taken from Darwin and the Mysterious Mr. X: New Light on the Evolutionists which was, curiously enough, published posthumously by Eiseley!

My hypothesis is that Edward Blyth should have been given far more credit for the theory of natural selection. Because Blyth was a creationist, he did not see natural selection as an adequate mechanism for biological innovation. He believed natural selection as primarily a means of preserving species, not primarily creating large scale biological innovations. Even though a creationist, he seemed open to some forms of evolution (as creationists are today), and it would be hard to argue that he believed in the absolute fixity of species. Blyth’s position on natural selection would be consistent with many IDers and creationists today.

It was Darwin who promoted the hypothesis that natural selection could be a designer substitute, but the basic concept of natural selection is attributable to Blyth. At the end of the essay I will provide links to papers by Blyth which I believe Darwin plagiarized. Keep in mind, Darwin’s book was published in 1859, 24 years after Blyth stated the fundamental tenets of Natural Selection. Here are a few highlights however:

Blyth in 1836:

It is a general law of nature for all creatures to propagate the like of themselves: and this extends even to the most trivial minutiae, to the slightest individual peculiarities; and thus, among ourselves, we see a family likeness transmitted from generation to generation.

When two animals are matched together, each remarkable for a certain given peculiarity, no matter how trivial, there is also a decided tendency in nature for that peculiarity to increase; and if the produce of these animals be set apart, and only those in which the same peculiarity is most apparent, be selected to breed from, the next generation will possess it in a still more remarkable degree; and so on, till at length the variety I designate a breed, is formed, which may be very unlike the original type.

The examples of this class of varieties must be too obvious to need specification: many of the varieties of cattle, and, in all probability, the greater number of those of domestic pigeons, have been generally brought about in this manner. It is worthy of remark, however, that the original and typical form of an animal is in great measure kept up by the same identical means by which a true breed is produced.

The original form of a species is unquestionably better adapted to its natural habits than any modification of that form; and, as the sexual passions excite to rivalry and conflict, and the stronger must always prevail over the weaker, the latter, in a state of nature, is allowed but few opportunities of continuing its race. In a large herd of cattle, the strongest bull drives from him all the younger and weaker individuals of his own sex, and remains sole master of the herd; so that all the young which are produced must have had their origin from one which possessed the maximum of power and physical strength; and which, consequently, in the struggle for existence, was the best able to maintain his ground, and defend himself from every enemy.

The concepts of natural selection and even sexual selection are laid out plainly, even the concept of adaptation and the struggle for existence!

Here is Blyth in 1836 again:

The true physiological system is evidently one of irregular and indefinite radiation, and of reiterate divergence and ramification from a varying number of successively subordinate typical plans; often modified in the extremes, till the general aspect has become entirely changed, but still retaining, to the very ultimate limits, certain fixed and constant distinctive characters, by which the true affinities of species may be always known; the modifications of each successive type being always in direct relation to particular localities, or to peculiar modes of procuring sustenance; in short, to the particular circumstances under which a species was appointed to exist in the locality which it indigenously inhabits, where alone its presence forms part of the grand system of the universe, and tends to preserve the balance of organic being, and, removed whence (as is somewhere well remarked by Mudie), a plant or animal is little else than a “disjointed fragment.”

This is astonishing! Blyth offers the concept of environments creating adaptive radiations!

Then Blyth in 1837:

A variety of important considerations here crowd upon the mind; foremost of which is the inquiry, that, as man, by removing species from their appropriate haunts, superinduces changes on their physical constitution and adaptations, to what extent may not the same take place in wild nature, so that, in a few generations, distinctive characters may be acquired, such as are recognised as indicative of specific diversity? It is a positive fact, for example, that the nestling plumage of larks, hatched in a red gravelly locality, is of a paler and more rufous tint than in those bred upon a dark soil.17 May not, then, a large proportion of what are considered species have descended from a common parentage?

Is this a stretch? Note what Ernst Mayr had to say:

The Missing Link

Eiseley (1959) vigorously promoted the thesis that Edward Blyth had established the theory of evolution by natural selection in 1835 and that Darwin surely had read his paper and quite likely had derived a major inspiration from it without ever mentioning this in his writings … Darwin quite likely had read Blyth’s paper but paid no further attention to it since it was antievolutionary in spirit and not different from the writings of other natural theologians in its general thesis

In fact what is a bit incriminating is Darwin owned copies of Blyth’s work, and that these copies have Darwin’s notes in the margin. Reading Blyth, it really is hard to see that Darwin made any innovation except the illogical conclusion that natural selection can create large scale biological complexity and design. As Allen Orr said, “selection does not trade in the currency of design”.

Something interesting is also apparent: there were a lot of naturalists who doubted the permanence of species, and Blyth was among them. Nevertheless, Darwin wrote in 1876, contrary to the truth:

I never happened to come across a single [naturalist] who seemed to doubt about the permanence of species …

Darwin effectively claims that he was singularly exceptional in his belief that species could be transformed by the environment. This claim is clearly untrue! The suspicion then arises whether Darwin was lying. In fact, Professor George Simpson acknowledges the appearance of lying with a bit of disbelief (the missing link):

These are extraordinary statements. They cannot literally be true, yet Darwin cannot be consciously lying, and he may therefore be judged unconsciously misleading, naive, forgetful, or all three.

Thus, Darwin’s behavior was so obviously suspicious to some that his admirers had to make excuses to explain away the appearance of lying.

The discussion of this topic will obviously be more than I have space for here, and I welcome input in the comments section if there are any relevant data points. But I close with some thoughts regarding Darwin’s genius (or lack thereof) or Darwin’s integrity (or lack thereof):

Professor C.D. Darlington writes The Mystery Begins

[Darwin] was able to put across his ideas not so much because of his scientific integrity, but because of his opportunism, his equivocation and his lack of historical sense. Though his admirers will not like to believe it, he accomplished his revolution by personal weakness and strategic talent more than by scientific virtue.

Thomas Henry Huxley Darwiniana Obituary:

Shrewsbury School could find nothing but dull mediocrity in Charles Darwin. The mind that found satisfaction in knowledge, but very little in mere learning; that could appreciate literature, but had no particular aptitude for grammatical exercises; appeared to the “strictly classical” pedagogue to be no mind at all. As a matter of fact, Darwin’s school education left him ignorant of almost all the things which it would have been well for him to know, and untrained in all the things it would have been useful for him to be able to do, in after life.

Thus, starved and stunted on the intellectual side, it is not surprising that Charles Darwin’s energies were directed towards athletic amusements and sport, to such an extent, that even his kind and sagacious father could be exasperated into telling him that “he cared for nothing but shooting, dogs, and rat-catching.”

Sir Gavin de Beer:

The boy [Darwin] developed very slowly: he was given, when small, to inventing gratuitous fibs and to daydreaming

and

Lies-and the thrills derived from lies-were for him indistinguishable from the delights of natural history or the joy of finding a long-sought specimen.

John and Mary Gribben:

… he devised a plan so cunning that even Machiavelli would have been proud of it. During 1845, Darwin worked on a second edition of his successful journal of the Beagle voyage, and added new material to the descriptions of the living things he had seen in South America. These new passages look innocuous enough in themselves. But as Howard Gruber pointed out in his book Darwin on Man (Wildwood House, London, 1974), if you compare the first and second editions … you can locate all the new material … string it together to make a coherent ‘ghost essay’ which conveys almost all of Darwin’s thinking about evolution [in 1845]. It is quite clear that this material must have been written as that coherent essay, then carefully chopped up and inserted into the journal.

The whole case of Darwin’s plagiarism was laid out rather tediously in Charles Darwin — The Truth? Interestingly the essay mentions Brian Goodwin and our very own John Davison here.

I hope this essay inspire some to revisit these important issues. If the hypothesis inspired by Eiseley is true, and if natural selection is an inadequate explanation for biological design, and if it turns out that Darwin was little more than a plagiarizing opportunist making illogical extrapolations of Blyth, then Blyth will be the one history smiles on, and Darwin will be the one history despises.

References to Blyth:

An Attempt to Classify the ‘Varieties’ of Animals with Observations on the Marked Seasonal and Other Changes Which Naturally Take Place in Various British Species, and Which Do Not Constitute Varieties by Blyth in 1835.

Varieties of Animals Part 2 by Blyth in 1835

Observations on the Various Seasonal and Other External Changes Which Regularly Take Place in Birds by Blyth in 1836

Seasonal and Other Changes in Birds – Part 2 by Blyth in 1836

Seasonal and Other Changes in Birds – Part 3 by Blyth in 1836

Seasonal and Other Changes in Birds – Part 4 by Blyth in 1836

On the Psychological Distinctions Between Man and All Other Animals by Blyth in 1837

Psychological Distinctions Between Man and Other Animals – Part 2 by Blyth in 1837

Psychological Distinctions Between Man and Other Animals – Part 3 by Blyth in 1837

Psychological Distinctions Between Man and Other Animals – Part 4 by Blyth in 1837

UPDATE 8/31/2006 I will link to opposing opinions on the net if I feel the scholarship is worthy. Here is Dr. N. Wells at ARN : Salvador on Blyth and Darwin

Comments
Why do Darwinists like PZ Myers act as if only 'creationists' use the word 'Darwinist'? PZ Myers:"Using the word "Darwinist" puts you in the creationist camp and demonstrates that you haven't been paying attention to what the scientists actually say." They act as though they can argue a point by arguing a word (same scenario with micro v. macro evolution). Tom G and others have already linked to many mainstream uses of the term Darwinism. Dawkins, Orr, Ruse etc. all use it. Lynne Margulis says she is a Darwinist and not a neo-Darwinist.. I know that Ken MIller is both an othodox Catholic and an orthodox Darwinist. Implying that an opponent's use of 'Darwinist' demonstrates ignorance of the subject is a useless tactic. Especially ironic when you are wrong. Trrll: We are not on Pubmed. We are writing on a popular meadia blog. If you check popular media you will find that plenty of non-creationists use the term. And not only in reference to history.Charlie
August 27, 2006
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Reciporcating Bill: You quoted Gould as follows: “Darwin, in his characteristic and radical way, grasped that this standard mechanism for preserving the type could be inverted, and then converted into the primary cause of evolutionary change." Indeed, Darwin did "invert" the meaning of natural selection. In all things to be found in The Origins, Darwin consistently stands logic on its head. It remains a mystery that the obvious errors remain so obscure to so many. E.g., Darwin tells us that a "variety" is an "incipient species". How does that match up with nature? Answer: it doesn't. As does little of what he conjectured. Why not allow science to move forward?PaV
August 27, 2006
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Patrick, I have the ability to moderate the Akismet queue which is where most of the "affection starved housewives" attempt to hijack Uncommon Descent. I've been able to clean that queue out. However, I don't have the ability to moderate any comments in the moderation queue. Not that I'm really eager for the job! Salvadorscordova
August 27, 2006
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scordova: You don't have the ability to moderate the Moderation Queue? I'm not sure who else has been moderating it lately...it might just be myself since the queue seems to stack up if I don't clear it myself often. Especially annoying is that the spammers are now wording their spam so it gets by akismet, sometimes even addressing Dave so it appears to be a legitimate comment at first glance:
Dave Interesting topic… I’m working in this industry myself and I don’t agree about this in 100%
etc. Then of course we have the lovely ranting comments cursing out Bill that we receive all the time. trrll: You must be very new to this subject matter then. The people at the World Summit on Evolution certainly knew the term "Darwinist": https://uncommondescent.com/index.php/archives/204 Now whether they like it or not is another matter. I doubt there is a group consensus on this point.Patrick
August 27, 2006
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But what is equally amazing the status of Deity Darwin is being afforded in secular culture. Why do even have a Darwin Day? Aren’t the contributions of Newton, Faraday and Maxwell, and so many others far more deserving of celebration?
We have a Darwin Day? I didn't know that! Why didn't anybody ever tell me? Are there parades? Certainly, as a biologist, it seems to me that I deserve a day off from work on Darwin Day! But I'd definitely be in favor of a Newton Day, a Faraday Day, and a Maxwell Day, as well. Especially if there are parades.
If my memory doesn’t fail, it was Darwin who started to propose that biological life forms were NOT the result of design, but the result of unguided *natural* process. So ID didn’t attack Darwin first; Darwin attacked the design hypothesis first.
Again, I am amazed that you so completely missed the point as to think that the argument is about "who started it." The point is that as far as modern biology is concerned, Darwin is of purely historical interest. It is as if somebody was trying to prove that the colonies were really at fault in the war with England, and imagining that if they could just prove that point, then America would admit that they were wrong and rejoin the British empire.
Read http://www.evolutionnews.org/2005/12/busting_another_darwinist_myth.html
Well, for "Darwinist," I found 20 citations in PubMed, all historical. For "Darwinian," I found 207 references, a large fraction of which do not seem to be research papers. Even a search for "Darwinian" (which I have heard used, albeit not often) nets under a thousand. Just to put those numbers in context, a search for "natural selection" yields over 15,000 citations; a search for "evolution" yields over 181,000. I stand by my statement that as a biologist with over 25 years of experience, I have never heard the word "Darwinism" used by a biologist, or indeed anybody other than a Creationism/ID advocate, nor have I ever heard a biologist describe himself or anybody else as a Darwinist.
Evolutionist Michael Ruse says...
Who? I did a search on "Michael Ruse." The only one I could could find was identified as a "philosopher," not a biologist. By the way, "evolutionist" is another term that I've never heard used by a biologist. Biologists talk about "evolutionary theory" or "natural selection." If Darwin's name comes up at all, it is usually as an adjective; e.g. "Darwinian mechanisms" is occasionally used to refer to distinguish the classical natural selection described by Darwin from the much wider range of evolutionary principles recognized by modern biology.trrll
August 27, 2006
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I wish to thank everyone for their patience. I'm trying clean out the spam buffer every 15 minutes as it seems we're getting a lot of comments trapped there (about 50% of the legitimate ones on this thread alone, including mine!). Also currently there are 79 posts in the moderation queue. I have no jurisdiction over those comments. Though I have my differences with the ID commenters so far, every comment by them I think has been very substantive. And thanks also to the pro-ID commenters as well. Given the emotional nature of this topic, I appreciate the restraint everyone has shown. Any more data points on this topic would be welcome. Salvadorscordova
August 27, 2006
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Here is something interesting: Darwin’s illegitimate brainchild If you thought Darwin’s Origin was original, think again! by Russell Grigg, Australia The concept of evolution by natural selection is sometimes referred to as Charles Darwin’s brainchild, and indeed he often referred to it in his letters to his friends as his dear ‘child’. However, this is a far cry from the facts. At best it was an adopted child; at worst an illegitimate child. Erasmus Darwin and James Hutton—1794 In the last issue of Creation, we showed that Charles’s humanist grandfather, Erasmus, preempted Charles on the subject of evolution by some 65 years with his book Zoonomia (1794), and that Charles used almost every topic discussed and example given in this work in his own On the Origin of Species, published in 1859.1 Now new evidence has emerged that a Scottish geologist, Dr James Hutton (1726–1797), conceived a theory of selection as early as 1794. Hutton is best known as the man who proposed that the earth was ‘immeasurably’ old, not thousands of years, because he rejected the Flood of the Bible and so erroneously assumed that there were no major catastrophes in the earth’s early history.2 Paul Pearson, professor of paleoclimatology at Cardiff University, has recently found in the National Library of Scotland a formerly unpublished work of three volumes and 2,138 pages, written by Hutton in 1794. Entitled An Investigation of the Principles of Knowledge and of Progress of Reason, from Sense to Science and Philosophy,3 it contains a full chapter on Hutton’s theory of ‘seminal variation’.4 For example, Hutton said that among dogs that relied on ‘nothing but swiftness of foot and quickness of sight’ for survival, the slower dogs would perish and the swifter would be preserved to continue the race. But if an acute sense of smell was ‘more necessary to the sustenance of the animal’, then ‘the natural tendency of the race, acting upon the same principle of seminal variation, would be to change the qualities of the animal and to produce a race of well scented hounds, instead of those who catch their prey by swiftness’. And he went on to say, ‘The same “principle of variation” must also influence “every species of plant, whether growing in a forest or a meadow”.’5 Others—1831–1858 Apart from James Hutton, there were several other authors who, many years before Charles Darwin, published articles on the subject of natural selection. William Wells (1757–1817) was a Scottish-American doctor who, in 1813 (and published posthumously in 1818), described a concept like natural selection. He said that in central Africa some inhabitants ‘would be better fitted than the others to bear the diseases of the country. This race would consequently multiply, while the others would decrease.’ He went on to say that ‘the color of this vigorous race … would be dark’ and that ‘as the darkest would be the best fitted for the climate, this would at length become the most prevalent, if not the only race, in the particular country in which it had originated’.6 Patrick Matthew (1790–1874) was a Scottish fruit-grower who, in 1831, published a book On Naval Timber and Arboriculture, in the appendix of which he briefly mentioned natural selection and evolutionary change. Matthew publicly claimed that he had anticipated Charles Darwin, and even described himself on the title pages of his books as ‘Discoverer of the Principle of Natural Selection’. Professor Pearson points out that Wells, Matthew and Charles Darwin were all educated in the university city of Edinburgh, ‘a place famous for its scientific clubs and societies’, which was also Hutton’s home town. He makes the interesting suggestion ‘that a half-forgotten concept from his [Charles’s] student days resurfaced afresh in his mind as he struggled to explain the observations of species and varieties compiled on the voyage of the Beagle’.3 Edward Blyth (1810–1873) was the man whose ideas probably influenced Darwin most. An English chemist and zoologist, Blyth wrote three major articles on natural selection that were published in The Magazine of Natural History from 1835 to 1837.7 Charles was well aware of these. Not only was this one of the leading zoological journals of that time, in which his friends Henslow, Jenyns and Lyell had all published articles, but also it seems that the University of Cambridge, England, has Darwin’s own copies of the issues containing the Blyth articles, with Charles’s handwritten notes in the margins!8 Charles Darwin’s ‘Historical Sketch’ After the publication of his Origin of Species in 1859, Charles was accused by his contemporaries of failing to acknowledge his debt to these and other predecessors who had written about natural selection. The cry became so loud that, in 1861, he found it necessary to add a Historical Sketch, which listed some of these previous writers, to the third edition of his Origin. Then, under continued attack, he enlarged this in three subsequent editions until, in the 6th and last edition, he mentioned some 34 other authors who had previously written on how species originated or changed. But he gave very few details of what they had said, and they were sealed off in the Historical Sketch, away from the main line of discussion. Darlington calls it ‘the most unreliable account that ever will be written’.9 This was not enough for the English satirist Samuel Butler. In 1879, he wrote Evolution Old and New, a book in which he accused Darwin of slighting the evolutionary speculations of Buffon, Lamarck and Darwin’s own grandfather, Erasmus. Modern accusations of plagiarism One of the leading modern evolutionists to claim that Darwin ‘borrowed’ (some would say ‘plagiarized’) the works of others was the late Loren Eiseley, who was Benjamin Franklin Professor of Anthropology and the History of Science at the University of Pennsylvania before his death. Eiseley spent decades tracing the origins of the ideas attributed to Darwin. In a 1979 book,10 he claimed that ‘the leading tenets of Darwin’s work—the struggle for existence, variation, natural selection and sexual selection—are all fully expressed in Blyth’s paper of 1835’.11 He also cites ‘Blythisms’ and use of rare words by Darwin (such as ‘inosculate’, meaning to pass into), after it appeared in Blyth’s paper of 1836, similarities of phrasing, and Darwin’s choice of similar lists of creatures in similar contexts.12 Eiseley’s work seems to have encouraged other 20th-century evolutionists to speak up. Darlington accused Darwin of ‘a flexible strategy which is not to be reconciled with even average intellectual integrity’.13 In 1981, Hoyle and Wickramasinghe referred to Eiseley’s ‘courageous’ stand and wrote: ‘Darwin by his own account was a voracious reader of other men’s work … . It was not in his character, however, to make a return for what he received.’ And: ‘The evidence does not permit of any conclusion except that the omissions [by Darwin] were deliberate … a serious sin of omission remains to be redeemed by the world of professional biology.’14 It is true that in his Origin Charles mentions correspondence with, or information from, Blyth—on the habits of Indian cattle, the hemionus [Asian wild ass] and crossbred geese,15 but, as Eiseley comments: ‘Blyth is restricted to the role of taxonomist and field observer.’16 So why was Darwin so loath to credit Blyth with the key element of his theory? Why did he not cite Blyth’s papers that dealt directly with natural selection? Answer: Probably for two reasons. Blyth was a Christian and what we would nowadays call a ‘special creationist’. E.g. concerning the seasonal changes in animal colouring (such as the mountain hare becoming white in winter), Blyth said that these were ‘striking instances of design, which so clearly and forcibly attest the existence of an omniscient great First Cause’.17 And he said that animals ‘evince superhuman wisdom, because it is innate, and therefore, instilled by an all-wise Creator’.18 Blyth correctly saw the concept of natural selection as a mechanism by which the sick, old and unfit were removed from a population; that is, as a preserving factor and for the maintenance of the status quo—the created kind.19 Creationists like Edward Blyth (and English theologian William Paley) saw natural selection as a process of culling; that is, of choosing between several traits, all of which must first be in existence before they can be selected. Conclusion History has bestowed the dubious credit for the idea of evolution by natural selection on Charles Darwin. Apart from the fact that selection itself, while a real phenomenon, is utterly impotent to provide the extra information necessary to produce new traits, most, if not all, of the major ideas attributed to Darwin had previously been discussed in print by others. Not only was this ‘brainchild’ of Darwin’s not really his, but it also had many fathers! Fairness or fear? Alfred Russel Wallace (1823–1913), while living at Ternate in the Malay Archipelago, independently developed a theory of evolution almost identical with that of Charles Darwin.1 In 1858 he sent Darwin a copy of his manuscript on natural selection, entitled On the Tendency of Varieties to Depart Indefinitely From the Original Type, which outlined in complete form what is now known as the Darwinian theory of evolution.2 Darwin’s friends, Charles Lyell and Joseph Hooker, immediately arranged to have Wallace’s manuscript, along with two earlier unpublished items by Charles Darwin (an 1844 essay and an 1857 letter to Asa Gray), read at the next meeting of the Linnean Society of London, on 1 July 1858. This has euphemistically been referred to as the reading of a ‘joint paper’, but it all took place without the personal participation of Wallace, and even without his knowledge or permission—he was still on an island off the coast of New Guinea! It also caused Charles to rush through the writing of his Origin of Species, and publish it on 24 November 1859. Some have seen this so-called ‘joint paper’ not as fair play on Darwin’s part, but rather as the result of his fear of being scooped by Wallace. Brackman says: ‘Wallace, not Darwin, first wrote out the complete theory of the origin and divergence of species by natural selection ... and was robbed in 1858 of his priority in the proclaiming of the theory’ (emphasis in the original).3 References and notes Wallace had been thinking on the subject as early as 1845, and had published a rather general paper on it in the Annals and Magazine of Natural History, September 1855. See ref. 2, p. 78. Eiseley says, ‘It was Darwin’s unpublished conception down to the last detail, independently duplicated by a man sitting in a hut at the world’s end.’ Eiseley, L., Alfred Russel Wallace, Scientific American 200(2):80, February 1959. Brackman, A., A Delicate Arrangement: The Strange Case of Charles Darwin and Alfred Russel Wallace, Times Books, New York, p. xi, 1980.Mario A. Lopez
August 27, 2006
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jerry: "His book is set up to make a sell... The professor related how Darwin used the first few chapters to relate what all knew at the time about breeding and variety in nature as well as Malthus’s ideas so that when he introduced natural selection the reader had been nodding in agreement for over a hundred pages." Precisely. Darwin's audience was a skeptical scientific community. He marshaled evidence from multiple fields of study in order to convince that audience. That is the purpose of modern peer review, and the reason his theory was originally put forth before the Linnean Society, his scientific peers. (They were hardly rubes, but the most knowledgeable scientific community of the day.) jerry: "Blyth couldn’t sell the original but Darwin could sell the used version." I'm not sure what point you are making here (assuming it is not merely rhetoric). Blyth was published in the scientific journals, and did convince his peers concerning the importance of natural selection and common descent in the divergence of varieties within species. Darwin cited Blyth's evidence of the common descent of domestic animals in Origin of Species. jerry: "but as we know the natural world is one of stasis not constant change despite this struggle" I'm not sure how you can justify that statement when looking at a fossil of a T. Rex or H. habilis.Zachriel
August 27, 2006
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Bob OH, If I may ask, what notebooks were the notebooks bowler was using to prove Darwin didn't plagerize, was it Darwin's notebooks? Salvadorscordova
August 27, 2006
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Bob OH, Thank you for the datapoints. I hope the readers will take them into consideration. Salvadorscordova
August 27, 2006
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I think Eiesely’s hypothesis about Blyth desrving great credit is sound, however, still in question is whether Darwin systematically tried to steal credit for work that was not his. That is a much harder case to establish, but I think whatever circumstantial evidence is there should be given a larger hearing.
Sal, as I've already tried to post, it has been given a wider hearing: From Bowler, P.J. (1989) Evolution: The History of an Idea. (there is a newer edition out, but this is the one I have):
One thing is now clear: Darwin did not borrow the idea of natural selection from an earlier writer. Several naturalists have been credited with anticipating the discovery of natural selection, principally, William Charles Wells, Patrick Matthew, and Edward Blyth. The notebooks confirm the fact that there was no crucial input from these sources, and it is doubtful if any of these so-called precursors of selectionism anticipated the true spririt of Darwin's theory. (citations omitted)
Bowler is a professional historian of science, so he's aware of the claims, and rejects them after examining the evidence from Darwin's notes (as people here have already noted). There's a footnote on TalkOrigins that gives some references: http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/precursors/precursnatsel.html#r6 BobBob OH
August 27, 2006
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In the previous comment I mentioned the U. Cal Berkeley. In another thread about John Davison's theory someone named Leo said Darwin's theory were so well documented and supported that few scientist really doubts them. When I made a challenge to Leo to be the first one to present a comprehensive defense of Darwin, he punted and said I should go to the Darwin exhibit in New York which is now closed. Salvador asked to keep the concepts on that thread relative to John's theory so I did not reply. My comment in the previous paragraph is also not exactly in sync with this thread but in response to Leo, I went to the U. Cal Berkeley website to learn more about Darwin and am currently diligently watching their lectures on biology and Darwin. In a very informative set of lectures the professor talks in detail about the Origin of Species and why it was so successful. The structure of the book was a stroke of genius. Essentially Charles Darwin was a fantastic salesman. His book is set up to make a sell and my wife who has a background in sales management said its approach is one of the best. The professor related how Darwin used the first few chapters to relate what all knew at the time about breeding and variety in nature as well as Malthus's ideas so that when he introduced natural selection the reader had been nodding in agreement for over a hundred pages. It was only a little bit more to ask them to nod in agreement about the speculation he introduced and close the deal as the term is used in sales management. Charlie was a fantastic used card salesmen given the information about Blyth. Blyth couldn't sell the original but Darwin could sell the used version. Darwin actually falsified his own theory in the chapter on natural selection because he emphasized a constant struggle for resources which is continually causing adaptation and is essential to his theory but as we know the natural world is one of stasis not constant change despite this struggle. By the way the Berkeley professor failed to mention this contradiction. And he said the current theory is known as “neo Darwinism” as well as the “modern synthesis.” Again the UD challenge; can a Darwinist or if they don't like that term, someone who supports Darwin's ideas give a coherent defense of Darwin or neo Darwinism?jerry
August 27, 2006
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jerry: " have a lot of comments on this but let’s start with the term Darwinism." The official evolution website at Berkeley defines 'Darwinism' as the historical theory proposed by Darwin. Note the use of quotes. Misconception: “Most biologists have rejected ‘Darwinism’ (i.e., no longer really agree with the ideas put forth by Darwin and Wallace).”Zachriel
August 27, 2006
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Trrll, I have a lot of comments on this but let's start with the term Darwinism. It is used by the biology department at U. Cal Berkeley. Are they behind the curve there? Maybe you should write them to straighten them out.jerry
August 27, 2006
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trill, I'm sure Denyse is ready to do this herself, but I'll refer to a blog of hers about the use of the term "Darwinism": http://post-darwinist.blogspot.com/2006/08/darwinismdarwinist-now-term-of.html . Your statement about that is ironic under that light.TomG
August 27, 2006
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Mats: "If my memory doesn’t fail, it was Darwin who started to propose that biological life forms were NOT the result of design, but the result of unguided *natural* process. So ID didn’t attack Darwin first; Darwin attacked the design hypothesis first." You stated that very well. Darwin proposed an alternative to Special Creation, and in return he is attacked personally. Mats: "Read [on references to Darwinism]". Checking the sources, most references are to neodarwinism, which is the successor theory to Darwin's original theory, and integrates genetics and population dynamics. In modern scientific parlance, "darwinism" is usually used to refer to the assertion that natural selection is the predominant mechanism of genetic evolution, as opposed to e.g. neutral theory.Zachriel
August 27, 2006
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S. J. Gould addressed this specific argument vis Blyth in his 2002 masterwork "The Structure of Evolutionary Theory." To wit, on page 137 and 139 (138 is entirely footnotes): "The following kind of incident has occurred over and over again, ever since Darwin. An evolutionist, browsing through some pre-Darwinian tome in natural history, comes upon a description of natural selection...the great anthropologist and writer Loren Eiseley thought that he had detected such an anticipation in the writings of Edward Blyth.... "Yes, Blyth had discussed natural selection, but Eisley didn't realize-thus committing the usual and fateful error in this line of argument-that all good biologists did so in the generations before Darwin. Natural selection ranked as a standard item in biological discourse-but with a crucial difference from Darwin's version: the usual interpretation invoked natural selection as part of a larger argument for created permanency.... "Darwin, in his characteristic and radical way, grasped that this standard mechanism for preserving the type could be inverted, and then converted into the primary cause of evolutionary change. Natural selection obviously lies at the center of Darwin's theory, but we must recognize, as Darwin's second key postulate, the clam that natural selection acts as the creative force of evolutionary change." See the original for much more detail. Bottom line: your discussion of Eisley's work is nothing new, and, with Eisley, misses the point of Darwin's essential contribution.Reciprocating Bill
August 27, 2006
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Zachriel, Thank you for you points. You wrote:
British scientists who formed Darwin’s primary audience were well-aware of theories and Blyth’s work concerning natural selection
But Origin of Species appeared in 1859 which is 24 years after Blyth was published. It seems Blyth was forgotten except in select circles. But if Darwin's books were written for a large audience, then it is incumbent on Darwin to acknowledge to the public his sources. I am obviously quite a bit partial in my inclination to give Darwin a bad wrap, but Loren Eiesely would hardly seem one to share my biases. I think Eiesely's hypothesis about Blyth desrving great credit is sound, however, still in question is whether Darwin systematically tried to steal credit for work that was not his. That is a much harder case to establish, but I think whatever circumstantial evidence is there should be given a larger hearing. Salvadorscordova
August 27, 2006
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Hi trrll. Allow me to comment on a few things...
I am amazed at the amount of energy ID Creationists invest into attacking Darwin.
If my memory doesn't fail, it was Darwin who started to propose that biological life forms were NOT the result of design, but the result of unguided *natural* process. So ID didn't attack Darwin first; Darwin attacked the design hypothesis first.
I’ve noticed that they like to refer to evolution as “Darwinism” (a term that I’ve never heard used by any biologist)
Read http://www.evolutionnews.org/2005/12/busting_another_darwinist_myth.html
as if evolution were some sort of competing religion with Darwin as a god or prophet.
Evolutionist Michael Ruse says: "Evolution is promoted by its practitioners as more than mere science. Evolution is promulgated as an ideology, a secular religion -- a full-fledged alternative to Christianity, with meaning and morality. I am an ardent evolutionist and an ex-Christian, but I must admit that in this one complaint -- and Mr. Gish is but one of many to make it -- the literalists are absolutely right. Evolution is a religion. This was true of evolution in the beginning, and it is true of evolution still today. (Michael Ruse, "Saving Darwinism from the Darwinians," National Post (May 13, 2000)
Indeed, the post refers to Darwin’s “followers” and calls him a “deity.”
A few months ago Darwin Day was "celebrated" all over American, with great religious fervors. Heck, even some religious people joined the bang wagon and sung praises to Darwin. Where are Einstein Day or Newton Day or even Mendel Day?! What's so special about Darwin that he deserves a day for himself?Mats
August 27, 2006
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scordova: "But is this simply a veneer to cover the fact he did the opposite, namely, hide the fact he was plagerizing?" Uh, no. Darwin specifically cites Blyth's work indicating that Indian and European cattle descend from a common ancestor, as well as poultry. And the British scientists who formed Darwin's primary audience were well-aware of theories and Blyth's work concerning natural selection. It was not a secret, but a subject of some discussion. They were also aware that Darwin was attempting to demonstrate that species were not inviolate, and the existence of varieties evolving from common ancestors was an important, but not sufficient bit of evidence. A clear reading of Origin of Species, and of the correspondence between Darwin and Blyth, indicate that both scientists were only concerned with the facts and the truth as could be determined from those facts. But, as trrll noted, the origins of the Theory of Evolution has no relevance to its validity.Zachriel
August 27, 2006
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trll observed: I am amazed at the amount of energy ID Creationists invest into attacking Darwin.
trrll, Thank you for you comment. But what is equally amazing the status of Deity Darwin is being afforded in secular culture. Why do even have a Darwin Day? Aren't the contributions of Newton, Faraday and Maxwell, and so many others far more deserving of celebration? To the anti-Darwinists out there, here is something to be thinking about: 2009: Origin of Species Sesquicentennial
I want to encourage critics of materialistic evolution to start thinking even now about organizing conferences and other public events in 2009 aimed at deflating Darwinism and its contemporary offshoots (it’s never too soon to start). ...these conferences should aim at undoing the hagiography that secularists have built around Darwin. The man and his theory need to be knocked off their pedestal. Bill Dembski
I know it may seem awfully mean spirited, but well, if Darwin rose to fame on charlatanry and plagerism (I'm not asserting he did, yet), then like a gold medalist caught using steriods, Darwin should be stripped of his honors and exposed as a fraud. Salvadorscordova
August 27, 2006
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Zachariel, Thank you for the quote and your kind words for Blyth. For the readers As Zachariel mentioned,
Darwin wrote: Mr. Blyth, whose opinion, from his large and varied stores of knowledge, I should value more than that of almost any one, thinks that all the breeds of poultry have proceeded from the common wild
Darwin was well aware of Blyth, but the issue is whether Darwin was systematically trying to give the appearance that Darwin was the true pioneer of Natural Selection, Sexual Selection, Adaptation, etc.... Darwin gave the superficial appearance of being meticulous in giving credit where credit is due. See Without Reference
Darwin wrote: No one can feel more sensible than I do of the necessity of hereafter publishing in detail all the facts, with references, on which my conclusions have been grounded; and I hope in a future work to do this.
But is this simply a veneer to cover the fact he did the opposite, namely, hide the fact he was plagerizing? What is disturbing is Darwin gives generous praise for a small part Blyth's ideas. It appears superficially, Darwin systematically acknowledged minor works by a rivals while taking great care to hide the fact major portions of Darwin's ideas proceeded from Blyth. Darwin was so profuse in giving praise for Blyth in these small areas, why not the more significant ones? Why did Darwin permanently refuse to reference Blyth's more important works, like the copies of Blyth's articles which Darwin had and annotated in the margin! Here is my (not so serious) take on what Darwin could have said:
Blyth put forward the foundations of natural selection, sexual selction, adaptation via selection, irregular and indefinite radiation for the preservation of life.....I am merely then extrapolating Blyth's ideas and saying these conservative mechanisms founded on seleciton are also innovative mechanims which can also create eyes, lungs, brains, wings, ears, and a host of other irreducibly complex systems which Michael Behe and Bill Dembski will take me to task for long after I'm gone. However this will happen in 1996, after I lived the good life of fame and fortune built on my unproven speculations....
Well that was my rendering of what Darwin could have done if he were truly generous to Blyth. Instead he thanked Blyth for Blyth's knowledge about chickens and heaped praise upon Malthus for what Blyth had written even before Malthus. Salvadorscordova
August 27, 2006
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I am amazed at the amount of energy ID Creationists invest into attacking Darwin. I suppose that Darwin is of interest to historians of science, but from from the point of view of a scientist, it seems distinctly odd. I guess this relates to the way that ID Creationists seem to look at everything from a religious point of view. I've noticed that they like to refer to evolution as "Darwinism" (a term that I've never heard used by any biologist), as if evolution were some sort of competing religion with Darwin as a god or prophet. Indeed, the post refers to Darwin's "followers" and calls him a "deity." So perhaps they imagine that they can somehow undermine evolution by attacking Darwin. To a scientist, this sounds a bit ridiculous. Scientists like to give credit where it is due (because they hope to get recognition for their own work), but the status of evolutionary theory today doesn't in the slightest rest on the authority of Darwin, and most evolutionary scientists aren't actually all that interested in Darwin himself. If Darwin were generally agreed to be a plagiarist and an all-around Bad Guy, nothing would change, any more than the recognition that Newton was a generally unpleasant fellow who stole credit from Leibnitz and Hooke has altered the usage of Newton's Laws of Motion in physics. Despite his historical significance, modern evolutionary theory rests on the contributions of thousands of scientists who have confirmed and extended the theory.trrll
August 27, 2006
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Darwin cited Blyth's research in Origin of Species, "Mr. Blyth, whose opinion, from his large and varied stores of knowledge, I should value more than that of almost any one, thinks that all the breeds of poultry have proceeded from the common wild." So clearly, Darwin was well-aware of Blyth's findings on natural selection and cited them appropriately, though Blyth had argued against the transmutation of species. Darwin and Blyth carried on an active scientific correspondence, both before and after Origin of Species. There is no reasonable doubt as to the contributions of each scientist. Blyth made important studies of varieties within species, and of natural selection. Darwin posited the common descent of species with natural selection being an important mechanism of adaptation. http://www.lib.cam.ac.uk/Departments/Darwin/ Not only did Darwin make many novel observations during his voyage on the Beagle, but he also did extensive studies of barnacles, corals, molds, and orchids — even predicting the existence of a yet to be discovered pollenating moth. His active correspondence shows a scientist interested in every detail of biology.Zachriel
August 27, 2006
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It is becoming clearer- evolutionism co-opted & twisted the work of Creationists- Blyth for Natural Selection and Gregor Mendel in genetics- in order to get their PoV across to the masses. I wonder if the NCSE will let people know about this? Great work Sal, Charlie and John D.!Joseph
August 27, 2006
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Charles Darwin was an excellent observer of nature which is to say that he was a naturalist rather than a scientist. Alfred Russel Wallace was also a fine naturalist, far more productive than Darwin and it should be noted that in later life he abandoned the hypothesis he helped found. Scientists test their hypotheses and then proceed. Naturalists generally do not do experiments so they are unable to proceed. Most Darwinians are naturalists rather than experimental scientists. Most remarkable, when a professed Darwinist, Theodosius Dobzhansky, set out to experimentally prove the efficacy of natural selection, failed, and admitted that he had failed, he was promptly forgotten by the establishment and continued to ignore his own failed experiment. The primary spokespersons for the Darwinian fairy tale have been, without exception, naturalists rather than bench scientists or even field naturalists. The chief ones, Gould, Mayr, Provine and Dawkins, completely abandoned their scientific training to retire early with endowed chairs to which they remained glued at some of our most prestigious institutions and spent the rest of their lives cranking out book after book of pure science fiction. These books, occupying several meters of shelf space, have but one purpose in mind which is to convince an adoring, naive, unsuspecting public that there is now and never was purpose in any aspect of the living world. They have obviously been eminently successful. It is hard to believe isn't it? "We seek and offer ourselves to be gulled." Montaigne "A past evolution in undeniable, a present evolution undemonstrable." John A. DavisonJohn A. Davison
August 27, 2006
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This is great work, Sal. I wonder if there are some historians who specialized on Blyth. A handful of them would make a great PBS special: "Darwin: Genius or Liar?"Red
August 27, 2006
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Charlie! Whoa! Thanks for linking to Steve Jones. For the reader's benefit: Darwin's Dishonesty Darwin's Lies (1) Darwin's Lies (2) Darwin's Lies (3)
Many historians have commented that the most curiously revealing statement in Darwin's autobiography comes close to being an unconscious lie- Stephen Gould
Gould goes on to defend Darwin, but one can't help but feel it's all spin.
Darwin lied about "being on board H.M.S. Beagle, as naturalist .... nor was Darwin appointed, or even called, the Beagle's naturalist except in his own imagination Browne EJ 1995 .... Amid the flurry of preparations, a 22-year-old man picked his way. He moved awkwardly around the ship, not only because his 6-foot frame was oversized for the cramped quarters, but also because he felt profoundly out of place. He had no official position on the ship, having been invited to keep the captain company during the voyage and act as an unofficial naturalist. It was usually up to a ship's surgeon to act as the naturalist for a voyage, but this awkward young man had no such practical skill. He was a medical school dropout who, for want of any other respectable line of work, was considering a career as a country parson when the voyage was over. ... The name of this awkward young man was Charles Darwin C Zimmer 2001 .... In the event, CD's [Charles Darwin's] appointment was not official. Although CD lists himself on the title page of Journal of researches as 'Naturalist to the Beagle' and in the Zoology as 'Naturalist to the Expedition' this is not to he understood as an official title conferred by the Admiralty.
Note how Darwin's deception has persisted to this day. Google on "official naturalist" you'll see how many hits include Charles Darwin as the official naturalist, even PBS archive.scordova
August 26, 2006
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Great post, Sal. As David Stove said in his book Darwinian Fairytales: ""Darwin had a lifelong habit of not acknowledging, until he was obliged to do so, the debts his work owed to other people; either that or he had a still worse habit of not even noting them. But his debt to Malthus was so great that even Darwin could not have failed to notice..." page 28. I left that bit about Malthus in at the end because according to Stephen Jones ( working primarily, I believe, from your source Loren Eiseley ) even Darwin's crediting of Malthus was not quite true. http://members.iinet.net.au/~sejones/histry2d.html#hstrydrwndshnstylsbthsthryCharlie
August 26, 2006
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