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The PreDarwinian Worldview

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He made their tiny wings. The Static Universe (2) : The Great Chain of Being ... animals and plants but allowing for rocks at the bottom and angels at top) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The PreDarwinian Worldview


1
The Pre-Darwinian Worldview
  • Science and Religion Between 1700 and 1859

2
The Static Universe
  • World created in 4004 BC Usher, Lightfoot
    (17th century)
  • Doctrine of Sufficient Reason if theres a
    reason for anything to exist, surely God has
    created it.
  • Doctrine of Plenum Formarum the earth is full
    of all forms God could possibly want to create.
    No changes are necessary no extinction, no
    fresh creation
  • All Things Bright and Beautiful the
    nineteenth century hymn by Cecil Alexander says
    it all!

3
All Things Bright and Beautiful
  • All things bright and beautiful,All creatures
    great and small,All things wise and
    wonderful,The Lord God made them all.Each
    little flower that opens,Each little bird that
    sings,He made their glowing petals,He made
    their tiny wings.

4
The Static Universe (2) The Great Chain of
Being
  • Common but not universal in 17th and 18th
    centuries
  • Idea of a hierarchical chain or ladder linking
    lowest and highest organisms (primarily animals
    and plants but allowing for rocks at the bottom
    and angels at top)
  • Every organism occupies a link or a rung
  • There are no gaps in the chain
  • Man is at the top
  • Idea does NOT imply evolutionary sequence

5
Disturbing Discoveries
  • Mammoth bones discovered in Siberia in early
    eighteenth century
  • Mastodon bones found in North America 1739,
    1767, 1780
  • 1699. Tyson dissects infant chimpanzee from
    Angola
  • 1724. Wild Peter in Hanover
  • 1735 Linnaeus, Swedish naturalist, lists humans
    and monkeys as Anthropomorpha
  • 1751 Guettard finds extinct volcanoes in Auvergne
  • 1790 John Frere finds hand axes in Hoxne, E.
    England
  • 1795 James Huttons Theory of the Earth
  • - no vestige of a beginning no end in sight

6
Disturbing Discoveries (2)
  • 1799 Jefferson and Wistar report discoveries of
    giant sloth
  • 1799 Cuvier and Blumenbach distinguish between
    mammoth and mastodon
  • 1809 Lamarcks Philosophie Zoologique
  • 1825-29 MacEnery excavates Kents Cavern
  • 1827-30 Schmerling uncovers Neandertal(??)
    fossils and stone tools at Engis
  • 1810s and1820s First dinosaur discoveries

7
Disturbing Discoveries (3)
  • 1831-1836 Darwin on HMS Beagle
  • 1830s and 1840s Boucher de Perthes finds hand
    axes and other paleolithic tools in Somme Valley
  • 1844 Vestiges of Creation revives idea of
    evolution, but the book has a hostile reception
  • 1856 Discovery of Neandertal Man. Significance
    denied by many
  • 1858 Falconer and Pengelly excavate Brixham
    Cave-prove existence of Paleolithic humans
  • 1858 Darwin and Wallace present findings
  • 1859 Origin of Species

8
Uniformitarians Catastrophists 1
  • Rival schools in Geology
  • Many catastrophists try to reconcile fossil
    remains of extinct animals and evidence of
    extensive geological change (and distinct strata)
    with the Genesis account of creation. Some cannot
    do so.
  • Their key idea is that change has been
    occasional and rapid, the result of catastrophes
    such as eruptions, glaciations and floods (like
    Noahs Flood) on a global scale. Many allow for
    extension of time scale from 6000 to 50000 years.
    Catastrophists include Cuvier, William Smith,
    Buckland, Agassiz.
  • .

9
Uniformitarians, Catastrophists 2
  • Uniformitarians believe that the earth is a
    uniform system of matter in motion.
  • Infinite time was necessary for earth to cool
    from molten mass and for rocks to form.
  • The uniformitarian principle, derived from
    physics and astronomy, would be a lynchpin of
    evolution, but uniformitarians such as Lyell had
    first to be convinced that extinction of species
    was possible. Uniformitarians include James
    Hutton, author of The Theory of the Earth and
    Charles Lyell, author of The Principles of
    Geology (1829-1833) and The Antiquity of Man
    (1863) .

10
Uniformitarians and Catastrophists 3
  • Although the catastrophists were in a sense the
    losers of this battle, the techniques of
    stratigraphy developed by Cuvier and Smith were
    utlized by scholars like Pengelly, Falconer and
    Evans to provide critical evidence for the
    existence of the Paleolithic era and to provide a
    timeline for both cultural and biological
    evolution

11
Monogenists and Polygenists 1
  • The two pre-Darwinian schools conducted a debate
    over human origins and the boundaries of the
    human species between 1775 and 1860.
  • Species could be defined according to
    formal resemblance

    fixity of type

    reproductive isolation.

12
Monogenists and Polygenists 2
  • Monogenists believe all humans are a single
    species
  • Whose members have the same ancestry, and
  • All Humans can interbreed.
  • Within the species the differences between human
    VARIETIES or RACES are caused by differences in
    climate, diet and mode of life.
  • Differentiation increases over generations
  • Skin colour, size of limbs, intelligence all vary
    in this way.
  • Most monogenists believe whites are superior, but
    that environmental change may be reversible
  • Many but not all believe in Genesis and in
    Ushers 6000 year chronology

13
Monogenists and Polygenists 3
  • Polygenists believed that the different races
    were NOT varieties of one species but distinct
    SPECIES which were
  • Separately created in different parts of the
    world
  • That their characteristics were fixed and
    immutable they had not changed since the time
    of the Pyramids
  • That mulattoes and other hybrids were
    absolutely or relatively infertile
  • That races could be hierarchically ranked
  • Many but not all polygenists defended slavery

14
Comparative Philology
  • Now historical linguistics
  • William Jones in the late 18th century, Bopp,
    Pott, Jakob Grimm, Muller and Pictet in the 19th
    trace the relationship and between grammatical
    and lexical forms in Greek, Latin, Celtic,
    Germanic, Persians, Sanskrit and Russian
    Languages.
  • Hypothesis of Aryan race and culture a result
  • ANALOGY between tracing of common origin through
    linguistic roots through different periods of
    history and the discovery of fossils and stone
    tools in different strata

15
Sources of Comparative MethodSurvivals, Fossils
and Sound Shifts
  • 1 The conjectural history and four-stage theory
    of the Scottish Enlightenment from foraging
    through pastoralism and horticulture to
    polished society
  • 2 Fossils arrayed in different strata
  • 3 Recapitulation theory from the embryology of
    Van Baer as misunderstood by Haeckel (1866) and
    others - ontogeny recapitulates phylogeny
  • 4 Comparative philology using word roots and
    sound shifts to trace history
  • 5 Lamarckian evolution
  • 6 Darwin on the evolutionary significance of
    useless organs (the appendix, aspects of
    structure of outer ear)

16
What distinguishes Darwin (and Wallace)
  • They combine evolution and natural selection, and
    provide PROOF for their ideas
  • We find evolution with the wrong mechanism
    (inheritance of acquired characteristics) in
    Erasmus Darwin, 1790s, Lamarck 1809, Chambers
    1844 and early Herbert Spencer
  • Principle of inheritance of acquired
    characteristics is also found in the theory of
    MONOGENESIS (which is NOT about creation of new
    species)
  • We find natural selection without evolution in
    Malthus (1798), William Charles Wells (1813)
    where it is used to explain racial changes ,
    Patrick Matthew (1831), and Herbert Spencer
    (1852) where it is used to explain why
    intelligence may be an advantage. Spencer also
    coins the term, survival of the fittest
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