CHAPTER I.
THE THEORY DEFINED AND TESTS PROPOSED.
“ Old things need not be therefore true,
O brother men ! nor yet the new.
Ah ! still awhile the old thought retain,
And yet consider it again.”—A. Clough.
By what process have all the different kinds of animal
and vegetable organisms become what we now see them
to be ? This is the problem which has from time to time
excited the interest of solitary thinkers, and which, within
the last thirty or forty years, has profoundly agitated the
scientific world. Two answers have been given to this
question. On the one hand, it used to be asserted (it is
still asserted by some) that the different kinds of animals
and plants are the lineal descendants of organisms similar
to themselves, and that those remote ancestors suddenly
appeared upon the earth, some six thousand years ago,
endowed with the power of reproducing their like from
generation to generation. On the other hand, it is con
tended that all existing kinds of organisms, however
complex, have been produced by successive changes from
the simplest and least complex forms of life. The latter is
the opinion of the majority of scientific men at the present
day. This process is designated by the term Organic
Evolution : and evolution is defined by Mr. Herbert Spencer
as the result of the joint action of growth or increase in
size, and of development or increase in [the complexity
of] structure.*
The Principles of Biology, i., p. /jj, note.