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prompt and unmodified reproduction of an art learned by
a long line of remote ancestors.
(3) In the third place we have to consider the pro
position that instincts may be developed or modified by
Natural Selection in the absence of intelligence on account
of what is known as the “ lapsing ” of the intelligence.
We are indebted to Mr. George Henry Lewes for this
theory, and it may be interesting to note, first, what
Mr. Lewes teaches on this point; and, secondly, how the
theory has been modified by Mr. Romanes in order to
make room for the action of Natural Selection.
The process by which an intelligent action is developed
into an instinct is as follows :—First of all, we have the
intelligent action which solves some new problem presented
by some new condition. This act, which is prompted by
intelligence, is often required to meet daily difficulties, and
quickly becomes a habit. The habitual action soon
becomes easy to perform, so that it requires less and less
attention on the part of the agent, until at last it becomes
automatic—i.e., the agent performs the action uncon
sciously. This perfectly developed habit is inherited by
offspring actually or potentially. In those animals which
have to be most self-reliant in their earliest days this
perfect habit will be inherited in complete or almost
complete perfection. And thus an intelligent action
becomes an instinctive one by processes which we can
illustrate from the experiences of men and animals. We
have abundant evidence of the fact that the intelligence of
some animals is sufficient to solve the problem suggested
by changed conditions. Mr. Arthur Nichols gives a most
graphic description of a new method adopted by his
retriever:—
“Towards the evening of a long day’s snipe-shooting on Dartmoor,
my retriever flushed a widgeon which fell to my gun in the river
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