p. 234. t p. 207.
280
corporeal structures.”* How important Mr. Darwin
esteems this principle to be may be seen from the follow
ing statement : “ If it could be demonstrated that any
complex organism existed which could not possibly
have been formed by numerous successive slight modi
fications, my theory would absolutely break down.”
The process will be a more or less protracted one—“No
complex instinct can possibly be produced through Natural
Selection except by the slow and gradual accumulation
of numerous slight yet profitable variations.”']’
Now in considering this theory, the first thing to be
borne in mind is that in those cases in which we have an
instinct correlated to a particular structure and to certain
outward conditions, no change can be profitable and,
therefore, if any change takes place it will take place
apart from Natural Selection. But this is not all. For
if it be true that Natural Selection is actively engaged
in preserving the stability of species in connection with
unchanged conditions, then it is surely equally reasonable
to suppose that it would tend to promote the constancy
of instinct where change was useless at the least, and
might so easily prove prejudicial. If Natural Selection
is to be invoked to alter old established instincts, it must
be in the face of changed conditions and new problems.
Mr. Darwin insists that the variations of instinct shall
be slight, that they shall be the result of variations of
instinct due to sexual reproduction, and that favourable
variations shall be selected.
Now if circumstances altered very gradually we could
then believe that the slow process of the Natural Selection
of slight favourable variations might suffice to secure the
well-being of the race. But very often new circumstances