CHAPTER VI.
NATURAL SELECTION NOT MANIFESTED IN ORGANIC
EVOLUTION (continued).
(e) CLASSIFICATION.
“ The King of Babylon stood at the parting of the way, at the
head of the two ways, to use divination.”—Ezekiel, xxt., 21.
The natural classification of organic beings turns out to
be an arrangement according to their genetic relationships,
and the result of this classification is seen in a tree-like
ramification, having several points of divergence. This fact
is accepted as a strong argument in favour of the process
of Organic Evolution. If we had been privileged to be
spectators of what took place when different groups of
similar individuals bade farewell to one another at the
parting of the way, we might then have divined the laws
by which these initial modifications were effected. That
the scientific imagination will be able to achieve this some
day, I am fully confident; but the hour has not yet come,
and we must move now, if we move at all, in the region
of conjecture. This chapter is added, “ for the sake of
symmetry,” to complete the logical statement of my argu
ment, and yet deals with subjects on which our knowledge
is still “ elementary,” in the ordinary sense of that word.
It is obvious that all existing organisms may be classi
fied so as to exhibit these tree-like ramifications ; and if
the inference of the advocates of Organic Evolution is to
be relied on, there must have been a point at which some
inorganic elements became endowed with what we call