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brought about that phenomenon. In point of fact, the
arguments for the fact of Organic Evolution are perfectly
independent of any particular method by which it was
brought about. Now, it so happens that Mr. Robert
Chambers, in his Vestiges of the Natural History of
Creation, stated these arguments in language almost
identical with those employed by Mr. Romanes in his
Evidences of Organic Evolution—a work which professed
to give a synopsis of Darwinism, but in which no proofs
of Natural Selection are adduced. These arguments
themselves, being identical in idea and very similar in
phraseology, were as valid in 1844 as they were in 1882.
If they were not accepted in 1844, the fault is not in the
arguments, but in the receptivity of the minds to which
they were addressed. And yet the book was read with
interest by many cultured people. Why, then, were these
arguments for Organic Evolution not accepted ? The
reason, we are told, was because no adequate explanation
was offered as to the processes by which this Organic Evo
lution had come about. The reason seems to me to have
been because the doctrine of the fixity of species died hard ;
because it was still accepted by the overwhelming majority
of scientific men ; because they overlooked the arguments
for Organic Evolution, or judged them only by argu
ments adduced for certain factors of Organic Evolution.
Meanwhile, the theory of Natural Selection came upon
the scene and triumphed, for the reasons already assigned.
But in all this, a great injustice was done to those who
promulgated the arguments for Organic Evolution as a
fact of the natural world ; for if those arguments are
logically sound, they ought to have been accepted, even
if the actual factors could not be discovered. I know
that the Eiffel Tower at Blackpool has been gradually
produced, and that it did not come down from heaven