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Evolution and Dogma

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Description: Evolution and Dogma
by John Augustine Zahm

Published 1896
Topics Religion and science, Evolution

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EVOLUTION AND DOGMA;ru J.A.ZAHM.







EVOLUTION AND DOGMA BYTHE REVEREND J. A. ZAHM, Ph.D., C. S. C. Professor of Physics in the University of Notre Dame. and and"SoundAuthor of Music," "Bible, Science Faith," "Catholic Science and Catholic Scientists," etc. fJdvra d(z6ffrj.rj(T voos, ANAXAGORAS. THE rose-seed holds the glory of the rose; Within its heart sweet summer fragrance bides. And there each petal s tender blush-tint hides, Till June bids nature all her charms disclose. The 1 infant s heart and brain may hold sleeping The glorious power that in future years Shall move the listening world to smiles and tears Tis life potential that the days unfold. One act of Will Divine, and lo 1 the seed Of growth was sown in young creation s heart. From Life Eternal hath all life its start And endless change as changeless law we read. CHICAGO D. H. MCBRIDE & co. 1896

COPYRIGHT, 1896, BY f. A. ZAHM.





PREFATORY NOTE. Second of this work covers substantiallyPARTthe same ground as my lectures on Evolution,delivered before the Madison and Plattsburgh Summer Schools and before the Winter School of NewOrleans. Indeed, the chief difference between thesubject-matter of Part Second, and that of the lectures as given at the Summer and Winter Schools,consists in the foot-notes which have been added tothe text, and in a more exhaustive treatment of certain topics herein discussed than was possible in thetime allotted to them in the lecture hall. J. A. ZAHM, C. S. C. NOTRE DAME UNIVERSITY, December 18, 1895.



TABLE OF CONTENTS.INTRODUCTION PAGES xiii-xxx PART I.EVOLUTION, PAST AND PRESENT. CHAPTER I.NATURE AND SCOPE OF EVOLUTION.EARLY Speculations Regarding Nature and Man Com prehensiveness of Evolution Evolution Denned Literature of Evolution Freedom from Bias in theDiscussion of Evolution I3~22 CHAPTER II. EARLY EVOLUTIONARY VIEWS.FIRST Studies of Nature Evolution Among the Greeks Aristotle s Observations Mediaeval Writers. . . . 23-30 CHAPTER III. FOSSILS AND GIANTS.EARLY Notions Regarding Fossils Italian Geologists on Fossils Legends About Giants True Significance of Fossils Controversy in the French Academy. . . 3 I ~4 (7)

EVOLUTION AND DOGMA. CHAPTER IV.SPONTANEOUS GENERATION AND SCIENTIFIC DISCOVERY. PAGESEARLY Views Regarding Abiogenesis Fathers and School men on Abiogenesis Redi s Experiments LaterResearches General Advance in Science Chemistryand Astronomy Testimony of Biology 4 I- 54 CHAPTER V.FROM LORD BACON TO CHARLES DARWIN.FIRST Materials for the Controversy Bacon and Kant 55-64 Linnaeus and Buffon Erasmus Darwin and Lamarck Species and Varieties CHAPTER VI. CONTROVERSY AND PROGRESS.DARWIN Origin of SpeciesS " " Herbert Spencer and Compeers Science and Philosophy Anticipations ofDiscoveries Species and Creation Evolutionistsand Anti-Evolutionists No Via Media PossibleThe Miltonic Hypothesis Views of Agassiz Evolution 65-83 CHAPTER VII. EVIDENCES OF EVOLUTION.SYSTEMS of Classification Cuvier and His SuccessorsPoints of View Taxonomic Divisions Plato s "GrandIdeas " Cuvier on Species Definition of SpeciesDifficulties Regarding Species Agassiz ViewsSpecies in the Making De Candolle and BairdEvidences of Organic Evolution A Philological Illustration Tree-like System of Classification The Argument from Structure and Morphology RudimentaryOrgans Argument from Embryology Amphioxus

TABLE OF CONTENTS. PAGESand Loligo Meaning of Recapitulation Geographical Distribution of Organisms Facts of GeologicalSuccession The Demonstrative Evidence of Evolution Generalized Types Probability of EvolutionSpecial Creation and Evolution 84-139 CHAPTER VIII.OBJECTIONS AGAINST EVOLUTION.DECLARATIONS of Anti-Evolutionists Historical and Ar chaeological Objections Egyptian Mummies Testi mony of the Monuments Evidence from Plants Views of Agassiz, Barrande and Others Misappre hension of the Nature of Evolution, and Answer toObjections Existence and Cause of VariationsPaucity of Transitional Forms Variations and theFormation of Fossiliferous Deposits Romanes onDifficulties Attending Preservation of Fossils SmallPercentage of Fossil Forms Extraordinary Intercalary Forms Imperfection of the Geological RecordTime, Change and Equilibrium Paleontology Compared With Egyptology and Assyriology Sterility ofSpecies When Crossed Morphological and Physiolog True Significance of the Term "Speical Species " Factors of Evolution Evolutionary Theoriesciesand Their Difficulties The Ideal Theory. . . . 140-202 PART II. EVOLUTION AND DOGMA. CHAPTER I. MISCONCEPTIONS OF THEORY, ERRORS IN DOG TRINE AND MISTAKES IN TERMINOLOGY.EVOLUTION of the Evolution Theory Evolution and Dar winism Evolution, Atheism and Nihilism Evolu-

10 EVOLUTION AND DOGMA.tion and Faith Evolution and Science Ignorance ofTerms Materialism and Dualism PantheismDogma of Creation The Vatican Council on Creation WordMeaning of the "Nature" Nature and 205-229God CHAPTER II. MONISM AND EVOLUTION.H^ECKEL and Monism Haeckel as a Scientist Hceckel s Nature-Philosophy Five Propositions of Hackel God and the Soul Organic and Inorganic Matter The Religion of the Future Haeckel s Limitations Verbal Jugglery False Analogy Type of a Class. 230-253 CHAPTER III. AGNOSTICISM AND EVOLUTION.NATURE and Scope of Agnosticism Late Developments ofAgnosticism Mansel, Huxley and Romanes Doc-ta Ignorantia Agnosticism as a Via Media Originof the Universe Spencer s Unknowable Max Miil-ler on Agnosticism Sources of Agnosticism InfiniteTime Infinite Space Mysteries of Nature Christian Agnosticism Gods of the Positivist and the Ag-nostic 254-278 CHAPTER IV. THEISM AND EVOLUTION.EVOLUTION and Faith Teachings of St. Augustine Views of the Angelic Doctor Seminales Rationes Creation According to Scripture The Divine Administration Efficient Causality of Creatures Occasionalism An thropomorphism Divine Interference Science and Creation Darwin s Objection Limitations of Spe cialists Evolution and Catholic Teaching The Scho lastic Doctrine of Species Milton and Ray. . . 279-319

TABLE OF CONTENTS. 11 CHAPTER V.THE ORIGIN AND NATURE OF LIFE. PAGESSPONTANEOUS Generation The Nature of Life The Germof Life Abiogenesis Artificial Production of LifeProtoplasm 3 2 -339 CHAPTER VI. THE SIMIAN ORIGIN OF MAN.THE Missing Link The Human Soul Creation of Man s Body Mivart s Theory Angelic Doctor on Creation of Adam Views of Cardinal Gonzales Opinions of Other Writers Interpretation Not Revelation. . 340-368 CHAPTER VII. TELEOLOGY, OLD AND NEW.THE Doctrine of Final Causes A Newer Teleology Evo lution and Teleology Design and Purpose in Nature. 369-377 CHAPTER VIII.RETROSPECT, REFLECTIONS AND CON CLUSION.EVOLUTION Not a New Theory Teachings of Greek Phi losophers Teleological Ideas of Anaxagoras and Aristotle Influence of Aristotle Darwinism Not Evolution Evolution in the Future Evolution Not Antagonistic to Religion Objections Against New Theories Galileo and the Copernican Theory Conservatism in Science Conflict of Opinions BeneficialEvolution and Creationism Errors in the Infancy ofScience Science Not Omnipotent Bankruptcy ofScience Conquests of Science Evidences of Design and Purpose Rudimentary Organs Evolution,Scripture and Theology Evolution and Special Creation Genesiac Days, Flood, Fossils and Antiquity ofMan Eminent Catholics on Evolution Faith HasNothing to Apprehend from Evolution Misapprehensions Regarding Evolution Evolution, an Ennobling Conception 37 8~43 8



PART I.INTRODUCTION,

II" faut savoir douter ou il faut, assurer ou il faut, et sesoumettre ou il faut. Qui ne fait ainsi n entend pas la force dela raison. II y en a qui faillent contre ces trois principes ; ouen assurant tout comme dmonstratif, manque de se connaitreen demonstration ou en doutant de tout, manque de savoir ou ;il faut se soumettre; ou en se soumettant en tout, manque deousavoir il faut Pascal, "Pensees." juger."We" must know when to doubt, when fo feel certain, whenWhoto submit. fails in this understands not the force of reason.There are those who offend against these three rules, either byaccepting everything as evidence, for want of knowing whatevidence is ; or by doubting every thing, for want of knowing whento submit or by yielding in everything, for want of knowing ;when to use their judgment."

INTRODUCTION. v&v yap atyfiel travra owadu ra v raxvTpevdel rafyflls, ARISTOTLE, fiia<j>uvti with"For the truth all things that exist arein harmony, but with the false the true atonce disagrees."THE present work is devoted chiefly to the dis cussion of three topics which, although in ameasure independent one of the other, are, nevertheless, so closely allied that they may be viewed asparts of one and the same subject. The first of thesetopics embraces a brief sketch of the evolutionarytheory from its earliest beginnings to the presenttime ; the second takes up the pros and the cons of thetheory as it now stands while the third deals with ;the reciprocal and little-understood relations between Evolution and Christian faith.It is often supposed by those who should knowbetter, that the Evolution theory is something whichis of very recent origin ; something about which littleor nothing was known before the publication ofCharles Darwin s celebrated The" Origin of work,Species." Frequently, too, it is confounded withDarwinism, or some other modern attempt to explain the action of Evolution, or determine the factors which have been operative in the developmentof the higher from the lower forms of life. The

Xiv EVOLUTION AND DOGMA.purpose of the first six chapters of this book is toshow that such views are unwarranted that Evolu ;tion, far from being of recent date, is a theory whosegerms are discernible in the earliest dawn of philosophic thought. In the two following chapters aregiven, in brief compass, some of the principal arguments which are usually adduced in favor of, oragainst, Evolution. These chapters, together withthose which precede them, constitute Part First ofthe present volume Part Second being wholly ;devoted to the consideration of the third topic,namely, Evolution in its relation to CatholicDogma, For avowed Christians, to whatever creedthey may belong, the subject relates to matters ofgrave import and abiding interest, and this importand interest, great as they are from the nature of thetheme itself, have been enhanced a hundred foldby the protracted and violent controversies to whichEvolution has given rise, no less than by the manymisconceptions which yet prevail, and the manydoubts which still remain to be dissipated. Can a Catholic, can a Christian of any denomination, consistently with the faith he holds dear, bean evolutionist or is there something in the theory ;that is so antagonistic to faith and Scripture as torender its acceptance tantamount to the denial ofthe fundamental tenets of religious belief? Thequestion, as we shall learn, has been answered bothaffirmatively and negatively. But, as is evident, theresponse cannot be both yea and nay. It must beone or the other, and the query now is, which an-swer is to be given, the negative or the affirmative?

INTRODUCTION. xvWhatever may be the outcome of the controversy, whatever may be the results of future researchand discovery, there is absolutely no room for apprehension respecting the claims and authority ofScripture and Catholic Dogma. Science will neverbe able to contradict aught that God has revealed ;for it is not possible that the Divine works andthe Divine words should ever be in any relation toeach other but one of the most perfect harmony.Doubts and difficulties may obtain for a time; theforces of error may for a while appear triumphant ; thetestimonies of the Lord may be tried to the uttermost but in the long run it will always be found, ;as has so often been the case in the past, thatthe Bible and faith, like truth, will come forth unharmed and intact from any ordeal, however severe,to which they may be subjected. For error is impotent against truth the pride of man s intellect is of ;no avail against the wisdom of the Almighty. Falseteaching and false views of nature are but the vainprojections of the imaginations of men false theo ;ries and false hypotheses are often no more thanwhat St. Augustine aptly designates "the great absurdities of great teachers magna magnorum deli-ramenta doctorum. How true, indeed, the wordsof the old distich:Nostra damus quum falsa damus, nam fallere nostrum est, Et quum falsa damus, nil nisi nostra damus. The fictions of opinions are ephemeral, but thetestimonies of the Lord are everlasting. Opinionumcommenta delct dies, says Cicero. This utterance of

ivi EVOLUTION AND DOGMA. the old Roman philosopher applies with singular point to all those conjectures of scientists, philoso phers and exegetists, who fail to make their views a true reflex of the teachings of nature, naturce indicia, or who promulgate theories manifestly an tagonistic to the declarations of faith or of the In spired Record. A striking illustration of the unwisdom of com mitting one s self to premature notions, or unproved hypotheses, especially before all the evidence in the case is properly weighed, is afforded in the long and animated controversy respecting the authorship ofthe Pentateuch. Many reasons have been assignedby the higher critics why it could not have been theproduction of Moses, to whom it has so long beenascribed by a venerable tradition, and one of theobjections urged against the Mosaic authorship was,that written language was unknown in the age during which the Jewish legislator is reputed to havelived. Now, however, the distinguished philologistand archaeologist, Prof. Sayce, comes forward andproves, beyond doubt or quibble, that the contention of the higher critics respecting the authorshipof the Bible is ill-founded. So sure, indeed, is he,whereof he speaks, that he does not hesitate toassert "not only that Moses could have written thePentateuch, but that it would have been somethinglike a miracle if he had not done so." Even in Germany, the great stronghold of theHigher Criticism, we meet with the expression ofsimilar views, and that, too, on the part of suchnoted Biblical scholars as Rupprecht, and Dr.

IN TR OD UC TION. xviiAdolph Zahn of Stuttgart. The former, as a result of his investigations, declares positively that"the Pentateuch dates back to the Mosaic periodof Divine revelation, and that its author is MosesAndhimself, the greatest prophet in Israel." as tothe groundless assertion that writing was unknownat the time of the Hebrew law-giver, we have thedeliberate statement of Sayce that " in the Canaan,Mosaic age, like the countries which surrounded it,was fully as literary as was Europe in the time ofthe Renaissance." Such and similar instances of premature claimsfor unwarranted hypotheses, should teach us thewisdom of practicing a proper reserve in respect ofthem, and of suspending judgment until we can yieldassent which is based on unimpeachable evidence.But this does not imply that we should go to theextreme of conservatism, or display a fanatical obstinacy in the assertion of traditional views which aredemonstrably untenable. There is a broad reachbetween ultra-conservatism and reprehensible liberalism or arrogant temerity. In this golden mean1 See The Contemporary Review, pp. 480-481, for October, 1895. Cf., also, by the same author, The Higher Criticism and the .Verdict of the Monuments, chapter n, andLiterature of the Old Testament in "The People s BibleHistory," mentioned later. In the last-named contribution toBiblical lore, the erudite Oxford divine affirms, and withoutfear of contradiction, onethat" of the first and most importantresults of the discoveries which have been pouring in upon usduring the last few years, is the proof that Canaan was a landof readers and writers long before the Israelites entered it, andthat the Mosaic age was one of high literary activity. So faras the use of writing is concerned, there is now no longer anyreason for doubting that the earlier books of the Bible might havebeen contemporaneous with the events they profess to record."

xviii EVOLUTION AND DOGMA.there is ample field for research and speculation,without any danger on the one side of trenchingon faith, or of putting a bar to intellectual progresson the other. The Fathers of the early Church andthe Schoolmen of mediaeval times, show us whatliberty of thought the Catholic may enjoy in thediscussion of all questions outside the domain ofrevealed truth.I am not unaware of the fact that Evolution hashad suspicion directed against it, and odium castupon it, because of its materialistic implications andits long anti-Christian associations. I know it hasbeen banned and tabooed becaUseTt has received thecordial imprimatur of the advocates of Agnosticism,and the special commendation of the defenders ofAtheism that it has long been identified with false ;systems of philosophy, and made to render yeomanservice in countless onslaughts against religion andthe Church, against morality and free-will, againstGod and His providential government of the universe. But this does not prove that Evolution isill-founded or that it is destitute of all elements oftruth. Far from it. It is because Evolution contains so large an element of truth, because it explains countless facts and phenomena which areexplicable on no other theory, that it has met withsuch universal favor, and that it has proved such apowerful agency in the dissemination of error andin giving verisimilitude to the most damnable ofdoctrines. Such being the case, ours is the duty towithdraw the truth from its enforced and unnaturalalliance, and to show that there is a sense in which

IN TRODUC TION. xixEvolution can be understood in which it must beunderstood, if it repose on a rational basis inwhich, far from contributing to the propagation offalse views of nature and God, it_is calculated to.renderj n valu able, aid ia the cause of both science^n^religion. From being an agency for the pro-mulgati6rT~crf~ Monism, Materialism and Pantheism,it should be converted into a power which makesfor righteousness and the exaltation of holy faithand undying truth. It were puerile to imagine that religion has anything to fear from the advance of science, or fromEvolution receiving all the prominence which thefacts in its favor will justify. Science and religion,revelation and nature, mutually supplement one another, and it would be against the best interests ofboth religion and science to do aught that woulddivorce them, or prevent their remaining the closeallies which Infinite Wisdom designed them to be. " Logically regarded, the advance of science, farfrom having weakened religion has immeasurablystrengthened it." So wrote shortly before his deathone who, during the best years of his life, was anardent Darwinian and an avowed agnostic. Andthe same gifted votary of science declared, that " Theteleology of revelation supplements that of nature,and so, to the spiritually minded man, they logicallyand mutually corroborate one another." 1 It behooves us to realize that in our age of doubtand intellectual confusion, when so many seek in thegloaming what is visible only in the effulgence of the1 " on Religion," p. 179, by George Romanes. Thoughts

XX EVOLUTION AND DOGMA.midday sun, when the skeptic sees an interrogationpoint at the end of every proposition, and when uncertainty and mystery hover over so much we shouldlike to know it behooves us, I say, to realize, thatwe must have recourse to everything that is calculated to dispel the darkness with which we are surrounded, and to relieve the harrowing doubts withwhich so many of our fellow men are oppressed.But more than this. Important as it is for us tobear in mind that we live in an age of doubt anddisquietude, it is none the less important for us notto lose sight of the fact that our lot is cast in an ageof dissent and conflict. Religion is assailed on all sides; principles wehold most dear are treated with contumely andscorn, and the very foundations of belief in apersonal Creator, and in the immortality of the soul,are systematically attacked by the enemies of Godand His Church. If, then, we would accomplishanything in the conflict which is now raging sofiercely all around us, it is imperative that we shouldprovide ourselves with the most approved means ofattack and defense, and that we should be able notonly to guard the stronghold of the faith, but thatwe should likewise be equipped and ready to meetour enemies out in the open. In these days ofMaxim guns, old worn-out blunderbusses are worsethan useless. To attempt to cope with the modernspirit of error by means of antiquated and discardedweapons of offense and defense, were as foolish asto pit a Roman trireme or a mediaeval galley against amodern steel cruiser or the latest type of battleship.

IN TRODUC TION. x xi To pass from the language of metaphor to language simple and unadorned, our great, or moretruthfully our greatest enemy, in the intellectualworld to-day, is Naturalism variously known as Agnosticism, Positivism, Empiricism which, as Mr,Balfour well observes, " is in reality the only systemwhich ultimately profits by any defeats which theology may sustain, or which may be counted on toflood the spaces from which the tide of religion hasreceded." It is Naturalism that, allying itself with Evolution,or some of the many theories of Evolution whichhave attracted such widespread attention during thelast half century, has counted such a formidable following that the friends of religion and Scripturemight well despair of final victory, did they not knowthe invincibility of truth, and that, however it may beobscured for a time, or however much it may apparently be weakened, it is sure to prevail and in theend issue from the contest triumphant. In writing the present work I have ever had before my mind the words of wisdom of our Holy Father, Leo XIII, concerning the duty incumbent on all Catholics, to turn the discoveries of science into , so many means of illuminating and corroborating the teachings of faith and the declarations of the Sacred Text. In public and in private, in season and out of season, in briefs, allocutions and encyclicals, he has constantly and strenuously urged a thorough study of science in all its branches. But nowhere does he insist more strongly on the profound study of 1 "The Foundations of Belief," p. 6.

xxii E VOL U TION A ND DOGMA .science, than in his two masterly encyclicals "" Inand Providentissimus" ^Eterni Patris Deus."these noble utterances both the clergy and the laityare stimulated to take an active part in the contestwhich is everywhere so furious repulseto" hostile ;assaults," and that, too, by modern" methods ofandattack," by " the arms of a perverted turningscience into weapons of defense." He tells usthat a" knowledge of natural science will be ofvery great assistance in detecting attacks on theSacred Books and in refuting them." For attacks"of this kind," the venerable Pontiff remarks, "bearing as they do on matters of sensible experience,are peculiarly dangerous both to the masses andalso to the young who are beginning their literarystudies." In reading these precious documents one wouldalmost think that the Holy Father had in mind themanifold materialistic hypotheses, so dangerous tothe faith of the uninstructed, which have groupedthemselves around the much-abused theory of contemporary Evolution. For, is it not a matter ofdaily observation and experience, that there is an increasing number of pious but timid souls who aresorely distressed by doubts which have been occasioned by the current theories of Transformism?They imagine, because it is continually dinned into1 igitur tantum ii possunt religion! importare "Quoniamcommodi, quibus cum catholicae professions gratia felicem indol-em ingenii benignum numen impertiit ; ideo in hac acerrima agi-tatione studiorum, quee Scripturas quoquo modoattingunt, aptumsibi quisque eligant studii genus, in quo aliquando excellentesobiecta in illas improbse sciential tela, non sine gloria, repellant."From the encyclical " Providentissimus Deus."

INTRODUCTION. xxiiitheir ears, that there is a mortal antagonism betweenthe principles of faith and the teachings of Evolution. They are assured, moreover, not only thatsuch an antagonism actually .exists, but also that itis based on undeniable facts, on absolute demonstration. They are told that if they wish to be consistent, if they wish to obey the certain behests ofreason, they must choose between Evolution andfaith, between science and superstition. The result is, too often, alas ! that they make shipwreck oftheir faith, and plunge headlong into the dark andhopeless errors of Naturalism.But not only have I been ever mindful of theteachings of the venerable Pontiff, Leo XIII ; I havemyalso, to the best of ability, striven to follow thepath marked out by those great masters of Catholicphilosophy and theology, St. Augustine and St.Thomas of Aquin. I have always had before metheir declarations respecting creation, and the manner in which we may conceive the world to have beenevolved from its pristine chaotic condition to itspresent state of order and loveliness. And to makemy task easier, I have had frequent recourse to thosetwo modern luminaries of science and faith, theprofound Jesuit, Father Harper, and the eminentDominican, Cardinal Gonzales. To Metaphysthe "Labyics of the School," the former, and to "amBiblia y la Ciencia," by the latter, I specially indebted for information and points of view that itwould be difficult to find elsewhere. Both of thesedistinguished scholars evince a rare mastery of thesubjects which they discuss with such lucidity, and

xxiv EVOLUTION AND DOGMA.one may safely follow them with the utmost confidence, and with the full assurance that ample justicewill always be done to the claims of both scienceand Dogma. In the present work I have studiously avoidedeverything that could justly be construed as an exaggeration of the results achieved by science, or as aminimizing of the dogmatic teachings of the Churchof God. I have endeavored to present Catholicdoctrines and scientific tenets in their true light, andto exhibit the mutual relations of one to the otherin the fairest possible manner. Purely ex partestatements and special pleadings are alien from a professedly didactic work, and hence my constant efforthas been to avoid all bias, to present impartially anddispassionately both sides of controverted questions,and to favor only such conclusions as seemed to bewarranted by indisputable evidence.The Church is committed to no theory as to theorigin of the world or its inhabitants. Hence, as aCatholic, I am bound to no theory of Evolution orof special creation, except in so far as there may bepositive evidence in behalf of such theory. As aman of science I must estimate, as everyone elsemust estimate, the merits or demerits of any hypothesis respecting the genesis and development ofthe divers forms of life, simply and solely by thearguments which can be advanced in its support. Ihave no prepossessions for Evolution nor have I ;any prejudice against special creation. If it can bedemonstrated that Evolution is the modus creandiwhich the Almighty has been pleased to adopt, I

INTRODUCTION. xxvshall rejoice that one of the greatest of the world-problems has at length received a solution. If, onthe other hand, it can be shown that the traditionalview of special creation is the one to which we mustgive our adhesion, I shall rejoice equally, for thesole desire of every student of nature, as well as thesole desire of every son of the Church, should bethe truth, and the truth whole and undefiled.I have, then, no pet theory to exploit, nothingsensational to defend, nothing to uphold that is inconsistent with the strictest orthodoxy or the mostrigid Ultramontanism. My sole aim and purpose inwriting this work has been, I repeat it, to removemisconceptions, to dispel confusion, to explain difficulties, to expose error, to eliminate false interpretation, to allay doubt, to quiet conscience, to benefitsouls. How far I have succeeded remains for othersto judge. That in the discussion of so many difficultand delicate questions, I may have made statementsthat could be improved, or should be somewhatmodified, is quite possible. But if, in anything, Ihave been wanting in accuracy of expression ; if Ihave misstated a fact of science, or misapprehendeda Dogma of faith I shall consider it a special favor ;to have my attention directed to what, on my part,is wholly an unintentional error.It will not do to say, as has been said, that thediscussion, whether from the platform or elsewhere,of such topics as constitute the main feature of thiswork, is inopportune or inexpedient. If the reasons already assigned did not suffice to justify theexpediency and opportuneness of such discussions,

XX vi EVOLU TION A ND DOGMA .the example given by the International CatholicScientific Congress ought to dispel all doubts thatmight be still entertained on the subject. For onevery occasion the Congress has yet assembled, thediscussion of evolutionary topics has been givenspecial prominence. And the interest exhibited insuch discussions was not confined to laymen andspecialists, but it was shared in by distinguishedprelates and scholars of international reputation.They recognized the necessity of having all possible light on a question of such widespread interest of seeking by all possible means to attain the ;truth respecting a subject which has been so prolificof error and has proved such an agency for evil.What these learned and zealous men deemed it wiseto do, in the cultured capitals of the Old World, wecertainly can and ought to do in this land of ours,where ignorance of the subject in question is moredense and where knowledge is more needed. Thefact that certain propositions in this work havegiven rise to such misunderstandings, and have led tosuch misdirected controversy and such useless logomachy as have prevailed during some months past,is the best evidence that there is yet much to belearned regarding what is so often incontinentlycondemned without a hearing. The great trouble now, as it has always been, isthe very general ignorance of the clench on the partof those who pose as critics of Evolution and of evolutionary theories. Without a sufficient knowledge ofthe facts they venture to discuss, they are often ledto make statements which a wider acquaintance with

INTRODUCTION. xxviinature compels them to retract. Evolution, however, has not fared differently from the other grandgeneralizations that now constitute the foundationsand pillars which support the noble and imposingedifice of science. The Copernican theory, it willbe remembered, was denounced as anti-Scriptural ;Newton s discovery of universal gravitation was condemned as atheistic while the researches of geolo ;gists were decried as leading to infidelity, and asbeing " an awful evasion of the testimony of Revelation." That the theory of Evolution should beobliged to pass through the same ordeal as awaitedother attempts at scientific progress, is not surprisingto those who are familiar with the history of science;but it is not a little strange that there are yet amongus those who derive such little profit from thelessons of the past, and who still persist in the futileattempt to solve by metaphysics problems which,by their very nature, can be worked out only by themethods of induction.Dr. Whewell, the erudite author of the " Historyof the Inductive Sciences," was wont to declare thatevery great discovery in science had to pass throughthree stages. First" people said, It is absurd !then they said, * It is contrary to the Bible ! and We* always knew it was so !finally they said,The truth of this observation of the famous Masterof Trinity is well exemplified in the case of Evolution. There are some who still denounce it as contrary to reason ; there are others who honestly believethat it contradicts Scripture ; while there are not afew, and the number is rapidly augmenting, who are

xxviii EVOLUTION AND DOGMA.convinced that the germs of the Evolution theoryare to be found in Genesis, and that its fundamentalprinciples were recognized by Aristotle, St. Augustine and St. Thomas of Aquin. The final result ofthe controversy belongs to the future. If the the-ory which has excited such animosity, and provokedsuch unbridled disputes, be founded on the facts ofnature, it will ultimately prevail, as truth itself willprevail in the end if, however, it repose only on ;assumption and unsupported hypotheses, if it haveno better foundation than a shifting reef, it isdoomed, sooner or later, to the fate which awaitseverything that is unwarranted by nature or is atvariance with truth.Strange as it may appear, there are still somewell-meaning people who foolishly imagine, thatscience, when too profoundly studied, is a source ofdanger to faith. Such a notion is so silly as scarcelyto deserve mention. Pope s well-known verse : "Alittle learning is a dangerous hasthing," its application here, as in so many other instances. Thefamiliar quotation from Bacon : "A little philosophyinclineth a man s mind to Atheism, but depth in phi-losophy bringeth men s minds about to religion," expresses a truth which holds good for science as wellas for philosophy. Illustrations of the truth of thesecond part of this statement are found in the livesof Copernicus, Galileo, Kepler, Linnaeus, Newton,Cuvier, Cauchy, Agassiz, Barrande, Leverrier andnumberless others of the world s most illustriousdiscoverers and most profound thinkers. The greatLinnaeus, than whom no one ever studied nature

INTRODUCTION. xxixmore carefully or deeply, saw in all created things,even in what was apparently the most insignificant,evidences of the power and wisdom and goodness ofGod, which to him were simply 1 And overwhelming.the immortal Pasteur, whose recent death a wholeworld mourns, whose exhaustive study of nature hasbeen a subject of universal comment and admiration,did not hesitate towards the end of his glorious career to declare, that careful and profound study inspires in one the deepest and the most childlike faith,a faith like unto that of a people who are proverbialfor the earnestness and simplicity of their religiousspirit, the faith of the pious and unspoiled inhabi 2tants of Catholic Brittany.In one of his sublime pensees, Pascal, applyingthe method of Descartes to the demonstration offaith, and causing this instrument of science to confound all false science, declares that we" must begin by showing that religion is not contrary to reason then that it is venerable, to give respect for it ; ;then to make it lovable, and to make good men hopeshowthat it is true then to that 3 Some- ; it is true." 1 In the introduction to his " Systema Naturae," the Swedishbotanist writes: " Deum sempiternum, irnmensum,omniscientem,omnipotentem, expergefactus a tergo transeuntem vidi et ob-stupui. Legi aliquot ejus vestigia per creata rerum, in quibusomnibus, etiam in minimis ut fere nullis, quse vis ! quanta sap-quamientia ! inextricabilis " perfectio ! Quand2 " on a bien etudie," the renowned savant avers,on" revient a la foi du paysan breton. Si j avais etudie plus encore, j aurais la foi de la p aysanne bretonne."3 II" faut commencer par montrer, que la religion n estpoint contraire a la raison; ensuite qu elle est venerable, endonner respect; la rendre ensuite aimable, faire souhaiter auxbons qu elle fut vraie et puis, montrer qu elle est vraie." ;

EVOLUTION AND DOGMA.thing akin to the idea contained in this beautifulpassage, has been uppermost in my mind in the penAning of the following pages. kindred thoughthas been dominant in every topic discussed. It hasgiven me courage to undertake, and strength to complete, a work which otherwise would never have beenattempted, and which, during the whole course ofits preparation, I would fain have seen intrusted tomore competent hands. My mysole, ardent desire,has been to show that there is nothing in true science, nothing in any of the theories duly accreditedby science and warranted by the facts of nature,nothing in Evolution, when properly understood,which is contrary to Scripture or Catholic teaching;that, on the contrary, when viewed in the light ofChristian philosophy and theology, there is much inEvolution to admire, much that is ennobling andinspiring, much that illustrates and corroborates thetruths of faith, much that may be made ancillary torevelation and religion, much that throws new lighton the mysteries of creation, much that unifies andcoordinates what were otherwise disconnected anddisparate, much that exalts our ideas of creativepower and wisdom and love, much, in fine, thatmakes the whole circle of the sciences tend, as neverbefore, ad majorem Dei gloriam.

PART I. EVOLUTION, PAST AND PRESENT. CHAPTER I. NATURE AND SCOPE OF EVOLUTION. Early Speculation Regarding Nature and Man. ROM time immemorial philosophers and stuF dents of nature have exhibited a special interestin all questions pertaining to the origin of man, ofthe earth on which he lives and of the universe towhich he belongs. The earliest speculations of ourAryan forefathers were about the beginnings ofthings. Questions of cosmology, as we learn fromthe tablets preserved in the great library of Assur-banipal in Nineveh, received their meed of attentionfrom the sages of ancient Assyria and Babylonia.And long before Assyria, Babylonia and Chaldea hadreached the zenith of their power, and before theyhad attained that intellectual eminence which sodistinguished them among the nations of the ancientworld, the peoples of Accad and Sumer had raisedand discussed questions of geogony and cosmogony.They were a philosophical race, these old Accadiansand Sumerians, and, as we learn from the recordswhich are constantly being exhumed in Mesopotamia, (13)

14 EVOL U TION A ND DOGMA . they had a breadth of view and an acuteness of intel lect, which, considering their environment and the age in which they lived, were simply astonishing. Well have they been called the" teachers of Greece," for all the subtlety of thought and keenness of per ception, all the love of science, art and letters, whichwere so characteristic of the Greek mind, were possessed in an eminent degree by those old pre-Baby-lonian masters who thought and taught and wrotemany long generations before Abraham left Ur ofthe Chaldees, untold centuries before Thales taughtand Homer sang. And the musings of the mysticHindu along the banks of the Indus and the Ganges ;the meditations of the Egyptian priest in the temples of Memphis and Heliopolis ; the speculationsof the wise men of Attica and Ionia, all turned moreor less on the same topics which possessed such afascination for the sages of old Chaldea, and whichwere discussed with such zest in the schools ofNineveh and Babylon. Whence are we? Whither are we going?Whence this earth of ours and the plants and animalswhich make it their home ? Whence the sun, andmoon, and stars those distant and brilliant, yet mysterious representatives of our visible universe? Didthey have a beginning, or have they existed from alleternity ? And if they had a beginning, are theythe same now as they were when they first cameinto existence, or have they undergone changes, and,if so, what are the nature and the factors of suchchanges? Are the development and mutations ofthings to be referred to the direct and immediate

NATURE AND SCOPE OF EVOLUTION. 15action of an all-powerful Creator, or are they ratherto be attributed to the operation of certain laws ofnature laws which admit of determination byhuman reason, and which, when known, serve as anorm in our investigations and experiments in theorganic and inorganic worlds? Are there special interventions on the part of a Supreme Being inthe government of the universe, and are we to lookfor frequent, if not constant, exhibitions of the miraculous in the natural world ? Has God s first creationof the universe and all it contains, of the earth andall that inhabits it, been followed by other creationsat divers periods, and if so, when and where has suchcreative power been manifested ? These are a few of the many questions about thegenesis and development of things which men askedthemselves in the infancy of our race. And theseare questions which philosophers are still putting tothemselves, and which, notwithstanding the manythousands of years during which they have beenunder discussion, have to-day a greater and moreabsorbing interest than in any former period ofhuman history. It is beside my present purpose to enumeratethe various theories in science to which the discussion of the questions just propounded have given rise,or to dwell on the divers systems of philosophy andreligion which have been the natural outgrowth ofsuch or similar discussions. Materialism, Pantheism,Emanationism, Hylozoism, Traducianism, Atheismand other isms innumerable have always been, as theyare to-day, more or less closely identified with many

16 EVOLUTION AND DOGMA.of the speculations regarding the origin and constitution of the visible universe. And despite thegreat advances which have been made in our knowledge of nature and of the laws which govern theorganic and inorganic worlds, many of the questionswhich so agitated the minds of the philosophers ofthe olden time, are still as far from solution as theywere when first proposed. New facts and new discoveries have placed the old problems in a new light,but have diminished none of their difficulties. Onthe contrary, the brilliant search-light of modern science has disclosed new difficulties which were beforeinvisible, and proved that those which were considered before are in many respects far graver than wasformerly imagined. With the advance of science,and the progress of discovery, many problems, it istrue, find their solution, but others, hydra-like, arisein their place and obtrude themselves on the scientist and philosopher, and will not down until theyhave received due recognition.Comprehensiveness of Evolution.To answer some, if not all, of the questions justalluded to ; to explain the phenomena of the cosmos ;to solve the problems of life and mind, and throwlight on the beginning and development of things,recourse is now had to a system of philosophy andscience which, within the last few decades, has attained a special vogue under the name of Evolutionism, or, as its adepts prefer to call it, Evolution.Evolution, we are assured, is the magic word whichexplains all difficulties ; the open sesame which" ad-"

NA TVRE AND SCOPE OF E VOL UTION. 17Wemits us into the innermost arcana of nature. aretold of the Evolution of the earth, of the Evolutionof the solar system, of the Evolution of the siderealuniverse. Men discourse on the Evolution of life,the Evolution of the organic and inorganic worlds,Wethe Evolution of the human race. have similarly the Evolution of society, government, religion,language, art, science, architecture, music, literature,chemistry, physics, mathematics, and the variousWeother branches of knowledge as well. now talkof the Evolution of the steamboat, the locomotive,the dynamo, the machine-gun, the telescope, theyacht and the bicycle. All that ministers to comfort, luxury and fashion are objects of Evolution.Hence it is that we hear people speak of the Evolution of the modern house-furnace and the cooking-stove the Evolution of the coach and the dog-cart ; ;the Evolution of seal-skin sacques, high-heeled shoesand of that periodically recurrent bete noire of fondhusbands and indulgent papas the latest pattern of a lady s hat. Anything which has developedor improved and what has not ? is spoken of ashaving come under the great law of Evolution, and,presto ! all is explained, and any little enigmaswhich before may have existed instantly vanish. As is evident from the foregoing, Evolution maymean a great deal, or it may mean little or nothing.It is manifestly a term of very general applicationand may often be very misleading. Properly understood it may be of signal service to the searcher aftertruth, while, on the contrary, if it is constituted anever-ready deus ex machina, capable of solving all

18 EVOLUTION AND DOGMA.difficulties, it may lead to inextricable confusion andtend to obscure what it was designed to illumine.It is obvious, too, that we must restrict the meaningof the word Evolution, for it does not come withinWethe scope of our work to speak of Evolution in gen-eral. have to consider only a particular phase ofit, and for this purpose it is important to have adefinition of what is meant by Evolution. Evolution Defined. Herbert Spencer, who is regarded by his admirersas the great philosopher of Evolution, defines it to bea change from an indefinite, incoherent homogeneity, to a definite, coherent heterogeneity; throughcontinuous differentiations and 1 And integrations.the operation of Evolution," continues the same au " Whether it be inthority, is absolutely universal.the development of the earth, in the development oflife upon its surface, in the development of society,of government, of manufactures, of commerce, of language, of literature, science, art, this same advancefrom the simple to the complex, through successivedifferentiations, holds uniformly. From the earliesttraceable cosmical changes down to the latest results of civilization, we shall find that the transformation of the homogeneous into the heterogeneous,is that which in Evolution 2 essentially consists." Spencer s definition, however, exact as it may bedeemed, embraces far more than we shall havemyoccasion to consider, for task sball be confined 144 First Principles," p. 216. 2 Id. p. 148.

NA T URE A ND SCOPE OF EVOLU TION. 19to the Evolution of the earth and its inhabitants, andonly incidentally shall I refer to cosmic Evolution.Indeed, properly speaking, the Evolution of which Ishall treat shall be limited almost entirely to organicEvolution, or the Evolution of the plants and animals which live or have lived on this earth of ours.All references, therefore, to the Evolution of theearth itself from its primeval nebulous state, and tothe Evolution of organic from inorganic matter, willbe mostly by way of illustration, and in order toshow that there is no breach of continuity betweenorganic Evolution, which is my theme, and inorganicor cosmic Evolution. Literature of Evolution.The subject is a vast one, and to treat it adequately would require far more space than I have atmy disposal. It has indeed a literature and a bibliography of its own a literature whose proportionsare already stupendous, and are daily, and withamazing rapidity, becoming more collossal. Forthe past third of a century, since the publication ofDarwin s " of Species," it has been uppermost Originin the minds of everyone given to thinking on serious subjects. Everybody talks about Evolution, andmore write about it than about any other one subject. More than five thousand distinct works, relatingto Goethe, who died in 1832, have, it is estimated,already been printed, and additions are continuallybeing made to this enormous number. Peignot, whowrote in 1822, declared that up to his day more thaneighty thousand distinct works had appeared on the

20 E VOL I TION AND DOGMA. history of France. The number of volumes that have been written on our Civil War can soon be enumerated by myriads, and still other works on the same subject are being published in rapid succession. Startling, however, as these figures may appear, they are insignificant in comparison with those relating to the subject of Evolution. In every language of the civilized world, books, brochures, and maga zine articles innumerable, have been written on Evo lution, and the number of publications of variouskinds specially treating of this topic is now almost beyond computation. Such being the case, it will evidently be impossible for me to do more than give a brief sketch ofthe history of Evolution, and of its status to-day inthe world of thought, religious, scientific and philosophic. It is something that one cannot developdans un mot, as a certain French lady expected of anoted savant, when asking him to explain his systemof philosophy. For a similar reason, also, I can discuss but briefly the bearings of Evolution on religionand Catholic dogma. I shall, therefore, have to limitmyself to a few general propositions, and refer thosewho desire a more exhaustive treatment of the subjects discussed, to the many elaborate and learnedworks that have been given to the world during thepast few decades. Freedom From Bias in the Discussion of Evolution. I may here be permitted, before going further, toremind the reader that it is of prime importance, inthe discussion of the subject of Evolution, especially

NA TURE AND SCOPE OF E VOL UTION. 21in its relation to religion and dogma, for one toweigh fairly and dispassionately the arguments andobjections of evolutionists, and to divest one s selfof all bias that may proceed from prejudice or earlyeducation, to consider the question on its merits, andnot to let one s mind be swayed by preconceived, orit may be, by erroneous notions. Let the value ofthe evidence adduced be estimated by the rules oflogic and in the light of reason. This is essential.In the discussion of the subject during the pastthirty and odd years much has been said in the heatof controversy, and on both sides, that had nofoundation in fact. There have been much exaggeration and misrepresentation, which have given rise todifficulties and complications that might easily havebeen avoided if the disputants on both sides hadalways been governed by a love of truth, and thestrict rules of dialectics, rather than by passion andthe spirit of party. Misguided zeal and ignoranceof the true teachings of the Church, always betrayone into making statements which have no foundation in fact, but, in the discussions to which the subject of Evolution has given rise, there has often beenexhibited, by both the defendants and the opponentsof the theory, a lack of fairness and a bitterness offeeling that are certainly not characteristic of thosewhose sole desire is the attainment of truth. Suchpolemics have injured both parties, and have delayeda mutual understanding that should have, and wouldhave, been reached years ago if the ordinary rules ofhonest controversy had always been inviolablyobserved.

22 E VOL UTIQN A ND DOGMA . Now that the smoke of battle is beginning tovanish, and that the participants in the contest havetime to reckon results and to look back to the causeswhich precipitated the struggle, it is found, and Ithink generally conceded, that certain of the representatives of science were the ones who brought onan imbroglio for which there was not the slightestjustification. But it is the old story over againhatred of religion concealed behind some new discovery of science or enveloped in some theory that,for the nonce, was raised to the dignity of an indisputable dogma. It was not, it is true, so much thechief representatives of science who were to blameas some of their ill-advised asseclce, who saw in thenew teachings an opportunity of achieving notoriety,and, at the same time, of venting their spleen againstthe Church and casting obloquy on religion andScripture.

CHAPTER II.EARLY EVOLUTIONARY VIEWS. First Studies of Nature. as we now know it, is a productEVOLUTION,of the latter half of the present century. Itwould, however, be a mistake to imagine that Minerva-like it came forth from the brain of Darwin orSpencer, or that of anyone else, as the fully-developedtheory which has caused so great a stir in the intellectual world. No ; Evolution, as a theory, is not thework of one man, nor the result of the work of anybody of men that could be designated by name.Neither is it the product of any one generation orepoch. On the contrary, it has been the joint achievement, if such it can be called, of countless thinkers and observers and experimenters of many climesand of many centuries. It is the focus towards whichmany and divers lines of thought have convergedfrom the earliest periods of speculation and scientificresearch down to our own. The sages of India andBabylonia; the priests of Egypt and Assyria; thephilosophers of Greece and Rome the Fathers of ;the early Church and the Schoolmen of the MiddleAges, as well as the scholars and discoverers of subsequent ages, contributed toward the establishmentof the theory on the basis on which it now reposes. (23)

24 E VOL U TION A ND DOGMA .This being the case, it will help us to a moreintelligent appreciation of the theory to take a briefretrospect of the work accomplished by the earlierworkers in the field, and to review some of the moreimportant observations and discoveries which led upto the promulgation of Evolution as a theory of theuniversal application which is now claimed for it.WeSuch a review will likewise serve another purpose. are often disposed to imagine that all the greatdiscoveries and generalizations in science are entirelyWethe result of modern thought and investigation.forget that the way has been prepared for us bythose who questioned nature thousands of years ago,but who, not having the advantages or appliancesof modern research, were unable to possess themWselves of her secrets. T e underrate and disparagethe work of the earlier students and speculators, because we are oblivious of the fact that they plantedthe germ which we see developed into the full-growntree, because we do not realize that we are reapingwhat others have sown. All great movements inthe world of thought are, we should remember,simply the integration of infinitesimals; the summation of an almost infinite series of factors whichare ordinarily ignored or disregarded. The successful generalizer and the framer of legitimate scientifictheories are, as a rule, those who avail themselvesof the data and patient indications of others, whoaccumulate and correlate disjointed and independentobservations which, separately considered, have littleor no value, and which tell us little or nothing ofthe operations of nature and nature s laws. Thus

EARL T E VOL UTIONART VIE WS. 25Kepler s laws were based on the observations ofTycho Brahe ; Newton s great discovery of the lawof universal gravitation was founded on Abbe" Pic-ard s measurement of the earth s meridian and ;Leverrier s discovery of the planet Neptune wassuggested by the perturbations which various astronomers had observed in the motion of Uranus. So,too, is it, but to a greater extent, in respect ofthe theory of Evolution. It is the result not onlyof the observations of the immediate predecessorsof those who are now regarded as the founders ofthe theory, but of data which have been amassedand of reflections which philosophers have beenmaking since our Aryan forefathers first began to interrogate nature and seek a rational explanation ofthe various mutations which were observed to characterize the earth s surface and its inhabitants.Evolution Among the Greeks.Thales, who was one of the first philosophersthat attempted a natural explanation of the universe, in lieu of the myths which had so long obtained, taught that all life had its origin in water.Anaximander, who flourished six centuries B.C.,seems to forestall certain evolutionary theorieswhich were taught twenty-five hundred years later.The he werexpwTa" first animals," roa, tells us, "begotten in moisture and earth." Man, accordingto the same philosopher, " must have been born fromanimals of a different form, 1$ aMoettitiv Zwutv, for,whereas other animals easily get their food by themselves, man alone requires long rearing. Hence, had

26 E VOL UTION AND DOGMA.man been originally such as he is now, he could neverHehave survived." first propounded the theory of" fish-men," which, in a modified form, was adoptedby Oken. Anaximenes, a pupil of Anaximander,made air the cause of all things, while Diogenesof Appolonia held that all forms of animal andplant life originated from primordial slime theprototype of Oken s famous Urschleim. Anaxagorassought the beginnings of animated nature in germswhich preexisted in nature, and were distributedthroughout the air and ether. In Empedocles, whois sometimes spoken of as the father of the Evolution idea, we find the germ of what Darwin callsnatural" and what Spencer denominates selection,"With"the survival of the fittest." the representatives of the Ionian schools, he was a believer inspontaneous generation, or abiogenesis, but he approximated more closely to the teachings of modernEvolution than did any of his predecessors or contemporaries. He recognized the gradual development of the higher from the lower forms of life, andtaught that plants made their appearance beforeanimals. Aristotle s Observations. But the greatest of the Greek naturalists, as hewas also the greatest of Greek philosophers, was* In his "Physics," II, cap. vin, Aristotle refers to naturalselection andand others, as the survival of the fittest, as taught by Empedocles very same combinations whenForfollows " the :happened to be produced which the law of final causes would havecalled into being, those combinations which proved to be advantageous to the organism were preserved; while those whichwere not advantageous perished, and still perish, like the mino-taurs and sphinxes of Empedocles."


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