Robert M. Young Online Writings
CHARLES DARWIN: MAN AND METAPHOR
by Robert M. Young
One of the ways we make our heroes heroic is to see them as outside
history - so great, so original that their genius can't be accounted for - pure genius.
This is especially true of the scientific hero. The greater the scientist the more she or
he (almost always he) shows unprecedented intelligence and insight beyond the ability of
colleagues - a timeless vision of immutable truth - the eternal truths - the laws of
nature. An Einstein, we say - the purest.
I find it hard to think of Darwin in these terms. What a prosaic man he
was. No eureka moment a la Archimedes in his tub. No apple fell on his head a la Newton.
No abstracted way of life. He was neither absent-minded nor effete nor dandy. He was a
quiet, sober family man who rarely left home and in the last forty years of life rarely
left this village and spent most of his time an invalid on this couch.
And yet, if we were looking for a scientific theory that is important
to humankind, I can't think of a more significant one or one with wider and deeper
implications. Moreover, if I was to think through all the intellectuals in British
history, no matter how disinclined I am to the heroic mode, I would have to acknowledge
that Darwin was the most profound.
More profound than Hobbes or Harvey. More profound than Newton or Locke
or Faraday or Dalton or Rutherford or Crick.
It is said that there were three or four great blows to our self-esteem
in the modern era. The first was that the earth is not the centre of the known
heavens but that it revolves around the sun, displacing us to an
eccentric setting. The second that we descended from the apes, displacing us from a unique
relationship with the earth and God. The third that our behaviour and motives are
ultimately rooted in social and economic causes; and, finally, that we don't even have
access to the most important sources of our own thought and actions since these are
unconscious. Of these four blows to human pride at the hands of Copernicus, Darwin, Marx
and Freud, it was Darwin who rooted our humanity to the history of the animal kingdom and
to the history of the earth so that, as they put it in the nineteenth century, 'man's
place in nature' was a purely historical one, not above or outside history. Not specially
created. Not apart from the other creatures but one of them. At the same time, in the
1860s when it was being argued that slaves were our brothers, an even heavier blow to
Victorian self-esteem was felt - that apes were our ancestors and remain our cousins or
perhaps - as some caricaturists thought - our brothers, after all, like the slaves.
All of this added up to a considerable humiliation - rocking many of
the ideological, moral and spiritual foundations of human civility - even human
civilization. But at a deeper level I want to argue that Darwinism was very much part of
the establishment and constituted a subtle accommodation with the status quo, one which
was suitable for a rapidly changing social and empirical order. I am suggesting that we
should think of Darwinism in three ways: first, its popular reception; second, its deeper
cultural resonances; and third - to which I will now turn - its philosophical and
scientific significance.
Newton's laws and the concepts of physics and chemistry don't include
real historical time. They are eternal and timeless. But geology and the history of life -
biology - have real time at the heart of their explanations.
It was Darwin who brought history - or historiness - to the heart of
science. His theory of evolution by natural selection is the linchpin of the human and the
biological and the earth sciences. It is the single most general idea for understanding
how we came to be. It makes us natural and unites humanity and nature.
What it says is that over millions and millions of years the process
that eventually led to the species we call 'man' or homo sapiens evolved by purely
natural processes by tiny stages, each conferring a small advantage so that an animal had
more surviving offspring - selected in the struggle for life. Bit by bit by an infinity of
slow processes our kind came to be - descended in the last instance from the apes.
This seemed extraordinary to a popular opinion in the mid-nineteenth
century and seems utterly commonplace to us now. What is striking about Darwin as we look
back on him is how much he was a man of his own time - inside history, inside the ideas
and society of his era. Evolution by natural selection was a quintessentially Victorian
theory. When one looks closely at his theory, his originality, it is actually an amalgam
of a number of ideas which come from traditions which seem on the surface to be opposed to
science. What I am saying is first that he was not as original as is often supposed and
second that he got his ideas from some very unlikely places. Even so - and I'll come back
to this - his theory of evolution by natural selection is one of the two or three most
important and fundamental in science. We think of science as pure, clear, objective,
unambiguous - the opposite of arts or literature. Yet Darwin's key idea - 'natural
selection' was a metaphor, a vague ambiguous phrase, and this ambiguity and
metaphoricalness lay at the heart of its power. This feature of his theory greatly helped
Darwin's concept of natural selection to prevail over its rivals.
What I am out to show is that science and scientists are inside culture
- they are expressions of contending values and social forces rather than above them.
Moreover, that scientific concepts - and the more fundamental a concept the truer this is
- are packed with values - are even expressions of them and are deeply metaphorical.
The usual way of representing Darwinian evolution is as a challenge to
theology. Indeed, a common phrase in the nineteenth century as in recent controversies in
America is that the battle over Darwinism was the decisive one in 'the warfare between
science and theology'. Darwin is said to have been godless to have destroyed the link
between God and man and with it to have undermined the concept of free will and
responsibility and the hope for an afterlife. If we are animals, descended from the apes,
how can we have God-given choice and an immortal soul? Do fish have souls? Do insects?
Indeed, at a melodramatic setpiece debate at the meeting of the British Association at
Oxford in 1860, Bishop Samuel Wilberforce challenged T. H. Huxley and asked if he was
descended from an ape on his grandmother's side or his grandfather's side. Huxley replied
with great dignity that he would rather be descended from an ape than to use his
intelligence in such a base way.
But if we look closely there is no evidence that Darwin was attacking
theism. The one feature that all of Darwin's intellectual mentors have in common is their
belief in God. Indeed, it was not at all unusual for naturalists to be clerics in this
period. On the contrary, he tells us that the works of the Reverend William Paley,
Archdeacon of Carlisle and author of works on Natural Theology and The
Evidences of Christianity, were the only books in the academical course at Cambridge
which were any use to him in the education of his mind. They gave him great delight.
It was Paley's way of reasoning about nature's harmony which provided
much of Darwin's framework of ideas. He drew attention to the mutual adaptedness of living
things in relation to each other and to the environment. Paley said there was beautiful
God-given harmony. Darwin agreed but set out to explain how it came to be by means of
natural causes. Another parson who saw nature and humanity in religious terms was the
Reverend Thomas R. Malthus, who provided much else - the key to Darwin's mechanism of
natural selection. This became clear to Darwin as he was ruminating the fruits of his
55-month-37,000 mile voyage round the world, starting in 1831. The experience of such a
journey led Darwin to see the relationship between present and extinct plants and animals
on a grand scale. Indeed, the time scale was greatly enhanced by the Principles of
Geology by Darwin's mentor Charles Lyell of whom he said 'I always think my books came
half out of Lyell's brain'. Volume One of Lyell's Principles went with him when he
sailed from England and Volume Two was waiting for him when he arrived in Montevideo.
Lyell argued that only causes now in operation and in their present intensity produced the
changes in the earth and life which we observe to have come to pass. This process took
many millions of years rather than the few thousand allowed for by a literal reading of
the Bible. Lyell, too, was a theist and wished to exempt man's origins from his framework
of naturalistic ideas.
If we put together Paley's harmony with Lyell's time scale and the
ideas of Malthus, which pointed to a competition produced by the pressure of
ever-increasing populations, it is not difficult to arrive at Darwin's theory of the
development of species through the struggle for existence or natural selection. He is
quite explicit about this in his autobiography and his notebooks and the early sketches of
his theory. He said,
'In October 1838, that is, fifteen months after I had begun my
systematic enquiry, I happened to read for amusement Malthus on Population, and
being well prepared to appreciate the struggle for existence which everywhere goes on from
long-continued observation of the habits of animals and plants, it at once struck me that
under these circumstances favourable variations would tend to be preserved, and
unfavourable ones to be destroyed. The result of this would be the formation of new
species. Here, then, I had at last got a theory by which to work;'
There is a breathless quality about the sense of discovery in his
notes.
[show ms]
'It is the doctrine of Malthus applied in most cases with ten-fold
force . . . the pressure is always ready . . . a thousand wedges are being forced into the
economy of nature. In the course of a thousand generations infinitesimally small
differences must inevitably tell.' In his notebook for October 1838, he says, 'One may say
that there is a force like a hundred thousand wedges trying to force every kind of adopted
structure into the gaps in the economy of nature, or rather forming gaps by thrusting out
weaker ones'.
You might think that Darwin thoroughly secularized theistic ideas and
banished religion. But if that was so, why did he put three theological quotations at the
beginning of his great work On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural
Selection or the Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life?
[show]
These said respectively that God acted through general laws, that he
acted once and that there is no conflict between the book of God's word - the Bible - and
the book of God's works - science - they are complementary. Once again, if Darwin was an
enemy of theism, why did he conclude On the Origin of Species with this flourish:
Thus, from the war of nature, from famine and death, the most exalted
object which we are capable of conceiving, namely, the production of the higher animal,
directly follows. There is grandeur in this view of life, with its several powers, having
been originally breathed by the Creator into a few forms or into one; and that, whilst
this planet has gone cycling on according to the fixed law of gravity, from so simple a
beginning endless forms most beautiful and most wonderful have been, and are being
evolved.
The phrase 'by the Creator' was not in the first edition. Darwin added
it to the second edition and kept it in all later ones. All of this seems pretty
theological to me. But I'd say it was a secular natural theology. It was not the personal
god of the Christian life. It was a rather abstruse deistic god acting through natural
laws. Indeed, there has been a huge controversy about whether or not Darwin was a
believer, and current theologians battle over the fate of his soul. There is even talk of
a deathbed conversion. The passage in his writings which I find most convincing was a
remark he made to the Duke of Argyll in the last year of his life: that a sense of design
in nature often came over him with overwhelming force but at other times - and he shook
his head vaguely - 'it seems to go away'.
The popular controversies surrounding Darwin's theory were colossal.
Indeed, even the listing of the periodicals containing substantial articles about it
covers 15 pages, and then there were all the pamphlets and books. But let's look more
deeply and focus on what was happening among the elite.
Public debate happens at several levels. There is what we would now
call the media hype, and there's the - sometimes very different - reaction of the
intellectuals. One of Darwin's supporters was Frederick Temple, who was prosecuted in the
theological courts in 1860, but went on to write a book downplaying the notion of conflict
between religion and science (and after that he became Archbishop of Canterbury). Indeed,
Darwin was a serious supporter of the church in the village of Down where he lived out the
last four decades of his life and where he died. He was a pillar of the parish, something
of a squire/parson, and when he died his respectability was so great that Sir John Lubbock
along with 20 Members of Parliament and a future Prime Minister argued that it was
appropriate that he should be buried in Westminster Abbey. The editorial in The Times said this:
'By every title which can claim a corner in that sacred earth, the body
of Charles Darwin should be there. . . Charles Darwin has, perhaps, borne the fiat of
science farther, certainly he has planted its standard more deeply, than any Englishman
since Newton. . . The Abbey has its orators and Ministers who have convinced reluctant
senates and swayed nations. Not one of them all has wielded a power over men and their
intelligences more complete than that which for the last twenty three years has emanated
from a simple country house in Kent.'
So much for Darwin the anti-theistic iconoclast. His theory was a
synthesis of prevailing views which were themselves primarily theistic, and he was not
anti-theistic at all in the intentions of his own work. Nor were the Establishment
scandalized: they buried him next to Newton in the nation's shrine. Moreover, his
originality was of a kind which I find often in the history of great ideas. As soon as one
sees the elements which went into it, the puzzle is why no one else thought of it. His
friend and champion, T. H. Huxley, actually said when he first heard it, 'How stupid of me
not to have thought of that'. Of course, people had thought of all of the elements of it
and there were other evolutionists aplenty for him to ponder. Indeed, his grandfather,
Erasmus Darwin, had put forward a theory of evolution in the 1790s, and other evolutionary
ideas were current in the 1840s and 50s, but he gave it scientific credibility and - the
mark of genius - synthesized the ideas of his time.
Now I want to go back to Darwin the pure scientist. Here I am after
very big game and want to argue that the usual distinction that puts science and
objectivity on one side and arts and subjectivity on the other - with facts clearly
separated from values - is balderdash and part of a conspiracy to hide the values and
politics and ideological positions deeply embedded in science.
If we think of Darwin's concept of natural selection and follow closely
its history in his own thinking and in the controversy surrounding his work, we find it
deeply value-laden, deeply anthropomorphic - that is, partaking of human attributes and
treating the idea of nature as if it was a person - just the way scientific concepts
aren't supposed to be. Darwin wrote that nature was always 'scrutinizing', that she picked
out with unerring skill, 'that she favoured ' this and rejected that.
Indeed, his colleagues were at pains to point this out to him and his
reply is very interesting indeed. He says that 'natural selection' is no worse than
chemists speaking of 'elective affinities' of elements or physicists speaking of 'gravity
as ruling the movements of the plants'. 'Everyone knows what is meant and is implied by
such metaphorical expressions.'
I am arguing that at the heart of science lies metaphor - a concept
usually associated with literature, especially poetry. We think of science as literal but
at its heart lie figures of speech, in this case the idea that nature selects rather like
a breeder or a deity.
Darwin is not alone in this kind of thinking. On the contrary, he
points out that 'affinity' and other scientific concepts are no more or less scientific
than his. The same thing applies to all basic concepts in science. The other candidate for
Britain's greatest scientist, Isaac Newton, derived the concept of gravity from gravitas:
affinity, natural selection, gravity - all these are metaphors drawn from ideas of human
nature and projected on to nature as a way of seeing things and providing a framework for
a philosophy of science. Not all such projections turn out to be so fruitful, but that
doesn't set facts apart from values or literal statements apart from metaphors. The
history of scientific ideas, like the history of other ideas, is a moving army of
metaphors - some more general than others, but literalness is the enemy of scientific
progress.
This point connects to my last one. The values in science are not only
'connected' to those in the wider society. Rather, the values in the wider society throw
up the issues in science which come to be revered. This is particularly true of the
extension of the concept of natural selection into what has come to be known as 'Social
Darwinism'. The social survival of the fittest had a great vogue in the period of the
1870s to the 1890s and has regained new respectability in Reagan America and Thatcher
Britain. People often write about Darwin as if one could separate his scientific views
from Social Darwinism. However, this simply won't wash for two reasons. The first is that
as we have seen, Darwin was deeply indebted to the writings of Thomas Malthus about social
competition as the motor of progress. Beyond this debt, however, we find his own writings
shot full of so-called social Darwinist ideas. They are found in the Origin of Species and again in the book in which he spelled out the human implications of his thinking, The
Descent of Man.
In The Origin of Species he sees nature quite as 'red in tooth
and claw' as Tennyson ever did. The chapter on instinct speaks of slave ants and other
apparent cruelties as 'small consequences of one general law, leading to the advancement
of all organic beings - namely, multiply, vary, let the strongest live and the weakest
die'.
In the Descent of Man he extols the inheritance of property and
the replacement of the lower races by the higher.
'Man, like every other animal, has no doubt advanced to his present
high condition through a struggle for existence consequent upon his rapid multiplication;
and if he is to advance still higher, it is to be feared that he must remain subject to a
severe struggle. Otherwise he would sink into indolence, and the more gifted men would not
be more successful in the battle of life than the less gifted. Hence our natural rate of
increase, though leading to many and obvious evils, must not be greatly diminished by any
means. There should be open competition for all men; and the most able should not be
prevented by laws or customs from succeeding the best and rearing the largest number of
offspring.'
So - we find Darwin's scientific theory derived from prevailing
theological and social ideas, feeding back into the competitive and imperialist social
philosophy of his age, and we find the man honoured and entombed by the nation in
Westminster Abbey.
Darwin is certainly Britain's greatest intellectual. Moreover, genius -
especially intellectual genius - is not outside history or above it. It is the
distillation of the times, its quintessence. In the same way we see that science is not
separate from values or above them, it is their embodiment. This is true of theories,
therapies and things just as it is of industrial processes and commercial products. And if
science is inside history and is the embodiment of values, then science and politics -
which is values linked to power - are ultimately one topic. Science, values and politics
are part of a single set of issues about how we see ourselves and live together on the
earth - which Darwin showed us is one world.
This is the text of a television documentary in the series Late
Great Victorians, BBC1, 1988. It was published in Science as Culture 5:71-86,
1989.
Address for correspondence: 26 Freegrove Road, London N7 9RQ
robert@rmy1.demon.co.uk
© The Author
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