CHAPTER VII. MISCELLANEOUS OBJECTIONS TO THE THEORY OF NATURAL SELECTION.
1. LONGEVITY. (continued)
It has often been asked, if natural selection be so potent, why has not
this or that structure been gained by certain species, to which it would
apparently have been advantageous? But it is unreasonable to expect a
precise answer to such questions, considering our ignorance of the past
history of each species, and of the conditions which at the present day
determine its numbers and range. In most cases only general reasons, but
in some few cases special reasons, can be assigned. Thus to adapt a
species to new habits of life, many co-ordinated modifications are almost
indispensable, and it may often have happened that the requisite parts did
not vary in the right manner or to the right degree. Many species must
have been prevented from increasing in numbers through destructive
agencies, which stood in no relation to certain structures, which we
imagine would have been gained through natural selection from appearing to
us advantageous to the species. In this case, as the struggle for life did
not depend on such structures, they could not have been acquired through
natural selection. In many cases complex and long-enduring conditions,
often of a peculiar nature, are necessary for the development of a
structure; and the requisite conditions may seldom have concurred. The
belief that any given structure, which we think, often erroneously, would
have been beneficial to a species, would have been gained under all
circumstances through natural selection, is opposed to what we can
understand of its manner of action. Mr. Mivart does not deny that natural
selection has effected something; but he considers it as "demonstrably
insufficient" to account for the phenomena which I explain by its agency.
His chief arguments have now been considered, and the others will hereafter
be considered. They seem to me to partake little of the character of
demonstration, and to have little weight in comparison with those in favour
of the power of natural selection, aided by the other agencies often
specified. I am bound to add, that some of the facts and arguments here
used by me, have been advanced for the same purpose in an able article
lately published in the "Medico-Chirurgical Review."
At the present day almost all naturalists admit evolution under some form.
Mr. Mivart believes that species change through "an internal force or
tendency," about which it is not pretended that anything is known. That
species have a capacity for change will be admitted by all evolutionists;
but there is no need, as it seems to me, to invoke any internal force
beyond the tendency to ordinary variability, which through the aid of
selection, by man has given rise to many well-adapted domestic races, and
which, through the aid of natural selection, would equally well give rise
by graduated steps to natural races or species. The final result will
generally have been, as already explained, an advance, but in some few
cases a retrogression, in organisation.
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