American Addresses, with a Lecture on the Study of Biology eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 123 pages of information about American Addresses, with a Lecture on the Study of Biology.

American Addresses, with a Lecture on the Study of Biology eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 123 pages of information about American Addresses, with a Lecture on the Study of Biology.

That, I say, is the natural and obvious teaching of the circumstantial evidence contained in the stratified rocks.  I leave you to consider how far, by any ingenuity of interpretation, by any stretching of the meaning of language, it can be brought into harmony with the Miltonic hypothesis.

There remains the third hypothesis, that of which I have spoken as the hypothesis of evolution; and I purpose that, in lectures to come, we should discuss it as carefully as we have considered the other two hypotheses.  I need not say that it is quite hopeless to look for testimonial evidence of evolution.  The very nature of the case precludes the possibility of such evidence, for the human race can no more be expected to testify to its own origin, than a child can be tendered as a witness of its own birth.  Our sole inquiry is, what foundation circumstantial evidence lends to the hypothesis, or whether it lends none, or whether it controverts the hypothesis.  I shall deal with the matter entirely as a question of history.  I shall not indulge in the discussion of any speculative probabilities.  I shall not attempt to show that Nature is unintelligible unless we adopt some such hypothesis.  For anything I know about the matter, it may be the way of Nature to be unintelligible; she is often puzzling, and I have no reason to suppose that she is bound to fit herself to our notions.

I shall place before you three kinds of evidence entirely based upon what is known of the forms of animal life which are contained in the series of stratified rocks.  I shall endeavour to show you that there is one kind of evidence which is neutral, which neither helps evolution nor is inconsistent with it.  I shall then bring forward a second kind of evidence which indicates a strong probability in favour of evolution, but does not prove it; and, lastly, I shall adduce a third kind of evidence which, being as complete as any evidence which we can hope to obtain upon such a subject, and being wholly and strikingly in favour of evolution, may fairly be called demonstrative evidence of its occurrence.

LECTURE II.

The hypothesis of evolutionThe neutral and the favourable evidence.

In the preceding lecture I pointed out that there are three hypotheses which may be entertained, and which have been entertained, respecting the past history of life upon the globe.  According to the first of these hypotheses, living beings, such as now exist, have existed from all eternity upon this earth.  We tested that hypothesis by the circumstantial evidence, as I called it, which is furnished by the fossil remains contained in the earth’s crust, and we found that it was obviously untenable.  I then proceeded to consider the second hypothesis, which I termed the Miltonic hypothesis, not because it is of any particular consequence to me whether John Milton seriously

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