THE EVIDENCES OF EVOLUTION and HOW IT CAME ABOUT
§ 1
Progress in Evolution
There
has often been slipping back and degeneracy in the course of evolution, but the
big fact is that there has been progress. For millions of years Life has been
slowly creeping upwards, and if we compare the highest animals, Birds and
Mammals, with their predecessors, we must admit that they are more controlled,
more masters of their fate, with more mentality. Evolution is on the whole integrative;
that is to say, it makes against instability and disorder, and towards harmony
and progress. Even in the rise of Birds and Mammals we can discern that the
evolutionary process was making towards a fuller embodiment or expression of
what Man values most, control, freedom, understanding, and love. The advance of
animal life through the ages has been chequered, but on the whole it has been
an advance towards increasing fullness, freedom, and fitness of life. In the
study of this advance, the central fact of Organic Evolution, there is
assuredly much for Man's instruction and much for his encouragement.
Evidences of Evolution
In all this, it may be said, the fact of
evolution has been taken for granted, but what are the evidences? Perhaps it
should be frankly answered that the idea of evolution, that the present is the
child of the past and the parent of the future, cannot be proved as one
may prove the Law of Gravitation. All that can be done is to show that it is a
key, a way of looking at things, that fits the facts. There is no lock that it
does not open.
But if the facts that the evolution theory
vividly interprets be called the evidences of its validity, there is no lack of
them. There is historical evidence; and what is more eloquent than the
general fact that fishes emerge before amphibians, and these before reptiles,
and these before birds, and so on? There are wonderfully complete fossil
series, e.g. among cuttlefishes, in which we can almost see evolution in
process. The pedigree of horse and elephant and crocodile is in general very
convincing, though it is to be confessed that there are other cases in regard
to which we have no light. Who can tell, for instance, how Vertebrates arose or
from what origin?
There
is embryological evidence, for the individual development often reads
like an abbreviated recapitulation of the presumed evolution of the race. The
mammal's visceral clefts are tell-tale evidence of remote aquatic ancestors,
breathing by gills. Something is known in regard to the historical evolution of
antlers in bygone ages; the Red Deer of to-day recapitulates at least the
general outlines of the history. The individual development of an asymmetrical
flat-fish, like a plaice or sole, which rests and swims on one side, tells us
plainly that its ancestors were symmetrical fishes.
There is what might be called physiological
evidence, for many plants and animals are variable before our eyes, and evolution
is going on around us to-day. This is familiarly seen among domesticated
animals and cultivated plants, but there is abundant flux in Wild Nature. It
need hardly be said that some organisms are very conservative, and that change
need not be expected when a position of stable equilibrium has been secured.
There is also anatomical evidence of
a most convincing quality. In the fore-limbs of backboned animals, say, the
paddle of a turtle, the wing of a bird, the flipper of a whale, the fore-leg of
a horse, and the arm of a man; the same essential bones and muscles are used to
such diverse results! What could it mean save blood relationship? And as to the
two sets of teeth in whalebone whales, which never even cut the gum, is there
any alternative but to regard them as relics of useful teeth which ancestral
forms possessed? In short, the evolution theory is justified by the way in
which it works.
§ 2
Factors in Evolution
If
it be said "So much for the fact of evolution, but what of the factors?"
the answer is not easy. For not only is the problem the greatest of all
scientific problems, but the inquiry is still very young. The scientific study
of evolution practically dates from the publication of The Origin of Species
in 1859.
Heritable novelties or variations often
crop up in living creatures, and these form the raw material of evolution.
These variations are the outcome of expression of changes in the germ-cells
that develop into organisms. But why should there be changes in the
constitution of the germ-cells? Perhaps because the living material is very
complex and inherently liable to change; perhaps because it is the vehicle of a
multitude of hereditary items among which there are very likely to be
reshufflings or rearrangements; perhaps because the germ-cells have very
changeful surroundings (the blood, the body-cavity fluid, the sea-water);
perhaps because deeply saturating outside influences, such as change of climate
and habitat, penetrate through the body to its germ-cells and provoke them to vary.
But we must be patient with the wearisome reiteration of "perhaps."
Moreover, every many-celled organism reproduced in the usual way, arises from
an egg-cell fertilised by a sperm-cell, and the changes involved in and
preparatory to this fertilisation may make new permutations and combinations of
the living items and hereditary qualities not only possible but necessary. It
is something like shuffling a pack of cards, but the cards are living. As to
the changes wrought on the body during its lifetime by peculiarities in
nurture, habits, and surroundings, these dents or modifications are often very
important for the individual, but it does not follow that they are directly
important for the race, since it is not certain that they are transmissible.
Given
a crop of variations or new departures or mutations, whatever the inborn
novelties may be called, we have then to inquire how these are sifted. The
sifting, which means the elimination of the relatively less fit variations and
the selection of the relatively more fit, effected in many different ways in
the course of the struggle for existence. The organism plays its new card in
the game of life, and the consequences may determine survival. The relatively
less fit to given conditions will tend to be eliminated, while the relatively
more fit will tend to survive. If the variations are hereditary and reappear,
perhaps increased in amount, generation after generation, and if the process of
sifting continue consistently, the result will be the evolution of the species.
The sifting process may be helped by various forms of "isolation"
which lessen the range of free intercrossing between members of a species, e.g.
by geographical barriers. Interbreeding of similar forms tends to make a stable
stock; out-breeding among dissimilars tends to promote variability. But for an
outline like this it is enough to suggest the general method of organic
evolution: Throughout the ages organisms have been making tentatives, new
departures of varying magnitude, and these tentatives have been tested. The
method is that of testing all things and holding fast that which is good.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
(The following short list may be useful to
readers who desire to have further books recommended to them.)
Clodd
,
Story of Creation: A Plain Account of Evolution.
Darwin,
Origin of Species, Descent of Man.
Deperet,
Transformation of the Animal World (Internat. Sci. Series).
Geddes and
Thomson, Evolution (Home University Library).
Goodrich,
Evolution (The People's Books).
Headley,
Life and Evolution.
Hutchinson, H.
Neville, Extinct Monsters (1892).
Lull,
Organic Evolution.
McCabe,
A B C of Evolution.
Metcalf,
Outline of the Theory of Organic Evolution.
Osborn, H. F.,
The Evolution of Life (1921).
Thomson,
Darwinism and Human Life.
Wallace,
Darwinism.