|
Date: 17 September 2002
Subject: Other
Introduction
This is an essay about Charles Robert Darwin (1809-1882). He is a man
about whom vast amounts (of very varying quality) have been published.
There are some good detailed biographies of Darwin,[1] and this will not attempt to parallel them. Rather
it seeks to sketch some of the scientific and religious backgrounds
against which Darwin came, and to explore his own changing views on
religion (including his oft reputed "death-bed conversion"). Various
sections will deal with useful background (scientific and religious)
against which Darwin must be seen. His own scientific and personal
development will be very sketchily dealt with, and the focus kept on his
religious development.
Geology and Timescales
Scientific Development
Our first task will be to outline the history of the development of
geology, and assess Christian reactions to it. After this we will return
to consider alternative models suggested today to fit what happened.
There were ancient questions about fossils and strata. Fossils had been
known for a long time (e.g. Xenophanes (c570-480BC), Avicienna (980-1037)
etc. - but there was no obvious means to tell that they were organic in
origin. (To earlier ages in fact the word 'fossil' meant anything dug up).
It is not obvious that a fossil differs in kind from a mineral vein or
crystal. There is no obvious reason: (i) why or how organisms should turn
to stone (ii) how they could become buried in solid rock (iii) why fossils
like shells should be found up mountains (though some, after Tertullian,
suggested Noah's flood). Ussher's famous date of 4004BC in 1650 was more
recent than earlier commentators (who put it around 6000 or so BC), but
there was no evidence to contradict such a view in 1650, and Isaac Newton
was one of many interested in such scripturally based chronologies. There
was no clash with science on this, because there was no obvious way for
science to date the origins.
Earth
science based on observation basically dates from the mid seventeenth
century. We might distinguish three main important areas of actual
field-work:
i. Structure (i.e. recognition that strata had a
structure).
ii. Composition (i.e. mineralogy, what the rocks were made
of).
iii.
Fossils (in the modern sense of living
remains turned to stone).
On structure, Steno (1631-1686), who
later entered holy orders, was one of the first to suggest study of strata
on the obvious presupposition that they indicated an order of
deposition.
In the systematic study of the
structure of mineralogy and rock composition John Woodward (1665-1728)
founded a system that, though not profound, makes Porter describe him as
'remarkable' and 'prophetic' in pointing the way forward.
Fossils had long puzzled observers.
Some looked like living creatures, others didn't, and opinions on their
origins varied. Woodward began a useful collection of fossils and
minerals, still intact in Cambridge. At that time there was no obvious reason why living creatures
should 'turn to stone', and no obvious reason why fossils should not (like
minerals and crystals) be chemical products of the rocks
themselves. Nevertheless, the consensus view by the early eighteenth
century was that fossils were the remains of once living
creatures.
Naturalists at that time also faced
the wider problem of constructing a theory to explain how strata formed,
why fossils were found on tops of mountains and how (since they were all
Christians of varying orthodoxy and piety) this fitted Genesis. It should,
however, be noted that they all generally took a Baconian approach, not
tailoring nature to the Scriptures, nor feeling any great theological
pressure to do so, but simply developing their theology and science
together in seeking an ultimate unity of knowledge. Though, of course, individuals sometimes failed in the
application of this approach to which they were committed, science
'confirmed' Scripture but did not begin from it.
One suggestion was that most of the
earth's surface structure was laid down during the one Noarchic flood. Two
Cambridge scholars on what
Porter describes as 'on the liberal and rationalistic wing' of the church
put forward such theories. Both Burnet's (1681) and Whiston's (1696) theories proposed
non-supernatural mechanisms, though neither were practical naturalists.
Theologically, Whiston was unorthodox, whilst Burnet took Genesis very
allegorically. They found few followers scientific or
theological.
A third 'flood-geology, was that of
Woodward, An Essay Towards a Natural Theory of the Earth (1693).
Woodward suggested that in the flood the stone, minerals, chalk etc 'lost
their solidity' and were 'sustained in the water', eventually resettling
in the order of different specific gravity'. Contemporary Christian
naturalists like the pious Ray, Lhwyd, Nicholson, Baker, etc, found this
to make neither scientific nor theological sense. They pointed out that
neither the strata nor fossils are in order of specific gravity, it would
have required far more water than the Bible implied, the shells would also
have dissolved (leaving no fossils) etc. Woodward was forced to introduce supernatural miracles
supposing that normal gravity was suspended etc. This (though modern
'flood geologists' usually resort to similar stratagems) all rather
defeats the original object of constructing a scientific theory of the
flood - given enough miracle any theory can be made compatible
with observation.
More biblically minded critics also
pointed out that the Bible referred to the same rivers before and after
the flood, that the curse dated from the fall of Adam and not the flood,
and that the Bible implied a longer period than the 14 days in May
suggested by Woodward to account for fossil leaves. Woodward was a pioneer in observational geology, but his
actual system was scientifically impossible and biblically
unsound.
There was also another important model
which gained some support, due to Robert Hooke (1635-1703). Though Hooke
believed in the Bible and the widespread effects of Noah's flood, he
believed that marine fossils were found on mountains because the earth's
surface was in a constant cycle of uplift and fall - a series of
catastrophic earthquakes over a long period of earth history. His system
prefigured the later one of Hutton (whom some have suggested knew of it)
and also some ideas of William Smith.
It should actually be noted that in general (and Woodward was
an exception) 'most theorists were not field-workers, and most
field-workers did not write theories'. Field workers - like Ray and Lhwyd, were all too aware of the
shortcomings of theories. Davis Young rightly portrays how Ray puzzled
about how to construct one. Earthquakes might raise sea floors - but not to the extent
needed for mountains. A single flood of short duration could not account
for distributions of rocks and fossils without great ad hoc introductions
of miracle. Thus, though most naturalists suspected that a worldwide flood
might have something to do with fossils on mountains, ideas (like
Woodward's) that all the Strata were laid down in one universal flood were
never part either of scientific or of Christian orthodoxy. Men like Hooke,
Ray and Lhwyd believed no less in the flood than Woodward, but could not
believe it the sole agent for laying down the strata.
In the eighteenth century, the most
important figure in biology was probably Carl Linne or Linnaeus, the man
who adapted Ray's system of organic classification into the one which is
still used today. Linnaeus like Ray, specifically rejected the possibility
that all the fossils could have been laid down in the Genesis
Flood. Such, in fact, was the effect of accumulating evidence that
one modern study states that by 1750 Woodward's theories: 'were so
undermined that they could no longer be accepted, even by those geologists who emphasised the
flood's role. One of the few prominent 18th century 'flood geology'
naturalists was Alexander Catcott, who held a tense mixture of Woodwardian
and Hutchinsonian ideas. Hutchinson
rejected Woodward as insufficiently 'literalist', and Hutchinsonians
continued as a minority (much as modern young-earth creationists). They
were never, however, regarded as mainstream or orthodox. John Wesley, for
example, was himself interested in 'scientific' literature and encouraged
his preachers to be. He read (with them) various books on Hutchinson's system, and his growing
criticism culminated by 1758 in saying: 'I am more and more convinced that
they have no foundation in Scripture or sound reason.'
By the late eighteenth century all
schools of geology had concluded that the world was much older than
previously thought. There were, however, two major areas of
controversy:
1.
Aqueous vs
Igneous: 'Neptunism'
held that virtually all rocks had been laid down by the agency of water,
except relatively recent volcanic rock. 'Vulcanism', held that a number of
rocks (e.g. basalt, granite) were formed from molten lava - i.e. were
igneous in origin.
2. Progressivism vs Steady State: This concerned whether the process
showed a beginning ('primitive' rocks which contained no fossils), or was
simply endlessly cycling with no trace of any beginning.
Neptunism was generally progressivist,
vulcanism could be either. In these movements the figureheads (though not
the founders) came to be Werner and Hutton. Hutton argued that even
granite was igneous, and was a strong advocate of a 'steady state' theory.
He did not necessarily reject catastrophes as part of geological history,
but saw them as part of a steady-state system.
Hutton himself was deistical, but
there was no lack of Christians (e.g. Rev Playfair) amongst his most
prominent supporters. His steady state system merely says there is no
apparent trace of a beginning; God could, of course, have created the
whole thing instantaneously as an ongoing system. It was never a simple
issue of theological differences, and (though many were also interested in
theology) the arguments were, with few exceptions, based on observational
evidence.
In the early 19th century there were
two further developments. The first was the recognition by English
engineer William Smith, that particular strata could be systematically
identified by their fossils. It should be noted that Smith's ideas began
from the practical experience of work in mines, cuttings, and road
surfaces (which were just bare rock and not covered). The flat strata
around Bath where he lived
showed fairly clearly how different fossils appeared at different layers.
Smith was not a theoretician, and his approach was structural rather than
thinking in terms of 'dating'. No particular 'theory' was assumed, and certainly no concept
of evolution.
The written dissemination of Smith's
idea owed much to the writings of Brongniart and Cuvier. Cuvier was a
renowned French Protestant who experienced religious
renewal. He also opposed and rejected the contemporary theories of
evolution (due to Laplace)
as unempirical. Cuvier also developed an influential idea (based mainly on
data from around the Paris
Basin) that there had been
successive widespread floods. In England, William Buckland (a Dean who
wrote about the design of God in creation and whose wife attended an
evangelical church) developed this into a notion of successive worldwide floods,
of which the flood of Noah might be the last. This form of 'catastrophism' (i.e. successive 'catastrophes')
became popular. A leading advocate for it was the Cambridge Professor of
Geology, Adam Sedgwick. Its leading opponent was probably the Scottish
naturalist John Fleming, who rejected it (in favour of a tranquil flood)
on both geological and biblical grounds. Both were highly competent scientists. Theologically, Sedgwick
identified his views with those of Charles Simeon - acknowledged as one of
the foremost evangelical leaders of his generation - whilst Fleming was part of the evangelical revival which
split the Church of Scotland. On both sides of the debate, then,
leading protagonists were firm Evangelicals.
The standard 1820's geology textbook
was co-authored by W D Conybeare (whose 1839 book on the Christian Fathers
shows a highly orthodox theology) and Phillips (who held to the orthodox
'gap theory' of Genesis).
Of the first three decades, then, of
the nineteenth century, we can make the following clear
generalisations:
1. No serious geologist believed the world 6000 or
so years old, or that the strata were laid down in one big
2. No school of geology or leading
geologist assumed or even believed in organic evolution - although the
idea had been put forward both in Britain and in France.
3. Christians (including Evangelicals) were
prominent in the development and dissemination of the ideas of
geology.
4. Their ideas developed not because of some
anti-Christian agenda, but simply because of what they saw in the
rocks.
By around 1830 various controversies
had become settled amongst serious geologists:
A. Neptunism had been right in believing the rocks
to show a one-way history rather than an endless cycle (as Hutton had
thought)..
B. Neptunism had been wrong in supposing that
mineral type indicated age of rock - granite, for example, was fossil-free
not because it was 'primitive, (i.e. before organic creation), but because
it was igneous (i.e. solidified from molten rock, which could be of any
period).
C. Neptunism had been wrong, and Vulcanism right,
in the igneous origin of basalt, granite etc, and igneous rocks played a
major part in earth history.
D. The association of fossil type with age was
accepted.
E. The successive worldwide flood theories were
abandoned, and Fleming's slow processes were accepted.
Sedgwick's own field work, for example,
led him to a public admission in a Presidential Address to the Geological
Society in 1831 that his former views on (B) and (C) had been wrong. Dean
Buckland, Reader in Geology at Oxford, made the same admission in footnotes in a work of natural
theology of 1836. These ideas
were the basis of the work from 1830-1855 which saw the development of the
geological column still accepted by geologists today.
We need at this point to mention the
work and influence of Charles Lyell, a lawyer turned geologist about which
more baloney has probably been written (by Christians and non-Christians)
than any other figure in geological history. Lyell put forward two
distinctive theories:
i. 'Rate-uniformity': he assumed that rates of all
processes had been constant, and actually tried to work out time spans
based on it.
ii. 'Steady-state': Lyell assumed that all the
genera of animals had always existed in a steady cycle of species change -
there was no 'progression' of animal forms.
On (i), his sympathisers never
numbered more than a small minority of geologists - the general view (well
expressed by Sedgwick) was that it was a gratuitous assumption. Lyell's
attempts at actual time spans were never accepted, and by the 1860's even
he admitted it was hopeless.
Lyell's steady state theory fared even worse, he
won no notable converts, and this has led Michael Bartholomew in his
detailed studies to call Lyell a 'singular figure'. Lyell's famous Principles of Geology (1830-33) was a
best selling introduction, but neither of his distinctive ideas convinced
the geological world. What was more influential was its version of
geological history - a version which was really propaganda. Porter calls
it 'mythic history' but it remains influential.
In Reason, Science and Faith we
show in detail a number of other key points on Lyell:
1. Lyell was fairly theologically orthodox (though not naturally
devout), and his Principles took an anti-evolution line because of
his views on the specialness humankind.
2. Lyell was not especially important to the development of
geology
Actually the Evangelical John Fleming
had been leading an assault on Bucklandian catastrophism in 1825-6 when
Lyell was still a catastrophist, and Fleming was justifiably angry when Lyell later tried to
claim the credit for its demise. Fleming, Scrope and Prevost, were probably at least as
influential as Lyell on professional geologists like Sedgwick. Sedgwick's
own field observation was the real reason for his change of mind
which occurred between 1827 and 1830 i.e. before Lyell's book was
published. In any event, what was distinctive in Lyell's system remained
an oddity, and some modern evangelical geologists have doubted if even
Lyell himself fully accepted it. Lyell's excessive belief in constancy of rates was not
accepted by the majority of those who established the geological
column.
The geological column, then, was
essentially completed by 1855 (later changes were merely verbal) - four
years before Darwin published his Origin of Species, and three key
points need to be made about this:
1. It did not assume evolution, and key
geologists were vehemently anti-evolution
2. It did not assume uniformity of process
rates and most geologists were catastrophis
3. It did not depend on a circular 'dating
the rocks from the fossils and the fossils from the rocks'.
These three points are
demonstrated in detail in our Reason, Science and Faith. On issues
of methodology Adam Sedgwick (the most successful stratigraphic geologist
of all time) is especially important. His method was a complex interaction
of three dimensional stratigraphy checked against fossil horizons – no
circularity was involved and at no stage in his long career did he accept
evolution let alone assume it as part of his method.-
Interpreting
Genesis 1-3 in the Age of Geology
What was the effect on biblical
interpretation of the various stages of development in geology that
started in the last part of the seventeenth century?
John Wesley, who died in 1791, could
not really be blamed for still believing the world was 6,000 years old. It
was really by about the start of the nineteenth century that geology had
concluded (on empirical grounds) that the great thickness of strata
indicated an ancient earth. During the period (say) 1819-1833 there was
still one school of geology that believed that over long time periods
there had been successive inundation's - the last could be identified with
Noah's flood. That in turn was overthrown empirically by the early 1830's.
So how did Bible-believing Christian
leaders react to this development of geology and the geologists in their
midst? Four basic alternatives were on offer:
1. A Flood Geology: Put forward an alternative geology with all or
most strata ascribed to one flood, so that a young earth (c 6000 years)
can be kept.
2. The Age-day View: The 'days' were taken to be long time
periods.
3. The Gap theory: That between Gen 1:1 and Gen 1:2 there was
actually a long gap (into which dinosaurs etc could fit), then 'the earth
became without form and void'. The rest of Genesis 1 describes its
reconstitution.
4. The Framework View: Basically following Augustine & co in a
belief that the 'days' are purely schematic.
The first of these was taken up in
books by the so-called U.K. 'Scriptural Geologists' listed in Table 1 below.
|
Table 1: UK 'Scriptural
Geologists' |
|
1822
1825 |
Granville Penn (1761-1844):
Comparative Estimate of Mineral and Mosaic
Geologists (2 eds) |
|
1826 |
George Bugg (1769-1851)
Scriptural Geology
(1826-7) |
|
1829 |
Andrew Ure (1778-1857)
A New System
of Geology |
|
1833 |
Frederick Nolan (1784-1864)
Analogy of
Revelation and Science Established |
|
1834 |
Henry Cole (1792?-1858)
Popular Geology Subversive of Divine
Revelation
|
|
1837 |
Thomas Gisbourne
(1758-1846)
Considerations on Modern Theories of
Geology |
|
1837 |
Samuel Best (1802-1873)
After Thoughts on Reading Dr Buckland's
Bridgewater Treatise |
|
18331837 |
George Fairholme (1789-1846)
General View of the Geology of Scripture
Mosaic Deluge |
|
1837 |
William Rhind (1797-1874)
Elements of Geology and Physical Geography
|
|
1838 |
James Mellor Brown
(1796-1867)
Reflection on Geology |
|
1838 |
John Murray (1786?-1851)
A Portrait of Geology |
|
1838 |
George Young (1777-1848)
Scriptural Geology
|
|
1838
-44
1849 |
William Cockburn (1774?-1858)
Letters etc
A New System of Geology
|
When the Geological Society was
founded in 1809, its emphasis was on empirical research rather than
overall theory. As people realised in the 1820's and particularly in the
1830's that actually a geological consensus was now being reached, some
reacted by rejecting it and looking for an alternative. Flood-geology was
essentially a phenomenon of the 1830's, at a time when the full evidence
for the new geological consensus could easily not be known by figures who
were (as most of them were) slightly out of date with their mugged-up
science.
But how did Evangelicals in the 1820's
and 30's react? Support was given Scriptural Geology by the Calvinist
editor of the weekly paper The Record - whose dour controversial
tone was deeply distasteful to many Evangelicals.
Its attitude was abhorred by major evangelical leaders like Simeon, Sumner
and Henry Venn.
Sumner himself, regarded by Toon as one of the few whose evangelical
credentials were above reproach, castigated Ure without hesitation.
In any event, a modern study can state: 'the following of the Scriptural
geologists, for all their vociferousness and the plenitude of their
tracts, was small and consistently so.'
Mortensen, who is highly sympathetic to these 'Scriptural Geologists' in
his recent PhD thesis, nevertheless shows how by 1850 (note: nearly a
decade before Darwin
published his book on evolution) all the major orthodox
commentaries had abandoned any support for such schema.
Ronald Numbers' monumental book identifies only the very
obscure Lord brothers as advocating flood geology in the U.S.A. after
1850 (Lord's magnum opus being in 1851).
Actually, my own PhD thesis (Sec 6.2)
shows that, in the crucial 1820's and 1830's, mainstream geology was
accepted by both Anglican and non-Anglican Evangelicalism, as well as the
High Church – i.e. all those in the church who regarded the whole Bible as
inspired. This point is important, for it seems not always to have been
well understood even in some modern historical works.
In this period, the mouthpiece of the moderate evangelical Anglicanism of
Simeon, Wilberforce, Sumner, and the so called 'Clapham' group central to
British Evangelicalism, was the Christian Observer. Though it would
print letters from 'Scriptural Geologists' (and even from the more extreme
Hutchinsonians who rejected Newton), its editorial line consistently supported mainstream geology
and the position of clerics like Conybeare and Sedgwick who were
geologists. On the other hand it equally clearly rejected any suggestion
(such as that made by Powell at Oxford) that the Bible might contain historical or scientific
mistakes. Amongst Church
of Scotland Evangelicals,
key leaders like Thomas Chalmers, and geologist Hugh Miller, were equally
clearly committed to the value of geology. Amongst leading non-Anglican
(or 'Dissenter') Evangelicals, John Pye Smith wrote his book On The
Relation Between the Holy Scriptures and Some Parts of Geological Science
in 1839. His acceptance of mainstream geology was continuous (his
correspondence with geologist John Phillips is extant in Oxford and we have read it) and a final
version was issued just after his death in 1854.
The most common views amongst leading
Evangelicals between 1815 and 1859 (when Darwin published his book) were the
age-day and gap theory. The exact origins of these two views are hard to
discover. The idea of the 'days' as millennia was very early in Christian
and Jewish thinking (e.g. it is mentioned by Irenaeus), but there would
have been no possibility to associate them with geological ages
until geology reached this point in the eighteenth century. The age-day
theory can actually be traced back to Buffon in Epoques de la Nature
(1778), but was influentially revived by the Evangelical G S Faber in
his Genius and Object (1823), and had its most illustrious pre-1859
geological advocate in Hugh Miller in his The Testimony of the Rocks
(1857). Miller actually portrays the days as visionary or prophetic -
but argues that they are also indicative (with some caveats) of time
periods in history.
The gap-theory is traced by Ramm to
some figures in the seventeenth century,
and work in progress by Michael Roberts may in due course produce further
evidence of its early occurrence.
In the nineteenth century it owed its popularity to Chalmers in The
Evidence and Authority of the Christian Revelation (1817), to John Pye
Smith's On the Relation between the Holy Scriptures and Certain Parts
of Geological Science (1839) (and in later works like G H Pember's
Earth's Earliest Ages (1876)). Influential geological advocates
were Buckland in Geology and Mineralogy Considered With Reference to
Natural Theology (1836) - supported by high church scholar Pusey.
Amongst the evangelical geologists, in America Hitchcock supported it, and in
Britain Sedgwick also tended towards it though later was more wary of
committal.
Variants of the age-day and the
gap-theory dominated Evangelicalism in the years before Darwin (though in
Reason, Science and Faith we also look at ideas in J H Kurtz
(1842) and P H Gosse (1857) which never caught on much).
A popular view is that when
Darwin published Origin
of Species in 1859 most Christians believed the world to be about 6000
years old. It is quite simply incorrect. Leaders of all branches of the
church had long since abandoned any such view and it was not generally
considered credible by then. What the 'person in the street' believed is
harder to decide.
Evolution Before Darwin
(1)
Romantic Evolutionary Deism
Erasmus Darwin (1731-1802) was born near Nottingham, went to Chesterfield school, then Cambridge University
where he studied classics, mathematics and medicine. In 1756 he qualified
as Doctor of Medicine from Edinburgh after two years study there. He moved to Litchfield where he
lived for 25 years giving medicine free to the poor and for fat fees to
rich. He became a very eminent Doctor and a friend of Wedgwood and Watt
the new breed of inventors/industrialists. He influenced Shelley, Keats
and Coleridge and was involved in scientific societies. His major works
were The Botanic Garden (1789-91) Zoonomia (1794-6)
Phytologia (1800) and The Temple of Nature (1803). A
gargantuan man - large of appetite - he had 14 children (from two wives +
2 illegitimate). Socially and politically he was a revolutionary
freethinker, Deistic in religion he admired the Unitarian Priestly. His
view of mind was reductionist and materialist. He was Charles
Darwin's grandfather, though died before Charles was born His system of
evolution was romantic rather than empirical, it was fanciful and
hypothetical, and was not generally regarded as at the forefront cutting
edge of science in the early 19th century. Erasmus summarized his
ideas:
Would it be too bold to imagine, that in the great length
of rime, since the earth began to exist, perhaps millions of aged before
the commencement of the history of mankind, would it be too bold to
imagine, that all warm-blooded animals have arisen from one living
filament, which the first great cause endowed with animality, with the
power of acquiring new parts, attended with new propensities, directed by
irritations, sensations, volitions and associations; and thus possessing
the faculty of continuing to improve by its own inherent activity, and of
delivering down those improvements by generation to its posterity, world
without end.
When I quote this in lectures I
usually add "Amen" at the end – it sounds so much like a liturgy! This is
not a science of mechanisms and empiricism, but a visionary deism.
(2) French
Transformationism
The founder of this school
was Jean-Baptist de Monet Chevalier de Lamarck
(1744-1829)
"Lamarckianism" was a system of evolution based on use and
disuse of organs + interior forces. There was a kind of inbuilt upwards
movement in organic life. Other members of the school included
Etienne Geoffroy St
Hilaire (1772-1844). He
applied term 'evolution' (applied to embryonic development) to the process
of transformation from 1834 time his works began to be more mystical and
vague - dominated by idea of unitary universe. From 1832-1837 Geoffroy's
son Isodore produced work on monstrosity - seen as source of evolution.
(3) The British School
In the
first half of the nineteenth century there developed at Edinburgh and then in University
College London a school of comparative anatomy based on the French ideas
(i.e. Lamarck/Geoffroy). This school was:
*
Politically radical - standing for the abolition of all privilege
*
Atheistic - often actively ridiculing the idea of God and design in
nature
*
Materialistic - reducing mind to matter
*
Evolutionist - linking even invertebrates and vertebrates
*
"Disreputable" – largely marginalized as Richard Owen became dominant in
anatomy.
The
Edinburgh group were
involved in giving private tuition on a large scale because the official
medical lecturers (as sometimes happens in complacent Ivy League
institutions) were out of date, boring, and uninspiring. A leading figure
was Robert Knox (1793-1862), who in 1828-29 had
504 students in his "unofficial" private tuition group. In 1820 he came
under suspicion (although later cleared) of involvement in the infamous
Burke & Hare murders for cadavers, and in1842 Left for London where he experienced various
failures to get an academic post. Publications in Lancet etc
Another key figure was Robert Grant (1793-1974) who in 1814 Graduated as
MD from Edinburgh
1815-1820 and had studied medicine and anatomy at continental
universities e.g. Paris.
Grant became a lecturer on invertebrate animals in Knox's extramural
anatomy school in 1824. Grant seems not to have flouted any
transmutationist (i.e. evolutionary) views as much as the flamboyant Knox
and there may be some doubt as to how far Grant held the evolutionary
views in the earlier 1820's
or whether he really was the anonymous author of an article in Jameson's
journal in October 1826 which took a Lamarckian view. In any event, in1827
he received recommendations from the fairly scientifically conservative
John Barclay and Robert Jameson to obtain the post of Professor of Zoology
Comparative Anatomy in the newly formed University College, London. He was also recommended by the
conservative evangelical scientists John Fleming and David In 1827, then,
Grant became professor of comparative anatomy and zoology in University
College London. A reserved person, Grant was seen as increasingly
eccentric in his formality of dress as he lectured, and increasingly
anachronistic and out of date in his approach. Loosely connected with this
group was Robert Chambers (1802-1871) the son of cotton manufacturer who
was a bookseller and publisher. In 1844 he wrote Vestiges of the
Natural History of Creation anonymously - by 1860 it had sold over
60,000 in the UK, plus
foreign edition. The book bore the marks of a self-taught person, and was
slated by scientific critics from the evangelical Adam Sedgwick to the
agnostic T H Huxley. It position was basically materialist, though its
evolutionary schema was deistic.
Outline of Darwin's Life and Religion
Charles Darwin
1809-1831
Erasmus Darwin's son Robert Wareing
Darwin was also an eminent doctor, and married a member of the Wedgwood
family. Their son, Charles Darwin, was born in Shrewsbury in 1809. Robert Darwin had
Darwin brought up like his
devout mother as an Anglican (i.e. an Episcopalian or member of the Church
of England) although his own freethinking views were more towards
Unitarianism.
The Darwin's were very affluent, and
Charles had a good education (though was an average pupil). In 1825 he
went to Edinburgh
University with the
intention that he would follow the family medical tradition. The anatomy
courses there were gruesome and boring, and he disliked and eventually
abandoned medicine.
He attended, however, courses by two of the leading British exponents of
the two schools of geology in the 1820's. One was Thomas Charles Hope's
chemistry lectures. Hope was not research-active but spent much money and
time on his renowned flamboyant and visual lecture courses. Hope included
geology and mineralogy, which his syllabus shows were treated from the
Huttonian (vulcanist) viewpoint. The other course was given by Robert
Jameson, covering zoology, botany, paleontology, geology, mineralogy and
"the philosophy of zoology". both Jameson and the course, complete with
field trips, were justly renowned. Charles found Jameson's style very
boring, but (in spite of his later statement that he abandoned it) he
persevered as his notebooks show. Jameson was a Neptunist, and was also
the one to introduce (and translate) Cuvier's ideas of successive
inundations. Jameson famously remarked to a Royal Commission in
1827:
It would be a misfortune if we
all had the same way of thinking. Dr Hope is decidedly opposed to me,
and I am opposed to Dr Hope, and between us we make the subject
interesting."
Darwin read both Jameson's course Text
Manual of Mineralogy (1821) and the 5th edition of his translation
of Cuvier's geological discourse Essay on the Theory of the Earth
(1827). Darwin was
reading other science books. He studied the evangelical John Fleming's
Philosophy of Zoology which took a vitalist rather than materialist
view of living organisms, and bought and possibly read John Barclay's
Treatise on Life and Organisation (1822) which gave a similar view
(though his actual notes in his own copy date from a later period).
Barclay was critical of Erasmus Darwin and other evolutionists for a
mechanical materialist view of animals.
In 1823 a student natural history
society, the Plinian Society, had started, and Darwin joined this with enthusiasm. An
important figure in this was graduate and tutor Robert Grant, who is
reputed also to have sat in on Jameson's lectures. Grant was in his early
thirties, a very reserved bachelor who lectured in full evening dress (and
indeed continued to wear frock coats to lecture long after no one else
did!). Reports
show him as ostensibly melancholic and humourless, a kind of loner devoted
to his subject with excessive zeal. Darwin remarked:
I knew him well. He was dry
and formal in manner, but with much enthusiasm beneath his outer
crust.
In any event the young Charles became
friendly with Grant and learned much on invertebrates through him in
numerous field excursions. At some stage Charles had read and annotated
his grandfather's Zoonomia which he admits "I greatly admired at
this time" - and it is hard to believe he did not discuss it with Grant.
On 27th March
1827 Darwin's first proper scientific paper was delivered to the Plinian
Society on an obscure marine invertebrate Flustra. This led to a
cooling of relations with Grant, as Darwin's daughter related some forty
years later. Rushing to tell Grant of his discovery, he "was confounded on
being told that it was very unfair of him to work at Prof G.s subject and
in fact he would take it ill if my father published it." Three days before
Darwin's "big moment"
Grant read a notice on Flustrae to the senior Wernerian Society
(which accepted only graduates) in which Darwin's work was subsumed with little
or no notice. Grant may have seen this as a Professorial programme
(similar disputes have not been uncommon in the history of university
science), and Darwin was
probably not original. In any event, relationship with Grant cooled, and
the evidence seems to be that Darwin did not embrace the older man's transmutationism at this
time.
Darwin's religion during
this time was formally Anglican. His private notes show, of course, that
he was interested in materialism (he could hardly not be at Edinburgh at this time where it was in
hot dispute. Darwin toyed
with materialism in private notebooks – but seems not to have gone far
into it.
He realized, however,
that medicine was not for him, and it was decided that he would go to
Cambridge. Oxford and Cambridge at that time were Anglican
(i.e. Episcopalian or C of E) institutions and a degree gave the possible
intention of entering the Anglican Ministry. In preparation, he read and
appreciated the evangelical John Bird Sumner's
Evidences of Christianity.
He was delighted with the logic of William Paley's Evidences for
Christianity when he read it as part of his Cambridge degree.
That degree was an ordinary BA, rather than the academic Mathematical
Tripos, and he was not required to do a great deal of work. He spent much
time with his cousin William Darwin Fox who was four years older and in
his final year. Fox was gentle, unassuming, with a love of natural history
curiosities and an intention of becoming a country parson. Living fairly
indolently, the pair were both passionate beetle collectors, and Darwin an
accomplish etymologist.
For some time devout Christians had
been in the forefront of Cambridge science. The renaissance of Cambridge science was pioneered by
ardent evangelical Isaac Milner (Jacksonian Professor 1783-92), and
continued by his later successor the evangelical William Farish, a close
friend of the doyen of evangelicals Charles Simeon. Edward Daniel Clarke,
professor of Mineralogy in this period, was also a supporter of the Bible
Society. Trinity Fellow Adam Sedgwick (who had attended Farish and
Clarke's lectures) had become Woodwardian Professor of Geology in 1818,
began annual lectures in 1819, and went on to become a key stratigraphic
geologist. Trinity and John's colleges were central to the rise of
Cambridge to a dominant
position in British science. The great polymath William Whewell
(1794-1866) who invented the word "scientist" in the early 1830's, became
a Fellow of Trinity in 1817 and Prof of Mineralogy in 1828. In 1813 John
Herschel (1792-1871) had passed out senior wrangler from neighbouring
St John's College and become an FRS at the age of
21 – going on to win the Copley medal for mathematical papers by 1822 when
he took over his father's telescopes and work. In 1826 George Biddell Airy
(1801-1892) became Lucasian professor, and in 1828 Plumian professor of
astronomy. Others in the circle, like Joseph Romilly, John Stevens
Henslow, Richard Sheepshanks, and George Peacock, also went on to
scientific interest and honour. Sometimes dubbed "the Cambridge Network",
the brilliant group had great effect in science. The British Association
for the Advancement of Science (BAAS) was founded in 1831 by a group in
which these men were central. Thackray and Morrell started a fashion for
calling this Cambridge Network "Broad Church"
– but this is misleading. They were not bigots, but their theology was
generally conservative and moderately evangelical.
Darwin was
greatly influenced by Professor John Stevens Henslow with whom he came to
spend much time. Henslow had been a Professor of Mineralogy, and then of
Botany, but was also at home in mathematics and theology.
He was a knowledgeable scientist, did much to advance science in school
curricula, and was also a devout Christian of whom Darwin himself remarked
that he cared so much for the biblically based 39 articles of the Church
of England that "he would be grieved if a single word… was altered."
Ironically, Darwin once
rushed through to Henslow with a similar "eureka" moment he had been so
disappointed with in Grant. Henslow, in contrast, was encouraging, showed
no professional jealousy, and was easy for any young scientist to be with.
Darwin adulated him –
seeing him as the epitome of professional and personal perfection in a
man.
Though never himself devout, Darwin
was fairly orthodox in his theological beliefs at this time. He later
never wavered from the assertion that:
"As I did not then in the least doubt the
strict and literal truth of every word in the Bible, I soon persuaded
myself that our Creed must be folly accepted."
This is, of course,
hyperbole. These Anglican Dons believed that all the bible was
inspired, but were certainly not "literalists" - any more than the
mainstream of Christian teachers ever had been. Though, of course, the
miracles and resurrection in the gospels were taken literally, Dons like
Henslow and Sedgwick (or figures like Paley and prominent evangelicals
like Sumner) were not "literalists" on Genesis 1-3 and ALL of them
believed by this time that the world was very old. We have to be very
careful of some of the material on this presented e.g. by Janet Browne,
who does not seem to understand well the religious climate of the times
nor the non-literality of the evangelical tradition. Darwin's qualms as he
thought about ordination were not about orthodoxy, but about whether he
could really, when asked in the ordination service, claim that he had been
"inwardly moved by the Holy Spirit" to ordination. To graduate, however,
he had to make no such claim, but he did have to assent to the 39
articles of the Church of England, which certainly took the classic
approach of the Christian church and held to the inspiration and authority
of Scripture. Darwin did
so without qualms.
Darwin left
Cambridge in 1831, and
completed his science education with a brief geological tour of
Wales with leading
geologist Professor Sedgwick in 1831.
So strong is the "Darwin myth" than in a new Channel 4 TV programme
broadcast September 2002 "Origins", Darwin was portrayed by Steve Jones (a
geneticist wheeled in by TV companies when real historians of science
won't sing the tune they want!) as a radical advocate of glacial action
facing contemporary prejudice in favour of bones being washed about by
Noah's flood. Though years later Darwin did, of course, see that those
Welsh valleys had marks of glacial action, he was far from a trendsetter
on glacial action. He continued to argue in the 1850's that the parallel
"roads" around Glen Roy were raised marine beaches long after the evidence
of glacial causality was obvious, and in spite of obvious glacial remains
at the valley head. To contemporaries, he was not "St Darwin the
infallible" – but just another geologist (good but fallible). alongside
others. A comparison of the journals of Darwin and Sedgiwck on this trip
shows just what one might expect. That of Sedgwick is professional,
detailed, and technical – that of Darwin more speculative and less
technical. He was a young inexperienced geologist completing his
scientific education.
At the opposite extreme from
the "St Darwin" approach of adulators, in some of the literature it has
been suggested that Darwin
was some kind of dilettante "amateur" in science in 1831.
This is also totally misleading. Actually, the terms "amateur" and
"professional" in science have virtually no meaning in 19th century (or
earlier) England. Professorships were not enough to maintain a middle
class lifestyle, and holders were expected to either practice medicine or
hold a church living (e.g. Sedgwick was a Canon) even to maintain a
moderate bachelor lifestyle. There were no "science degrees" at
Oxford or Cambridge (at least until 1851 – and
these were for the less able!). There were, of course, those who were
accepted/accredited as scientists and those who were not, but there was no
"scientific career structure". Figures like A R Wallace and T H Huxley –
brilliant though they were – struggled to make enough to live on from
their science. Figures like Charles Lyell and Charles Darwin were
supported from private means – but were no more "amateurs" than (say)
Robert Boyle or Isaac Newton. In 1831 Charles Darwin was one of the
best-trained young naturalists in Europe. He had studied under Hope,
Jameson, Grant, Henslow and Sedgwick – and had read a great deal more and
done a lot of fieldwork on his own and under individual supervision.
Darwin had also seen the
radical change in geology between 1825-1831. The old Neptunist-Vulcanist
controversy (still in Edinburgh) was falling away by 1831 when Sedgwick delivered his famous
recantation. Darwin was
about to launch on a geological "career" – and he did so under the new
paradigms.
In religious terms, he had understood
materialism, but had come out on the orthodox side. The men he adulated
were not the Edinburgh
materialists, but the devout Cambridge Dons – Henslow in particular –
whose scientific and personal qualities he so admired. Darwin himself had
felt no great inward calling to the ministry, but was fairly orthodox in
his religious views. He was not a transmutationist (overt or crypto) and
certainly did not go off on the HM S Beagle to look for evidence for
evolution. His own evolutionary speculations began after his return from
that trip, as we shall see, in 1836.
Charles Darwin 1831-1842
From 1831 to 1836 Darwin was on the HMS Beagle as a
gentleman companion to the Captain Robert Fitzroy, and as an unofficial
naturalist. We have noted that he had received a first rate training as a
naturalist. He was unofficial because the official naturalist was a
comparatively low-prestige post and Darwin was a gentleman – but he was not
"amateur" in any sense we would think today.
He had been advised by Henslow to get and read Lyell's
newly published Principles of Geology but "on no account to accept
the views therein advocated." Henslow was, of course, was partly joking.
Browne suggests that Henslow and Sedgiwck objected to Lyell's
idiosyncratic "steady state" model on theological grounds – but she really
does not understand the fundamental Baconian views of the Cambridge Dons
who regarded such issues as to be settled by observation not theology.
They were, of course, entirely right. Modern geology has emphatically
rejected both Lyell's unidirectional model and his uniformitarian
assumption that all the processes always went at the same pace. Both
Sedgwick and Henslow valued the work as a general introduction to geology,
but rejected its idiosyncracies. Darwin exaggerated his indebtedness to
Lyell, but he did, on the journey, see evidences for the slow changes in
land elevation over long periods of time. Darwin was fundamentally a geologist at
this time, and specimens sent home were presented to the Geological
Society by his mentors Henslow and Sedgwick. He achieved a geological
reputation in his absence.
In Christian terms he remained
orthodox:
Whilst on board the Beagle I was quite orthodox, and
remember being heartily laughed at by several of the officers (though
themselves orthodox) for quoting the Bible as an unanswerable authority
on some point of morality. I suppose it was the novelty of the argument
that amused thee. But I had gradually come by this time, i.e. 1836 to
1839, to see that the Old Testament was no more to be trusted than the
sacred books of the Hindus….By further reflecting… that the more we know
of the fixed laws of nature the more incredible do miracle become, -
that the men of the time were ignorant and credulous to a degree almost
incomprehensible to us,- that the Gospels cannot be proved to have been
written simultaneously with the events,- that they differ in many
important details///I gradually came to disbelieve in Christianity as a
divine revelation…. But I was very unwilling to give up my belief; I
feel sure of this, for I can well remember often and often inventing
day-dreams of old letters between distinguished Romans… which confirmed
in the most striking manner all that was written in the Gospels. But I
found it more and more difficult, with free scope given to my
imagination, to invent evidence which would suffice to convince me. Thus
disbelief crept over me at a very slow rate but was at last complete.
The rate was so slow that I felt no distress, and have never doubted
even for a single second that my conclusion was correct. I can, indeed,
hardly see how anyone ought to wish Christianity to be true; for if so
the plain language of the text seems to show that men who do not
believe, and this would include my Father, Brother and almost all my
best friends, will be everlastingly punished. And this is a damnable
doctrine.

After he came home in 1836 he began
speculating on transmutation (evolution), whilst confirming his reputation
as a geologist. It seems fairly clear that his belief in evolution, and
invention of the ideas of natural selection, arose at this time and not
before or during his voyage. He lived in Gower
Street – near to Robert Grant whom he apparently
never went to see.
Darwin was now
(1838) speculating on materialist ideas. This is not just or even
primarily about evolution. His notebooks around this time begin to reflect
an essentially materialist and deterministic view of human beings. He was
concluding that freewill was an illusion and the brain was mechanistic. He
read Comte's Positivist Philosophy and moved away from the old Cambridge spiritual view of humankind.
He read and agreed with the work of his brother's girl friend, Harriet
Martineau, who held that "right" and "wrong" are culturally conditioned,
not spiritual endowments.
This kind of moral relativism was common amongst the very radical Whig
dissenters and Darwin's
observation of alternative cultures on his Beagle trip had made him ripe
for it. He courted in 1838 (and in 1839 married) his cousin Emma Wedgwood,
a devout Christian, and opened his heart to her about his increasing
unorthdoxy on religious issues.
He was not, of course, an atheist at
this time, and no serious commentator believes he was. For
example:
…despite his recognition of
the materialist implications of selectionism for human nature, he
continued for some time to believe that the natural world was created
by a rational God.
… Darwin was no atheist. He
accepted that all this resulted from God's natural laws, and if it
looked like leading to a godless conclusion, a "Man… would earnestly
pray "deliver us from
temptation".'
Harriet Martineau was a Unitarian,
believing that matter itself was endowed with spirituality. God was seen
as setting it all in motion. Yet in his notebooks Darwin was exploring the obvious
metaphysical implications of a consistent positivist creed. A person can
be "congratulated for doing good" but the act is actually purely
conditioned and "deserves no credit". Moreover "wickedness is no more a
man's fault than bodily disease!". Had his Anglican friends known his
views, it would not have been his evolution by this deterministic
materialism that would have shocked them.
But he still had no mechanism
for evolution. Darwin
claimed that in 1838 the reading of Malthus essay on population pressures
triggered his recognition that "natural selection" was the evolutionary
mechanism he had been looking for. Whether this was true, or he had
earlier seen the idea in Patrick Mayhew as some suggest, by 1838 the
framework of his later theory was in place.
Darwin claims
in the long passage quoted above that with his loss of belief he "felt no
distress". Yet Moore and Desmond are probably right in their
assessment:
Darwin was approaching the
Victorian dilemma, becoming 'destitute of faith, yet terrified of
scepticism.' His new Malthusian evolution might have been implicitly
secular, but it was not atheistic. How could it be, he asked, when
God's laws produced so 'high a mind' as ours?
This, always, was a tension in
Darwin's evolution. As a
process it was blind, pointless, directionless. New species were simply
better adapted to particular environmental niches. There were, rationally,
no "higher animals". Yet what Victorian gentleman, faced with all the
feelings of adulation towards a perfect gentleman like Henslow or an
angelic wife like Emma, could not feel that there "really were" such
things as "higher faculties"? Who could really throw off any notion of
purpose or morality or meaning – or indeed the choices we feel ourselves
to freely make?
Meantime, the devout Emma was lovingly
expressing to him her concerns, urging him to:
Read our Saviour's farewell
discourse to his disciples which begins at the end of the 13th Chap of
John… it is the part of the New Testament I love the
best…
Emma was always concerned for the
eternal destiny of her beloved Charles – but by this time he believed
neither in a soul nor an afterlife. It deeply concerned him, and continued
to concern him for the rest of his life as she too was concerned for her
husband. As Moore and Desmond say:
Emma's Christianity was a simple evangelical prescription
to gain everlasting life by believing in Jesus…
Again, his later claim to have "felt
no distress" is unconvincing. It was very stressful.
Charles Darwin 1842-1851
By 1842 Darwin, Emma and their two children
moved to Downe (or Down) in Kent, away from the turmoil of London in the 1840's. He lost his third
child Mary as a baby born shortly after their arrival, and continued to
write and work as a naturalist. By 1842 also, Darwin's evolutionary ideas were fully
formed and sketched – though he did not yet announce it publicly.
In early 1844 Darwin communicated some
of his ideas on transmutation to the young botanist Joseph Hooker, newly
back from a stint as assistant surgeon on a navy vessel (the mid decks
equivalent of Darwin's trip – open to poorer men like Hooker and T H
Huxley to further their scientific careers). Darwin famously wrote:
I am almost convinced (quite contrary to the opinion I
started with) that species are not (it is like confession a murder)
immutable.
Darwin
probably felt this for a number of reasons. He remained both indebted to
and deeply fond of Sedgwick and Henslow, and believed that the
Cambridge circle would be
deeply offended by his materialistic evolution (as his letter to Sedgwick
even in 1859 when the Origin was published showed). Secondly, he
was aware that his devout wife could be hurt by the publication of his
views. Thirdly, in the 1840's there was deep resentment amongst much of
the population (including nonconformist Christians) about the power,
patronage, and wealth of the Established church. Only Anglicans could
graduate from or hold posts at Oxford or Cambridge,
and much of the science patronage was controlled by the Church of England.
In cities, the poor lived in squalor, whilst the church collected tithes.
Atheism and atheistic transmutation were a favourite theme of the radical
agitators – and the last thing Darwin wanted was to be associated with the rabble in the very
turbulent 40's.
Hooker (whose background was
evangelical) was moderate in response. He would be interested to see any
evidence, though had as yet seen nothing to convince him. Meantime,
Darwin ought at least to
become an expert at something. Darwin did. He spent years studying
barnacles.
In 1844 Robert Chambers published
anonymously a tract of evolutionary Deism The Vestiges of the Natural
History of Creation. Chambers was self-taught – and it showed. The
work was savaged in reviews not only by the Christian Sedgwick, but the
agnostic Huxley, as bad science. Darwin remarked of it:
the writing and arrangement
are certainly admirable, but his geology strikes me as bad, and his
zoology far worse.
It tried to combine materialism (which
was more the base of Sedgwick's objections than the evolution as such) –
whilst keeping a deistic God who set it all up. Darwin realized that he would have to
have a better case than he did before announcing his own
theory.
His religious faith seems to have
continued to decline. Moore and Desmond suggest that
Just as his clerical career
had died a slow "natural; death", so his belief in "Christianity as a
divine revelation" had withered gradually. There had been no turning
back once the death-blow fell. His dithering had crystallized into a
moral conviction so strict the he could not "see how anyone ought to
wish Christianity to be true." If it were, "the plain language" of the
New Testament "seems to show that the men who do not believe, and this
would include my father, brother and almost all my best friends, will
be everlastingly punished. And this is a damnable
doctrine.
Hard heartfelt words, they
recalled the bitter months and years after the Doctor's death. But
what about the wider issues? How could belief in God and immortality
be justified given the conflicting evidence? "Inward convictions and
feelings" were unreliable because the human mind had evolved. Blind
nature had given them a survival value, like other instincts. So while
he sometimes felt himself a theist, at others he distrusted his own
feelings, let alone anyone else's.
His evolutionary views, coupled with
his hardening materialism, certainly played some part in this decline. But
emotional issues were probably also important. The death in 1851 of his
favorite daughter Annie (aged ten) destroyed any vestige of belief in a
benevolent creator:
For him the death marked and
impasse and a new beginning. It put an end to three years
deliberations about the Christian meaning of mortality; it opened up a
fresh vision of the tragic contingency of nature… Annie's cruel death
destroyed Charles's tatters of belief in a moral, just universe. Later
he would say that this period chimed the final death-knell for his
Christianity, even if it had been a long drawn-out process of decay.
This death was the formal
beginning of Darwin's conscious dissociation from believing in the
traditional figure of God…. Little by little, his theological doubts
turned into conviction.
The thought, moreover, of his
unbelieving father (who had died in 1848) in an everlasting hell of
incessant torture brought a moral revulsion to what he thought was the
teaching of Christianity as we noted in his words above.
There were then (as indeed now) conservative evangelicals who believed
hell to be eventual annihilation rather than everlasting conscious
torment,
but most simply take it that timeless suffering is involved without even
looking into what the New Testament actually says and without thinking of
the enormity of the implications of what they believe. Darwin did think about it, and
it horrified him.
Charles Darwin 1851-1859
Darwin
continued with his scientific study, slowly moving from geology to
biology. He studied not only Barnacles, but the effects of pigeon breeding
– looking for the breeder selection parallels to natural selection. But
still few knew of his theories. He was working on his big book on natural
selection, but was not yet ready to publish. As well as Hooker, the
evangelical American botanist Asa Gray now also knew of Darwin's ideas – in a detailed letter –
but was sworn to secrecy. Darwin was unready to publish, but safeguarding his
priority.
In 1858, as is well known, his hand
was forced by the arrival of a paper from the young naturalist. A R
Wallace. Wallace, unlike Darwin, was not rich, and was earning his liv |