Erasmus Darwin
|
Erasmus Darwin, the grandfather of Charles Darwin, was a leading intellectual of 18th century England. He was a respected physician, a well-known poet, philosopher, botanist, and naturalist. He was born near Nottingham on December 12, 1731, and was educated at Cambridge and Edinburgh. He formulated one of the first formal theories on evolution in Zoonomia, or, The Laws of Organic Life (1794-1796)("all vegetables and animals now living were originally derived from the smallest microscopic ones"), and he described the importance of sexual selection ("the final cause of this contest among males seems to be, that the strongest and most active animal should propagate the species, which should thence become improved").
Erasmus Darwin thus accepted that all plants and animals had evolved in form over the history of the earth - a history that he believed had lasted several million years. He believed that new species arose in the course of that evolution, which he believed was guided by natural forces. He also believed that many species had become extinct, as witnessed in the fossil record. The natural forces he believed involved "the faculty of continuing to improve by its own inherent activity, and of delivering down those improvements by generation to its posterity"; in other words he believed in the heritability of acquired features as the key mechanism driving evolution, thus anticipating some of the views of Jean-Baptiste Lamarck. In these ideas, he was influenced by the thinking of James Burnett, Lord Monboddo. [1]
Erasmus Darwin presented his evolutionary ideas in verse, in particular in The Temple of Nature, or the Origin of Society, a Poem, with Philosophical Notes
- "Organic life beneath the shoreless waves
- Was born and nurs'd in ocean's pearly caves;
- First forms minute, unseen by spheric glass,
- Move on the mud, or pierce the watery mass;
- These, as successive generations bloom,
- New powers acquire and larger limbs assume;
- Whence countless groups of vegetation spring,
- And breathing realms of fin and feet and wing."
From The Temple of Nature. 1802.
His published works also include Phytologia, or the Philosophy of Agriculture and Gardening (1799), in which he gives his opinion that plants have sensation and volition. In 1797 he wrote a paper on Female Education in Boarding Schools.
References
- ↑ Erasmus Darwin (1794) Zoonomia, or, The Laws of Organic Life