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XIX - Darwin's work on the Movements of Plants

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 September 2010

Francis Darwin
Affiliation:
Honorary Fellow of Christ's College, Cambridge
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Summary

My father's interest in plants was of two kinds, which may be roughly distinguished as Evolutionary and Physiological. Thus in his purely evolutionary work, for instance in The Origin of Species and in his book on Variation under Domestication, plants as well as animals served as material for his generalisations. He was largely dependent on the work of others for the facts used in the evolutionary work, and despised himself for belonging to the “blessed gang” of compilers. And he correspondingly rejoiced in the employment of his wonderful power of observation in the physiological problems which occupied so much of his later life. But inasmuch as he felt evolution to be his life's work, he regarded himself as something of an idler in observing climbing plants, insectivorous plants, orchids, etc. In this physiological work he was to a large extent urged on by his passionate desire to understand the machinery of all living things. But though it is true that he worked at physiological problems in the naturalist's spirit of curiosity, yet there was always present to him the bearing of his facts on the problem of evolution. His interests, physiological and evolutionary, were indeed so interwoven that they cannot be sharply separated. Thus his original interest in the fertilisation of flowers was evolutionary.

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Darwin and Modern Science
Essays in Commemoration of the Centenary of the Birth of Charles Darwin and of the Fiftieth Anniversary of the Publication of The Origin of Species
, pp. 385 - 400
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2009
First published in: 1909

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