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CHAPTER XIV - FUNDAMENTAL PROBLEMS IN RELATION TO VARIATION AND HEREDITY

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 August 2010

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Summary

Having now set forth and illustrated at some length the most important of the applications of the development hypothesis in the explanation of the broader and more generally interesting phenomena presented by the organic world, we propose to discuss some of the more fundamental problems and difficulties which have recently been adduced by eminent naturalists. It is the more necessary to do this, because there is now a tendency to minimise the action of natural selection in the production of organic forms, and to set up in its place certain fundamental principles of variation or laws of growth, which it is urged are the real originators of the several lines of development, and of most of the variety of form and structure in the vegetable and animal kingdoms. These views have, moreover, been seized upon by popular writers to throw doubt and discredit on the whole theory of evolution, and especially on Darwin's presentation of that theory, to the bewilderment of the general public, who are quite unable to decide how far the new views, even if well established, tend to subvert the Darwinian theory, or whether they are really more than subsidiary parts of it, and quite powerless without it to produce any effect whatever.

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Darwinism
An Exposition of the Theory of Natural Selection, with some of its Applications
, pp. 414 - 448
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2009
First published in: 1889

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