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Richard Owen's Reaction to Transmutation in the 1830's
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 January 2009
Extract
Following Michael Bartholomew's study of ‘Lyell and Evolution’ in 1973, scholars have become increasingly interested in the response of gentlemen geologists to Lamarckism during the reign of William IV (1830–7). Bartholomew contended that Charles Lyell was ‘alone in scenting the danger’ for man of using transmutation to explain fossil progression, and that he reacted to the threat of bestialisation by restructuring palaeontology along safe non-progressionist lines. Like his Anglican contemporaries, Lyell was concerned to prove that man was no transformed ape, and that morals were not the better part of brute instinct. Dov Ospovat has subsequently suggested that Lyell's theory of climate was equally an attempt to thwart the transformists and ‘preserve man's unique status in creation’. In other words, Lyell's biology and geology were inextricably related in Principles of Geology and his ideology affected his science as a whole. Finally, Pietro Corsi has identified the Continental materialists who most probably alerted Lyell to the danger, intimating that a conservative British response became imperative when Lyell ‘saw signs of the diffusion of transformism in England itself, where it could even form an unholy alliance with prevailing progressionist and directionalist interpretations of the history of life on earth’.
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References
I should like to thank William F. Bynum and James A. Secord for discussions; and the following institutions and libraries for permission to study manuscript material: The British Library, British Museum archives, British Museum (Natural History), Edinburgh University, Geological Society of London, Royal College of Surgeons of England, Alexander Turnbull Library, Wellington, New Zealand, University College London, and the Zoological Society of London.
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118 Ibid.
119 See sources cited in op. cit. (7).
120 Carpenter himself realised this: Carpenter, W. B., Nature and man: essays scientific and philosophical, London, 1888, p. 107.CrossRefGoogle Scholar For a discussion see Desmond, , op. cit. (7), passim.Google Scholar
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127 For example, he moved to obtain an F.R.S. for W. Brodie before the latter returned to New Zealand, telling Buckland that it ‘may add to the great determination which he manifests to collect and transmit specimens & information from that colony’. Since Brodie had already armed Owen with a seventh Dinornis species, Owen was well aware of the advantages that could accrue from such an award: Owen, to Buckland, , 17 01 1845Google Scholar, BL Add. MS. 38091, f. 207; and 13 November 1844, BL Add. MS. 38091, f. 205.
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