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hysical; but also a mental and social heredity。  When an ideal human character has taken form; then there is shaped a type; which through imitation and influence can become an important factor in subsequent development; even if it cannot form a species in the biological sense of the word。  Spiritually strong men often succumb in the physical struggle for life; but they can nevertheless be victorious through the typical influence they exert; perhaps on very distant generations; if the remembrance of them is kept alive; be it in legendary or in historical form。  Their very failure can show that a type has taken form which is maintained at all risks; a standard of life which is adhered to in spite of the strongest opposition。  The question 〃to be or not to be〃 can be put from very different levels of being:  it has too often been considered a consequence of Darwinism that this question is only to be put from the lowest level。  When a stage is reached; where ideal (ethical; intellectual; aesthetic) interests are concerned; the struggle for life is a struggle for the preservation of this stage。  The giving up of a higher standard of life is a sort of death; for there is not only a physical; there is also a spiritual; death。

VI。

The Socratic character of Darwin's mind appears in his wariness in drawing the last consequences of his doctrine; in contrast both with the audacious theories of so many of his followers and with the consequences which his antagonists were busy in drawing。  Though he; as we have seen; saw from the beginning that his hypothesis would occasion 〃a whole of metaphysics;〃 he was himself very reserved as to the ultimate questions; and his answers to such questions were extorted from him。

As to the question of optimism and pessimism; Darwin held that though pain and suffering were very often the ways by which animals were led to pursue that course of action which is most beneficial to the species; yet pleasurable feelings were the most habitual guides。  〃We see this in the pleasure from exertion; even occasionally from great exertion of the body or mind; in the pleasure of our daily meals; and especially in the pleasure derived from sociability; and from loving our families。〃  But there was to him so much suffering in the world that it was a strong argument against the existence of an intelligent First Cause。  (〃Life and Letters〃 Vol。 I。 page 310。)

It seems to me that Darwin was not so clear on another question; that of the relation between improvement and adaptation。  He wrote to Lyell:  〃When you contrast natural selection and 'improvement;' you seem always to overlook。。。that every step in the natural selection of each species implies improvement in that species IN RELATION TO ITS CONDITION OF LIFE。。。Improvement implies; I suppose; EACH FORM OBTAINING MANY PARTS OR ORGANS; all excellently adapted for their functions。〃  〃All this;〃 he adds; 〃seems to me quite compatible with certain forms fitted for simple conditions; remaining unaltered; or being degraded。〃  (Ibid。 Vol。 II。 page 177。)  But the great question is; if the conditions of life will in the long run favour 〃improvement〃 in the sense of differentiation (or harmony of differentiation and integration)。  Many beings are best adapted to their conditions of life if they have few organs and few necessities。  Pessimism would not only be the consequence; if suffering outweighed happiness; but also if the most elementary forms of happiness were predominant; or if there were a tendency to reduce the standard of life to the simplest possible; the contentment of inertia or stable equilibrium。  There are animals which are very highly differentiated and active in their young state; but later lose their complex organisation and concentrate themselves on the one function of nutrition。  In the human world analogies to this sort of adaptation are not wanting。  Young 〃idealists〃 very often end as old 〃Philistines。〃  Adaptation and progress are not the same。

Another question of great importance in respect to human evolution is; whether there will be always a possibility for the existence of an impulse to progress; an impulse to make great claims on life; to be active and to alter the conditions of life instead of adapting to them in a passive manner。  Many people do not develop because they have too few necessities; and because they have no power to imagine other conditions of life than those under which they live。  In his remarks on 〃the pleasure from exertion〃 Darwin has a point of contact with the practical idealism of former timeswith the ideas of Lessing and Goethe; of Condorcet and Fichte。  The continual striving which was the condition of salvation to Faust's soul; is also the condition of salvation to mankind。  There is a holy fire which we ought to keep burning; if adaptation is really to be improvement。  If; as I have tried to show in my 〃Philosophy of Religion〃; the innermost core of all religion is faith in the persistence of value in the world; and if the highest values express themselves in the cry 〃Excelsior!〃 then the capital point is; that this cry should always be heard and followed。  We have here a corollary of the theory of evolution in its application to human life。

Darwin declared himself an agnostic; not only because he could not harmonise the large amount of suffering in the world with the idea of a God as its first cause; but also because he 〃was aware that if we admit a first cause; the mind still craves to know whence it came and how it arose。〃  (〃Life and Letters〃; Vol。 I。 page 306。)  He saw; as Kant had seen before him and expressed in his 〃Kritik der Urtheilskraft〃; that we cannot accept either of the only two possibilities which we are able to conceive:  chance (or brute force) and design。  Neither mechanism nor teleology can give an absolute answer to ultimate questions。  The universe; and especially the organic life in it; can neither be explained as a mere combination of absolute elements nor as the effect of a constructing thought。  Darwin concluded; as Kant; and before him Spinoza; that the oppositions and distinctions which our experience presents; cannot safely be regarded as valid for existence in itself。  And; with Kant and Fichte; he found his stronghold in the conviction that man has something to do; even if he cannot solve all enigmas。  〃The safest conclusion seems to me that the whole subject is beyond the scope of man's intellect; but man can do his duty。〃  (Ibid。 page 307。)

Is this the last word of human thought?  Does not the possibility; that man can do his duty; suppose that the conditions of life allow of continuous ethical striving; so that there is a certain harmony between cosmic order and human ideals?  Darwin himself has shown how the consciousness of duty can arise as a natural result of evolution。  Moreover there are lines of evolution which have their end in ethical idealism; in a kingdom of values; which must struggle for life as all things in the world must do; but a kingdom which has its firm foundation in reality。


XXIII。  DARWINISM AND SOCIOLOGY。

By C。 BOUGLE。 Professor of Social Philosophy in the University of Toulouse and Deputy… Professor at the Sorbonne; Paris。

How has our conception of social phenomena; and of their history; been affected by Darwin's conception of Nature and the laws of its transformations?  To what extent and in what particular respects have the discoveries and hypotheses of the author of 〃The Origin of Species〃 aided the efforts of those who have sought to construct a science of society?

To such a question it is certainly not easy to give any brief or precise answer。  We find traces of Darwinism almost everywhere。  Sociological systems differing widely from each other have laid claim to its authority; while; on the other hand; its influence has often made itself felt only in combination with other influences。  The Darwinian thread is worked into a hundred patterns along with other threads。

To deal with the problem; we must; it seems; first of all distinguish the more general conclusions in regard to the evolution of living beings; which are the outcome of Darwinism; from the particular explanations it offers of the ways and means by which that evolution is effected。  That is to say; we must; as far as possible; estimate separately the influence of Darwin as an evolutionist and Darwin as a selectionist。

The nineteenth century; said Cournot; has witnessed a mighty effort to 〃reintegrer l'homme dans la nature。〃  From divers quarters there has been a methodical reaction against the persistent dualism of the Cartesian tradition; which was itself the unconscious heir of the Christian tradition。  Even the philosophy of the eighteenth century; materialistic as were for the most part the tendencies of its leaders; seemed to revere man as a being apart; concerning whom laws might be formulated a priori。  To bring him down from his pedestal there was needed the marked predominance of positive researches wherein no account was taken of the 〃pride of man。〃  There can be no doubt that Darwin has done much to familiarise us with this attitude。  Take for instance the first part of 〃The Descent of Man〃:  it is an accumulation of typical facts; all tending to diminish the distanc

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