Luck or cunning - Samuel Butler - PDF ebook

Luck, or cunning, as the main means of organic modification?

Luck, or cunning


This book, as I have said in my concluding chapter, has turned out very different from the one I had in my mind to write when I began it. It arose out of a conversation with the late Mr Alfred Tylor soon after his paper on the growth of trees and protoplasmic continuity was read before the Linnean Society — that is to say, in December 1884 — and I proposed to make the theory concerning the subdivision of organic life into animal and vegetable, which I have broached in my concluding chapter, the main feature of the book. 

One afternoon, on leaving Mr Tylor's bedside, much touched at the deep disappointment he evidently felt at being unable to complete the work he had begun so ably, it occurred to me that it might be some pleasure to him if I promised to dedicate my own book to him, and thus, however unworthy it might be, connect it with his name. 

It occurred to me, of course, also that the honour to my own book would be greater than any it could confer, but the time was not one for balancing considerations nicely, and when I made my suggestion to Mr Tylor on the last occasion that I ever saw him, the manner in which he received it settled the question. If he had lived I should no doubt have kept more closely to my original plan, and should probably have been furnished by him with much that would have enriched the book and made it more worthy of his acceptance, but this was not to be. ? 

In the course of writing, I became more and more convinced that no progress could be made towards a sounder view of the theory of descent until people came to under- stand what the late Mr Charles Darwin's theory of natural selection amounted to, and how it was that it ever came to be propounded. 

Until the mindless theory of Charles Darwinian natural selection was finally discredited, and a mindful theory of evolution was substituted in its place, neither Mr Tylor's experiments nor my own theories could stand much chance of being attended to. I, therefore, devoted myself mainly, as I had done in " Evolution Old and New," and in " Unconscious Memory," to consider whether the view taken by the late Mr Darwin or the one put forward by his three most illustrious predecessors, should most command our assent. 

The deflection from my original purpose was increased by the appearance, about a year ago, of Mr Grant Allen's " Charles Darwin," which I imagine has had a very large circulation. So important, indeed, did I think it not to leave Mr Allen's statements unchallenged, that in November last I recast my book completely, cutting out much that I had written, and practically starting anew. 

How far Mr Tylor would have liked it, or even sanctioned it is dedicated to him, if he were now living, I cannot, of course, say. I never heard him speak of the late Mr Darwin in any but terms of warm respect, and am by no means sure that he would have been well pleased with an attempt to connect him with a book so polemical as the present. On the other hand, a promise made and received as mine was, cannot be set aside lightly. The understand- ing was that my next book was to be dedicated to Mr Tylor
the book details :
  • Author: Samuel Butler
  • Publication date: 1922
  • Company: London, J. Cape

  • Download Luck or cunning - PDF 5.5 MB


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