|
|
|
The C. Warren Irvin, Jr., Collection
of Charles Darwin and Darwiniana
After Darwin
Darwinismus in Germany
Ernst Heinrich Philipp August Haeckel,1834-1919.
The evolution of man: a popular exposition of the principal points of human ontogeny and
phylogeny.
2 vols. New York: Appleton, 1879.
The German morphologist Ernst Haeckel was among Darwin's most energetic disciples, visiting
Darwin at Down House and promoting Darwinismus in the German universities. The comparative
table displayed here, showing embryo development in eight parallel species, extends Darwin's
own simpler comparison of dog and human embryos in his Descent of Man, to support Haeckel's
slogan that "ontogeny [the development of the individual embryo] recapitulates phylogeny [the
evolution of animal species from lower to higher forms]."
Darwinism and the South Carolina professors, 1
James Woodrow, 1828-1907.
Evolution: an address delivered May 7th, 1884, before the Alumni Association of the Columbia
Theological Seminary.
Columbia, S.C.: Printed at the Presbyterian Publishing House, 1884.
Woodrow, a Heidelberg Ph.D. who later became President of South Carolina College, was
asked to deliver this address before the seminary alumni and trustees because of rumours he had
been teaching Darwinism. Subsequently the Presbytery staged a full heresy trial that left its own
paper trail of charge and countercharge. The address itself, however, says relatively little about
the scientific issues of evolution, focusing instead upon its religious interpretation and meaning.
The question of hereditable characteristics
Sir Francis Galton, 1822-1911.
Natural inheritance.
London and New York: Macmillan, 1889.
Darwin's younger cousin, Francis Galton, had like Darwin himself abandoned the study of
medicine for a life of travel and research. Galton had been a strong early supporter of Darwin's
species theory, soon focusing his attention of the question of hereditable characteristics, mainly
through statistical surveys. Some of Galton's enthusiasms--the role of heredity in the
achievements of successive generations of Darwins, for example--now look quaint, and others--
eugenicism--politically less progressive than they once seemed. Nonetheless, from the questions
Galton posed developed the twentieth century interest in what would later be called genetics.
Darwinism and the South Carolina professors, 2
Joseph LeConte, 1823-1901.
Evolution; its nature, its evidences, and its relation to religious thought.
2nd ed., rev. New York: D. Appleton, 1892.
Joseph LeConte and his brother John had been science professors at South Carolina in the
immediate post-Civil war period, before moving to the University of California where John
became president and Joseph, a chemist and geologist, a professor. In the main part of this short
book, Joseph LeConte outlines evolutionary theory, striving to keep later questions about such
topics as the mechanism of genetic mutation in proportion by comparison to the broad scientific
agreement over Darwin's general theory.
Darwinian theory and the development of genetics
William Bateson, 1861-1926.
Materials for the study of variation treated with especial regard to discontinuity in the origin of
species.
London, New York: Macmillan, 1894.
In his earlier work, as in this book, the young Cambridge geneticist William Bateson argued that
Darwin's theories of variation within species explained less about species development than did
the observable instances of sharp discontinuity. By 1900, Bateson rediscovered and translated
Mendel's pioneer work on plant hybridization, naming the new discipline genetics.
Updated 1 August 2002 by the Department
of Rare Books and Special Collections.
Copyright ©
2002, the University of South Carolina.
URL: http://www.sc.edu/library/spcoll/nathist/darwin/darwin1.html |