“It was a happy day that people
threw off the straight-jacket of logic and the burdensome
fetters of strict method, and mounting the light-caparisoned
steed of philosophic science, soared into the empyrean,
high above the laborious path of ordinary mortals.
One may not take offense if even the most sedate citizen,
for the sake of a change, occasionally kicks over
the traces, provided only that he returns in due time
to his wonted course. And now in the domain of
Biology, one is led to think that the time has at length
arrived for putting an end to mad masquerade pranks
and for returning without reserve to serious and sober
work, to find satisfaction therein.” With
these words did the illustrious Wigand, twenty-five
years ago, conclude the preface to the third volume
of his large classical work against Darwinism.
True, he did not at that time believe that the mad
campaign of Darwinism had already ended to its own
detriment, but he always predicted with the greatest
confidence that the struggle would soon terminate
in victory for the anti-Darwinian camp. When Wigand
closed his eyes in death in 1896, he was able to bear
with him the consciousness that the era of Darwinism
was approaching its end, and that he had been in the
right.
Today, at the dawn of the new century,
nothing is more certain than that Darwinism has lost
its prestige among men of science. It has seen
its day and will soon be reckoned a thing of the past.
A few decades hence when people will look back upon
the history of the doctrine of Descent, they will
confess that the years between 1860 and 1880 were in
many respects a time of carnival; and the enthusiasm
which at that time took possession of the devotees
of natural science will appear to them as the excitement
attending some mad revel.
A justification of our hope that Wigand’s
warning prediction will finally be fulfilled is to
be found in the fact that to-day the younger generation
of naturalists is departing more and more from Darwinism.
It is a fact worthy of special mention that the opposition
to Darwinism to-day comes chiefly from the ranks of
the zoologists, whereas thirty years ago large numbers
of zoologists from Jena associated themselves with
the Darwinian school, hoping to find there a full and
satisfactory solution for the profoundest enigmas
of natural science.
The cause of this reaction is not
far to seek. There was at the time a whole group
of enthusiastic Darwinians among the university professors,
Haeckel leading the van, who clung to that theory so
tenaciously and were so zealous in propagating it,
that for a while it seemed impossible for a young
naturalist to be anything but a Darwinian. Then
the inevitable reaction gradually set in. Darwin
himself died, the Darwinians of the sixties and seventies
lost their pristine ardor, and many even went beyond
Darwin. Above all, calm reflection took the place
of excited enthusiasm. As a result it has become
more and more apparent that the past forty years have
brought to light nothing new that is of any value
to the cause of Darwinism. This significant fact
has aroused doubts as to whether after all Darwinism
can really give a satisfactory explanation of the
genesis of organic forms.
The rising generation is now discovering
what discerning scholars had already recognized and
stated a quarter of a century ago. They are also
returning to a study of the older opponents of Darwinism,
especially of Wigand. It is only now, many years
after his death, that a tribute has been paid to this
distinguished savant which unfortunately was grudgingly
withheld during his life. One day recently there
was laid before his monument in the Botanical Garden
of Marburg a laurel-wreath with the inscription:
“To the great naturalist, philosopher and man.”
It came from a young zoologist at Vienna who had thoroughly
mastered Wigand’s great anti-Darwinian work,
an intelligent investigator who had set to work in
the spirit of Wigand. Another talented zoologist,
Hans Driesch, dedicates to the memory of Wigand two
books in rapid succession and reprehends the contemporaries
of that master of science for ignoring him. O.
Hammann abandons Darwinism for an internal principle
of development. W. Haacke openly disavows Darwinism;
and even at the convention of naturalists in 1897,
L. Wilser was allowed to assert without contradiction
that, “anyone who has committed himself to Darwinism
can no longer be ranked as a naturalist.”
These are all signs which clearly
indicate a radical revolution, and they are all the
more significant since it is the younger generation,
which will soon take the lead, that thinks and speaks
in this manner. But it is none the less noteworthy
that the younger naturalists are not alone in this
movement. Many of the older men of science are
swelling the current. We shall recall here only
the greatest of those whom we might mention in this
connection.
Julius von Sachs, the most gifted
and brilliant botanist of the last century, who unfortunately
is no longer among us, was in the sixties an outspoken
Darwinian, as is evident especially from his History
of Botany and from the first edition of his Handbook
of Botany. Soon, however, Sachs began to incline
toward the position assumed by Naegeli; and as early
as 1877, Wigand, in the third volume of his great work,
expressed the hope that Sachs would withdraw still
further from Darwinism. As years went by, Sachs
drifted more and more from his earlier position, and
Wigand was of opinion that to himself should be ascribed
the credit of bringing about the change. During
his last years Sachs had become bitterly opposed to
Darwinism, and in his masterly “Physiological
Notes” he took a firm stand on the “internal
factors of evolution.”
During recent years I had the pleasure
of occasional correspondence with Sachs. On the
16th of September, 1896, he wrote me: For more
than twenty years I have recognized that if we are
to build up a strictly scientific theory of organic
structural processes, we must separate the doctrine
of Descent from Darwinism. It was with this intention
that he worked during the last years of his life and
it is to be hoped that his school will continue his
researches with this aim in view.
The tendency among naturalists to
return to Wigand is well exemplified in an article
contributed to the “Preussischen Jahrbuecher”
for January, 1897, by Dr. Karl Camillo Schneider,
assistant at the zoological Institute of the University
of Vienna. This article which is entitled The
Origin of Species, pursues Wigand’s train of
thought throughout, and whole sentences and even paragraphs
are taken verbatim from his main work. This,
at all events, is a very instructive indication of
the present tendency which deserves prominence:
and its significance becomes more evident when we
recall how the work of Wigand was received by the
non-christian press a quarter of a century ago.
It was either ridiculed or ignored. The two methods
of treatment were applied to his writings which are
always readily employed when the critic has nothing
pertinent to say. It is interesting to note that
Darwin himself employed this method. Wigand once
told me that he had sent Darwin a copy of his work
and had addressed a letter to him at the same time
merely stating that he had sent the book, making no
reference to the line of thought contained in it.
Darwin answered immediately in the kindest manner
that he had not as yet received the book, but when
it arrived he would at once make a careful study of
its contents. Darwin did not write to him again,
and when a new edition of his works appeared, the
work of Wigand, the most comprehensive answer to Darwin
ever written, was passed over without even a passing
mention. Thus Darwin completely ignored his keenest
antagonist.
As has been said, the majority of
those who wrote about Wigand ridiculed him: very
few regarded him seriously, and even these indulged
chiefly in personal recriminations. Thus matters
stood twenty-five years ago. Wigand’s prediction
passed unheeded. That a periodical not having
a specifically Christian circle of readers should now
publish a condemnation of Darwinism entirely in accordance
with the views of Wigand, is a fact which indicates
a notable change of sentiment during the intervening
years. I should not be at all astonished if many
who sneered at Wigand twenty years ago, now read the
article in the Preussischen Jahrbuecher with entire
approval. Ill-will towards Wigand has not altogether
disappeared even to-day. This is evident from
the fact that as yet Dr. Schneider does not venture
to defend Wigand publicly, nor to acknowledge him
as his principal authority. We must be content,
however, if only, the truth will finally prevail.