As further witnesses to the passing
of Darwinism, two botanists may be cited; the first
is Professor Korschinsky who in N, 1899, of the
Naturwissenschaftliche Wochenschrift published
an article on “Heterogenesis and Evolution,”
which was to be followed later by a large work on
this subject. With precision and emphasis he points
to the numerous instances in which there occurs on
or in a plant, suddenly and without intervention,
a variation which may become hereditary under certain
circumstances; thus during the last century a number
of varieties of garden plants have been evolved.
On the basis of such experiments Korschinsky developed
the theory which had been proposed by Koelliker in
Wuerzburg thirty years earlier, namely, the theory
of “heterogeneous production” or “heterogenesis,”
as Korschinsky calls it. When one understands
that a plant gives rise suddenly and without any intervention
to a grain of seed, which produces a different plant,
it becomes evident that all Darwinistic speculations
about selection and struggle for existence are forthwith
absolutely excluded. The effect can proceed only
from the internal vital powers inherent in the specified
organism acting in connection, perhaps, with the internal
conditions of life, which suddenly exert an influence
in a new direction.
Korschinsky distinguishes clearly
and definitely between the principles of Heterogenesis
and Transmutation (gradual transformation through
natural selection in the struggle for existence), and
in so doing comes to a complete denial of Darwinism.
The other naturalist who has dealt
Darwinism a telling blow is the botanist of Graz,
Professor Haberlandt.
He published some very interesting
observations and experiments in the “Festschrift
fuer Schwendener” (Berlin 1899, Borntraeger).
They are concerned with a Liane javas of
the family of mulberry plants (Conocephalus ovatus.)
The free leaves possess under the outer layer, a tissue
composed of large, thin-walled, water-storing cells;
flat cavities on the upper side, having, furthermore,
organs that secrete water, which the botanist calls
hydathodes. These are delicate, small, glandular
cells over which are the bundles of vascular fibres
(leaf-veins) that convey the water to them; over these
in the top layer are so-called water-crevices through
which the water can force itself to the outside.
It is unnecessary to enter upon a closer explanation
of the anatomical structure of these peculiar organs.
The water which is forced upward by the root-pressure
of the plant is naturally conveyed through the vascular
fibres into the leaves and at every hydathode the
superfluous water oozes out in drops, a phenomenon
which one can also very nicely observe e.g. on
the “Lady’s cloak” (Alchemilla vulgaris)
of the German flora. A portion of the night-dew
must be attributed to this secretion of water.
On the Liane, then, Haberlandt observed a very considerable
secretion of water: a full-grown leaf secreted
during one night 2.76 g. of water (that is 26 per
cent. of its own weight.) Through this peculiarity
the water supply within the plant is regulated and
the danger avoided that any water should penetrate
the surrounding tissue in consequence of strong root-pressure, which
would naturally obstruct the vital function of the
entire leaf. Besides it is to be noticed that
in this way an abundant flow of water is produced:
the plant takes up large quantities of water from
the earth, laden with nutritive salts, and the distilled
water is almost pure (it contains only 0.045 g. salts),
so that the nutritive salts are absorbed by the plant.
From these considerations it necessarily
appears that the hydathodes are of great biological
importance to the plant.
Haberlandt then “poisoned”
the plant, by sprinkling it with a 0.1 per cent sublimate
solution of alcohol. The purpose of this experiment
was to ascertain whether in the secretion of water
there was question of a merely physical process or
of a vital process. In the first case the action
of the hydathode should continue even after the treatment
with the sublimate solution, while in the latter case
it should not. As the secretion ceased the obvious
conclusion to be deduced from this experiment is that
the hydathodes do not act as purely mechanical filtration-apparatuses,
as one might have thought, but that there is here
evidence of an active vital process in the plant; the
unusual term “poisoning” is therefore
really justified under present circumstances.
Let me dwell for a moment on this
result, for, although it may be somewhat foreign to
our present purpose and to the further observations
of Haberlandt, it is very significant in itself.
The water moves in the plant in closed cells, as the
cells of the aqueous gland are entirely closed, but
the organic membrane, as every one knows, has the peculiar
physical property of allowing water to pass through,
the pressure, of course, being applied on the side
of least resistance; when therefore the water is forced
into the cells by root-pressure, it is easily intelligible
that according to purely physical laws it should come
to the surface of the leaf on the side of the least
resistance, that is, by way of the water-crevices.
Even the defenders of “vital force” would
not find any reason in this for not considering the
phenomenon of distillation in this case a purely physical
phenomenon. And still according to Haberlandt’s
experiments it is not. The sublimate could at
most only impede the process of filtration, but should
under no circumstances have destroyed it. But
it does destroy it, and the hydathode dies. The
conclusion certainly follows from this that this process
is connected with some vital function. Even if
the hydathode is treated with sublimate solution,
all the conditions for mechanical filtration still
remain: the earth has moisture which can be taken
up by the roots so that root-pressure still exists.
The water is in all cases conveyed to the hydathodes
through the vascular fibres, the cell walls of the
hydathodes are still adapted for filtration, and yet
they do not filter. Hence some other factor must
join itself to the physico-mechanical process of filtration
and affect or destroy it, and this factor can be found
only in the protoplasm, the vital element of the cells;
for we know that the sublimate acts with pernicious
effect on it and in such a manner that it destroys
its entire power of reaction; it kills it, as we say.
The experiment under discussion has,
therefore, great significance for our view of the
vital processes in the plant; it proves beyond doubt
that these processes are in no way of a purely mechanical
nature, but that there is something underlying all
this, a hitherto inexplicable something, which we
call “life.” In all vital activities,
physical and chemical processes certainly do occur;
they do not, however, take place spontaneously but
are made use of by the vital element of the plant to
produce an effect that is desirable or necessary for
the vital activity of the plant. If the vital
element is dead, no matter how favorable the conditions
may be for chemical and physical processes, these do
not take place and the effect necessary for life is
not obtained. It is very remarkable after all
that according to the experiment of Haberlandt this
peculiar relation should become apparent in a process
that is so open to our investigation as the filtration
of water through the cell-wall of a plant.
After what has been said I consider
this simple experiment of Haberlandt of great significance;
for it is a direct proof of the existence of a vital
force. One may resist to his heart’s content,
but without avail; vital force is again finding its
way into science. More and more cognizance is
being taken of the fact that 60 and 70 years ago people
jumped at conclusions very imprudently when they believed
that the first artificial preparation of organic matter
(urea, by Woehler) had proven the non-existence of
a vital force. Since then there has been great
rejoicing in the camp of materialists who scoffed at
the “ignorant” who would not as yet forsake
vital force. “Behold,” they said,
“in the chemist’s retort the same matter
is produced chemically that is produced in the body
of the animal, without the direction of a hidden vital
force, which, if it is not necessary in the one case,
neither is it necessary in the other.” Any
one who had given the matter careful consideration
could even at that time have known where the “ignorant”
really were. That in both cases chemical processes
take place is clear and undisputed, but the materialists
forgot entirely that even in the laboratory it was
not the mere contact of the elements that produced
the urea; a chemist was needed and in this case not
any one arbitrarily chosen, but a man of the genius
and knowledge of a Woehler to watch over the process,
and utilize and partly direct the laws of chemistry
in order to obtain the desired result. Hence it
was even then absurd to deny vital force as a consequence
of that experiment. Since, however, it was well-adapted
for materialistic purposes, this denial was proclaimed
with the sound of trumpet throughout the land, and
repeated again and again with surprising tenacity,
with the result that even thoughtful investigators
rejected vital force almost universally in the seventies
and eighties.
It has always been a problem to me
how this could have happened. It can, indeed,
be explained only on the supposition that naturalists
were adverse to the introduction of anything into
nature, that appeared to them mystical and mysterious.
Nor is such a procedure at all necessary: vital
force is by no means a mysterious, ghostly power that
soars above nature, but a force of nature like its
other forces, as mysterious and as definite as they
are, only that it dominates a specified group of beings,
namely, living organisms. It may readily be compared
with any other natural phenomenon. For instance,
the phenomenon of crystallization has its well determined
sphere of activity, viz., the mineral world.
It employs definite mathematico-physical laws to obtain
a specified result, and even acts differently in different
mineral substances in so far as it produces in the
one case this, in the other case that form; but still
it should be a similarly directed force which has the
effect of producing these peculiar forms. Precisely
similar is it with vital force. It has its determined
sphere of activity, the kingdom of living organisms;
it acts according to definite physico-chemical laws
in producing a specified result; it acts differently
in different living organisms; it is therefore a force
of nature as clear yet as mysterious as the force
of crystallization or as any other force of nature.
Hence one has no cause to complain of its mysteriousness,
for all other forces of nature are just as much, or
if you will, just as little mysterious as vital force.
The only thing to be maintained is this, that living
organisms are dominated by a special force with special
phenomena and special activities, even as in mineral
substances there is a special dominant force which
produces special phenomena and exercises special activities.
It is possible to produce crystals
in the laboratory, but no one will be so foolish as
to maintain that in nature crystals are not formed
in consequence of a very definite force inherent in
the mineral-substances; nor will any one deny the
existence of the force of crystallization because
it does not appear in living organisms.
Nor have I ever despaired of a return
of the theory of vital force. A change of opinion
has really taken place during this decade; at present
the voices for a vital force are constantly growing
stronger and it will most probably not be very long
before it will be again universally recognized, not
as something preternatural, of course, but as a force
of nature on an equal footing with the other forces
of nature, with activities, just as mysterious and
just as well-attested as the activities of the other
forces of nature.
Haberlandt’s experiment, however,
had also an indirect consequence that is of far-reaching
importance. He observed that within a few days
new water-secreting organs of an entirely different
structure and of different origin were formed on the
leaves that had been sprinkled with sublimate.
Over the bundles of vascular fibres, little knots as
large as a pin head arose in larger numbers out of
a tissue underlying the top layer; out of these the
water now oozed every morning. Closer investigation
disclosed the fact that these organs develop only on
young immature leaves where groups of peculiar, perishable
gland-hairs are found; beneath these dead mucous glands
the substitute secretive organs originate in the inner
tissue. It is of no importance to state in what
particular cells they originate.
Suffice it to say that they are colorless
capillary tubes originating in various cells; projecting
like the hairs of a brush, containing living protoplasm
and evanescent chlorophyll. It is also important
to note that this new organ is immediately connected
with the water-conducting system consisting of bundles
of vascular fibres. Haberlandt furthermore indicates
especially that these organs when viewed in connection
with the process of secretion give evidence of an
active vital principle as well as of simple mechanical
filtration.
These substitute organs are all indeed
well adapted to their purpose and adequately replace
the old secretive organs, but they so easily dry out
and are so little protected that after a week they
become parched and die because wound-cork forms under
them. The leaf no longer produces new hydathodes,
but on its lower side it produces growths that function
as vesicles, by means of which it continues to sustain
itself.
Haberlandt furthermore records a phenomenon
perhaps analogous to this on the grape-vine, but with
this exception the case described by him is unique.
In order to pass any further judgment regarding it,
we should have to ascertain whether the whole phenomenon
is not a case of so-called adaptation; if so, processes
should be found in nature, analogous to the poisoning
of the hydathodes in this experiment, which result
in the destruction of the hydathodes so that in consequence
the plant would have gained the power of making good
the loss, by means of the substitute organs.
Such processes, however, (even through poisoning or
through parasites) would be very highly improbable.
Equally incredible is the alternative possibility
that the new organs would be produced by the plant
not as a substitute but as a supplementary apparatus
when the old ones would not suffice for secretion in
case of very large absorption of water. This
also must doubtlessly be rejected, as Haberlandt has
observed.
Powers of adaptation should, of course,
according to Darwinism, be gradually acquired in the
struggle for existence, as in that case they should
also have stability; but since this is not possessed
by the new organs, the presumption is that they do
not possess the character of adaptation. They
are therefore new organs that originated after an
entirely unnatural and unforeseen interference with
the normal vital functions and in consequence of a
self-regulating activity of the organism.
What then is there in the whole phenomenon
worthy of notice with regard to the theory of Descent?
1. An immediately well adapted
new organ has here originated very suddenly without
any previous incipient formation, without gradual
perfection and without stages of transition.
2. In its formation struggle
for existence and natural selection are entirely excluded,
neither can find any application whatever even according
to the newer exposition of Weismann. Haberlandt
himself draws this conclusion.
3. If this phenomenon of a suddenly
appearing change can take place in the course of the
development of the individual, there can be no obvious
reason why it should not take place in the same manner
(without natural selection or struggle for existence)
in the course of the phylogenetic development.
It is manifestly of the greatest importance
that in this case a direct, experimental proof has
been given that an organ has originated suddenly and
without the aid of Darwinian principles. Haberlandt’s
article is nothing less than a complete renunciation
of Darwinism on the part of Haberlandt, a renunciation
which we greet with great satisfaction.
In fact one such observation would
really suffice to set aside Darwinism and prove the
utter insufficiency of its principles to give explanation
of the origin of natural species. On the other
hand, this observation plainly proves two things:
first, that the above mentioned doctrine of Koelliker,
now held by Korschinsky is a move in the right direction
for the discovery of the causes of descent; and secondly,
that the principal cause of the evolution is not to
be sought in environment and blind forces but in the
systematically working, internal vital principle in
plants and animals. With that, however, an important
part of the foundation of the mechanical-materialistic
view of the world is demolished.