WeRead Powered by ReaderPub
Animal Life and Intelligence cover

Animal Life and Intelligence

Chapter 18: Summary and Conclusion.
Open in WeRead

Explore more books like this:

About This Book

The work surveys animal physiology, development, and behavior to infer mental processes in nonhuman animals, opening with organic evolution and the physical bases of life such as respiration and nutrition. It examines reproduction, growth, variation, and heredity, considers mechanisms proposed for inheritance, and explains natural selection, isolation, and adaptation including mimicry and protective resemblance. Attention is given to the contrast between instinct, habit, and learned intelligence, with examples illustrating gradations of mental capacity. Human reasoning and moral agency are treated as distinct yet still subject to underlying biological laws, and scientific evidence is combined with philosophical analysis throughout.

Summary and Conclusion.

It only remains to bring this chapter to a close with a few words of summary and conclusion.

The diversity of animal life must first be grasped. We believe that this diversity is the result of a process or processes of evolution. Evolution is the term applied to continuity of development. It involves adaptation; and adaptation to an unchanging environment may become more and more perfect. But the environment to which organisms are adapted also changes. Where the change is in the direction of complexity, we have elaboration; where it is in the direction of simplicity, we have degeneration. Of these elaboration is the more important. It involves both a tendency to differentiation giving rise to individuality, and a tendency to integration giving rise to association. Continued elaboration is progress; and this is opposed to degeneration.

The factors of evolution fall under two heads—origin and guidance. The origin of variations lies in mechanical stresses, and chemical or physical influences. Whether these act on the body (and are transmitted by inheritance) or only on the germ, is a question which divides biologists into two schools. In the latter case all variations are fortuitous; in the former the development of tissue-variations has been in direct response to the physical or chemical influences. There are, however, in any case fortuitous combinations of variations.

Whether use and disuse are factors of origin is also a debatable point. Those who believe that physical influences on the body are transmissible believe also that the effects of use and disuse are transmissible.

The vital vigour of the organism is a determining condition of importance. The vital vigour of males has favoured the origin of secondary sexual characters; that of females, the fostering and protection of young, and therefore the development in them of vital vigour.

The almost universally admitted factor in guidance is natural selection. But we must be careful not to use it as a mere formula.

Whether sexual selection is also a factor is still a matter of opinion. Without it the specific character and constancy of secondary sexual features are at present unexplained. If inherited use and disuse are admitted as factors in origin, they must also be admitted as important factors in guidance.

Questions of origin and guidance should, so far as is possible, be kept distinct. These terms, however, apply to the origin and guidance of variations. In the origin of species guidance is a factor, no doubt a most important factor. The title of Darwin's great work was, therefore, perfectly legitimate. And those who say that natural selection plays no part in the origin of species are, therefore, undoubtedly in error.