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29 - Darwin and Darwinism in France before 1900

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 May 2013

Michael Ruse
Affiliation:
Florida State University
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Summary

Among the nations with a major scientific tradition in the nineteenth century, France certainly resisted the penetration of Darwin’s evolutionary ideas the most. Darwin himself observed this, in a letter he sent to the French anthropologist Armand de Quatrefages, ten years after the publication of the Origin of Species:

It is curious how nationality influences opinion; a week hardly passes without my hearing of some naturalist in Germany who supports my views, and often puts an exaggerated value on my works; whilst in France I have not heard of a single zoologist, except M. Gaudry (and he only partially), who supports my views. But I must have a good many readers as my books are translated.

(Darwin 1985–, 18:141, letter, 28 May 1870)

Some years later, Ernst Haeckel was more radical. In his popular book, The History of Creation, he insisted on the crucial role of Lamarck in the origins of evolutionary ideas, but observed that, despite this precedent, the French naturalists had simply ignored Darwin:

In no civilized country of Europe has Darwin’s doctrine had so little effect and been so little understood as in France, so that in the further course of our examination [i.e., Haeckel’s book] we need not take French naturalists into consideration.

(Haeckel 1883, 118)
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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2013

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