[Anthropology by Robert Marett]@TWC D-Link bookAnthropology CHAPTER I 4/31
What is the truth that Darwinism supposes? Simply that all the forms of life in the world are related together; and that the relations manifested in time and space between the different lives are sufficiently uniform to be described under a general formula, or law of evolution. This means that man must, for certain purposes of science, toe the line with the rest of living things.
And at first, naturally enough, man did not like it.
He was too lordly.
For a long time, therefore, he pretended to be fighting for the Bible, when he was really fighting for his own dignity.
This was rather hard on the Bible, which has nothing to do with the Aristotelian theory of the fixity of species; though it might seem possible to read back something of the kind into the primitive creation-stories preserved in Genesis.
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