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Charles Darwin

Currency:USD Category:Collectibles / Autographs Start Price:NA Estimated At:30,000.00 - 40,000.00 USD
Charles Darwin

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Auction Date:2018 Oct 10 @ 18:00 (UTC-5 : EST/CDT)
Location:236 Commercial St., Suite 100, Boston, Massachusetts, 02109, United States
ALS - Autograph Letter Signed
ANS - Autograph Note Signed
AQS - Autograph Quotation Signed
AMQS - Autograph Musical Quotation Signed
DS - Document Signed
FDC - First Day Cover
Inscribed - “Personalized”
ISP - Inscribed Signed Photograph
LS - Letter Signed
SP - Signed Photograph
TLS - Typed Letter Signed
ALS signed “Ch. Darwin,” three pages, 4.75 x 8, personal letterhead, November 11, [1870]. Letter to Philip Lutley Sclater, who has been reading the proofs of Darwin’s Descent of Man, describing the ornithologist William Henry Hudson as "a hater of evolution." In full: "I will most gladly accept your kindness. I look at the delay caused as nothing comparatively to the great benefit. I never expected or hoped for many criticisms, but I still hope you will point out any serious error, whatever trouble this may cause to my Printers. I suppose I shall soon receive Revises, but Messrs Clowes [the printers of The Descent of Man] sometimes delay the 2d proofs till 2/3 of a whole vol. is corrected in first proof.

Mr. Hudson’s paper is very interesting & it pleases me to see so staunch a hater of evolution a little staggered at the end of his paper." He adds a postscript to the adjoining page: "I will not now waste quite so much time in trying to find every name quoted in some book; so you will doubly help me." In fine condition, with scattered light creasing and foxing.

One of the earliest known examples of the use of the term "evolution" in the Darwinian sense, pre-dating its first appearance in print in The Descent of Man. Although the term had long been in use in embryology, having been introduced with a specific meaning in 1762 by Charles Bonnet in his ‘Considerations sur les corps organisées,’ its use had been avoided by Jean-Baptiste Lamarck in his 1809 work ‘Philosophie Zoologique’; likewise, Darwin long resisted its use in the field of ontogenesis (biological development), preferring instead the phrase ‘descent with modification.’ In the last sentence of the first edition of Origin (1859), Darwin did use the verb ‘evolved’ (‘From so simple a beginning endless forms most beautiful and most wonderful have been, and are being, evolved’), but he had still not yet settled on the term ‘evolution’ to articulate his most important theory.

In 1862, three years after the publication of Origin, Herbert Spencer provided his own ontogenetic definition of the term in First Principles: ‘Evolution is a change from an indefinite, incoherent homogeneity, to a definite, coherent heterogeneity; through continuous differentiations and integrations.’ This definition failed to grasp a principle that Darwin had already recognized—that of adaptive complexity, or the idea that natural selection will tend to favor the evolution of new, specialized varieties. It was this feature that distinguished Darwin’s theory from that of Lamarck, as well as from those of Spencer and other contemporaries, and which would become the central organizing principle that biologists use to understand the world. The word ‘evolution’ occurs for the first time in any of Darwin’s printed works in The Descent of Man (vol. 1, p. 2), first published on February 24, 1871; Darwin then uses it—as a noun—in the revised sixth edition of Origin (published on February 19, 1872).

Provenance: collection of Sir Edward Ford (1902-86), distinguished physician and philanthropist, Sydney; believed to have been acquired by Ford in London in the 1960s, from either Maggs Bros. or Winifred Myers.