Lamarck's
Fallacy
So, how
could these "favorable variations" occur? Darwin tried to answer this
question from the standpoint of the primitive understanding of science at that
time. According to the French biologist Chevalier de Lamarck (1744-1829), who
lived before Darwin, living creatures passed on the traits they acquired during
their lifetime to the next generation. He asserted that these traits, which
accumulated from one generation to another, caused new species to be formed.
For instance, he claimed that giraffes evolved from antelopes; as they
struggled to eat the leaves of high trees, their necks were extended from
generation to generation.
Darwin
also gave similar examples. In his book The Origin of Species, for
instance, he said that some bears going into water to find food transformed
themselves into whales over time. (Charles Darwin, The Origin of Species: A
Facsimile of the First Edition, Harvard University Press, 1964, p. 184.)
However,
the laws of inheritance discovered by Gregor Mendel (1822-84) and verified by
the science of genetics, which flourished in the twentieth century, utterly
demolished the legend that acquired traits were passed on to subsequent
generations. Thus, natural selection was left 'alone' and consequently rendered
completely ineffective as an evolutionary mechanism.
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