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To H. K. Rusden   [before 27 March 1875]

Summary

Thanks for copy of lecture (Rusden 1874: Selection, natural and artificial, a lecture delivered in the Wangaratta Athenaeum by Mr. H. K. Rusden on Monday, October 26th, 1874) and essay (Rusden 1872: The treatment of criminals in relation to science, an essay read before the Royal Society of Victoria).

Comments on the essay.

Author:  Charles Robert Darwin
Addressee:  Henry Keylock Rusden
Date:  [before 27 Mar 1875]
Classmark:  Ovens and Murray Advertiser, 27 March 1875, p. 5
Letter no:  DCP-LETT-9705F

Matches: 3 hits

  • … is no general tendency to progress in civilisation, which comes to nearly the same thing …
  • … societies attained a higher degree of civilisation than some later ones, and that …
  • … in historic times the progress of civilisation had been ‘intermittent’. Walter Bagehot …

To William Graham   3 July 1881

Summary

Praises WG’s Creed of science.

He disagrees that the existence of natural laws implies purpose, but his "inmost conviction" is that "the Universe is not the result of chance". But then has horrid doubt whether convictions of man’s mind, which has been developed from lower animals, are at all trustworthy.

Believes natural selection is doing more for progress of civilisation than WG admits.

Author:  Charles Robert Darwin
Addressee:  William Graham
Date:  3 July 1881
Classmark:  DAR 144: 345
Letter no:  DCP-LETT-13230

Matches: 3 hits

  • … Believes natural selection is doing more for progress of civilisation than WG admits. …
  • … argued that the development of human civilisation depended upon great men, not natural …
  • … and doing more for the progress of civilisation than you seem inclined to admit. Remember …

To John Crawfurd   25 March [1861]

Summary

Asks for information about JC’s essay, "On the relation of the domesticated animals to civilisation" [read at BAAS meeting 1859].

Author:  Charles Robert Darwin
Addressee:  John Crawfurd
Date:  25 Mar [1861]
Classmark:  DAR 143: 299
Letter no:  DCP-LETT-13786

Matches: 1 hit

  • … On the relation of the domesticated animals to civilisation" [read at BAAS meeting 1859]. …

To J. D. Hooker   31 March [1858]

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Summary

Writing section on large and small genera [for Natural selection, ch. 4].

Huxley supersedes Owen on parthenogenesis.

Buckle’s History of civilisation in England extremely interesting.

Author:  Charles Robert Darwin
Addressee:  Joseph Dalton Hooker
Date:  31 Mar [1858]
Classmark:  DAR 114: 230
Letter no:  DCP-LETT-2248

Matches: 1 hit

  • … on parthenogenesis. Buckle’s History of civilisation in England extremely interesting. …

To J. D. Hooker   23 February [1858]

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Summary

Fertilisation of clover by bees in New Zealand.

Uneasy about biggest genera and their varieties.

H. T. Buckle’s sophistry [History of civilisation in England (1857)].

Working on bees’ cells.

Author:  Charles Robert Darwin
Addressee:  Joseph Dalton Hooker
Date:  23 Feb [1858]
Classmark:  DAR 114: 224
Letter no:  DCP-LETT-2222

Matches: 1 hit

  • … H. T. Buckle’s sophistry [ History of civilisation in England (1857)]. Working on bees’ …

To L. H. Morgan   7 June 1871

Summary

Directions to Down.

Author:  Charles Robert Darwin
Addressee:  Lewis Henry Morgan
Date:  7 June 1871
Classmark:  University of Rochester Libraries, Department of Rare Books, Special Collections and Preservation
Letter no:  DCP-LETT-7808

Matches: 1 hit

  • … s views on the development of human civilisation (see Correspondence vol.  18, letter from …

To J. D. Hooker   13 November [1869]

Summary

Congratulates JDH on his becoming a C.B.

Hard at work on sexual selection – weary of everlasting males and females, cocks and hens.

Has read J. H. Stirling vs Huxley on protoplasm [As regards protoplasm (1869)]

and E. B. Tylor on survival of old thoughts in modern civilisation.

Bentham’s Linnean Society [Presidential] Address [see 6793] is worth its weight in gold in making converts. C. J. F. Bunbury is impressed by it.

Likes JDH’s review of K. F. Schimper’s work [Paléontologie végétale, in Nature 1 (1869): 48].

Author:  Charles Robert Darwin
Addressee:  Joseph Dalton Hooker
Date:  13 Nov [1869]
Classmark:  DAR 94: 156–8
Letter no:  DCP-LETT-6985

Matches: 2 hits

  • … survival of old thoughts in modern civilisation. Bentham’s Linnean Society [Presidential] …
  • … on the survival of old thought in modern Civilisation. — Farewell, I am as dull as a duck, …

To Hermanus Hartogh Heijs van Zouteveen   21 February 1871

Summary

Thanks HHHvZ for a memoir

and answers some queries;

mentions some corrections for his Dutch translation of Descent.

Author:  Charles Robert Darwin
Addressee:  Hermanus Hartogh Heijs van Zouteveen
Date:  21 Feb 1871
Classmark:  Archives of the Museum of Comparative Zoology, Ernst Mayr Library, Harvard University (bMs 7.10.3(2))
Letter no:  DCP-LETT-7500

Matches: 2 hits

  • … me to the conclusion of the independent civilisation of Peru &c. I have already despatched …
  • … He discusses & disputes whether the civilisation of W.  coast of S.  America is due to …

To J. D. Hooker   7 March [1862]

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Summary

CD wishes he could sympathise with Asa Gray’s politics.

Orchids to appear soon.

Pre-glacial Arctic distribution.

Work on floral dimorphism.

High opinion of Buckle as a writer.

Author:  Charles Robert Darwin
Addressee:  Joseph Dalton Hooker
Date:  7 Mar [1862]
Classmark:  DAR 115: 185
Letter no:  DCP-LETT-3468

Matches: 2 hits

  • … enemy’ of such progress, and thus of civilisation, is ‘the protective spirit’ found in the …
  • … propositions concerning the history of civilisation: first, that human progress depends on …

To John Fiske   17 August [1879]

Summary

Thanks JF again for his Essays, which he has now read.

Author:  Charles Robert Darwin
Addressee:  John Fiske
Date:  17 Aug [1879]
Classmark:  The Huntington Library (HM 8268)
Letter no:  DCP-LETT-12196

Matches: 1 hit

  • … s fallacies’); they critiqued the work of Henry Thomas Buckle on European civilisation. …

To J. P. M. Weale   23 January [1868]

Summary

Thanks for information on expression.

Poor progress of civilisation in South Africa. CD’s doubts and fears about democracy.

JPMW’s views on glaciation in S. Africa will discredit him unless supported by clearest evidence.

Author:  Charles Robert Darwin
Addressee:  James Philip Mansel Weale
Date:  23 Jan [1868]
Classmark:  University of Virginia Library, Special Collections (3314 1: 50)
Letter no:  DCP-LETT-5795

Matches: 1 hit

  • … information on expression. Poor progress of civilisation in South Africa. CD’s doubts and …

To John Lubbock   4 January [1863]

Summary

Praises JL’s article ["North American archaeology", Nat. Hist. Rev. n.s. 3 (1863): 1–26]

and Hugh Falconer on the American fossil elephant [Nat. Hist. Rev. n.s. 3 (1863): 43–114].

Author:  Charles Robert Darwin
Addressee:  John Lubbock, 4th baronet and 1st Baron Avebury
Date:  4 Jan [1863]
Classmark:  DAR 263: 58
Letter no:  DCP-LETT-3900

Matches: 2 hits

  • … man: researches into the origin of civilisation in the old and the new world. 2 vols. …
  • … man: researches into the origin of civilisation in the old and new world ( D.  Wilson …

To Charles Lyell   22 August [1867]

Summary

Thanks CL for comments [on Variation].

Thinks Pangenesis would be important step in biology if admitted as probable.

Introduction to French edition [of Origin] has injured the book.

Author:  Charles Robert Darwin
Addressee:  Charles Lyell, 1st baronet
Date:  22 Aug [1867]
Classmark:  American Philosophical Society (Mss.B.D25.332)
Letter no:  DCP-LETT-5612

Matches: 1 hit

  • … Henry Thomas Buckle’s History of civilisation in England ( Buckle 1857–61 ) appeared in …

To John Lubbock   21 July [1870]

Summary

Thanks JL for his book [Origin of civilization (1870)], which he has read with "extreme interest". Wishes JL had published four or five months earlier as CD would have "so profited & saved so much work". CD will have to modify some of what he has written [in Descent]. Sees they differ a good deal about moral sense "but hardly two men ever do agree on this perplexing subject".

JL’s note of the 16th [see 7277] about the Census arrived too late for CD to answer.

Author:  Charles Robert Darwin
Addressee:  John Lubbock, 4th baronet and 1st Baron Avebury
Date:  21 July [1870]
Classmark:  Dr N. Hammond (private collection)
Letter no:  DCP-LETT-7286

Matches: 1 hit

  • … refers to Lubbock’s book The origin of civilisation and the primitive condition of man ( …

To George Rolleston   2 September [1875]

Summary

Thanks for GR’s "Address" [see 10141].

Wishes he had not quoted Bagehot’s remark [in Descent 1: 239] about decrease in savage populations. Interest in subject.

Author:  Charles Robert Darwin
Addressee:  George Rolleston
Date:  2 Sept [1875]
Classmark:  Wellcome Collection (MS.6119/68)
Letter no:  DCP-LETT-10150

Matches: 1 hit

  • … many wild animals when made captive. The civilisation of savages & the captivity of wild …

To J. D. Hooker   6 January [1875]

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Summary

Is not inclined to restrain himself from expressing his opinion of Mivart. Huxley’s article in Academy.

Author:  Charles Robert Darwin
Addressee:  Joseph Dalton Hooker
Date:  6 Jan [1875]
Classmark:  DAR 95: 365–6
Letter no:  DCP-LETT-9805

Matches: 1 hit

  • … view of the development of Western civilisation at the meeting of the British Association …

To G. H. Darwin   1 August [1874]

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Summary

GHD’s article will not do. It is too long and the denial seems weak and confused; also, it ought to be in the form of a letter to the editor. Encloses draft of the sort of letter of denial he thinks GHD should write.

Author:  Charles Robert Darwin
Addressee:  George Howard Darwin
Date:  1 Aug [1874]
Classmark:  DAR 210.1: 27, 29, 32
Letter no:  DCP-LETT-9580

Matches: 1 hit

  • … most varied appliances of a complex civilisation. George and CD continued to refine the …

To Francis Galton   4 January [1873]

Summary

Comments on FG’s article ["Hereditary improvement", Fraser’s Mag. 87 (1873): 116–30]. Finds it "the sole feasible, yet I fear utopian, plan of procedure in improving the human race".

Thanks for rabbits for Balfour.

Mentions reading W. R. Greg’s Enigmas [of life (1872)].

Author:  Charles Robert Darwin
Addressee:  Francis Galton
Date:  4 Jan [1873]
Classmark:  UCL Library Services, Special Collections (GALTON/1/1/9/5/7/14)
Letter no:  DCP-LETT-8724

Matches: 1 hit

  • … Greg 1872 ) included a chapter titled ‘Civilisation antagonistic to the law of “natural …

To Neil Arnott   29 August [1861]

Summary

Found NA’s A survey of human progress [1861] on his return home after two months’ absence. Is glad to see NA kept his intention of publishing on this subject.

Author:  Charles Robert Darwin
Addressee:  Neil Arnott
Date:  29 Aug [1861]
Classmark:  Remember When Antiquities (dealers) (Catalogue 28)
Letter no:  DCP-LETT-3237F

Matches: 1 hit

  • … from the savage state to the highest civilisation yet attained. A progress as little …

To Neil Arnott   16 February [1860?]

Summary

Discusses NA’s pamphlet on human progress. Suggests making it a book [A survey of human progress (1861)].

Comments on study of dead languages.

Denies that animals are "governed only by selfish motives".

Author:  Charles Robert Darwin
Addressee:  Neil Arnott
Date:  16 Feb [1860?]
Classmark:  DAR 143: 22
Letter no:  DCP-LETT-2677

Matches: 1 hit

  • … from the savage state to the highest civilisation yet attained. A progress as little …
Document type
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Author
Darwin, C. R.disabled_by_default
Date
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1862 (2)
1863 (3)
1867 (1)
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16 Items

Darwin on race and gender

Summary

Darwin’s views on race and gender are intertwined, and mingled also with those of class. In Descent of man, he tried to explain the origin of human races, and many of the differences between the sexes, with a single theory: sexual selection. Sexual…

Matches: 2 hits

  • … conflicts such as the American Civil War. Gender and civilisation In his early …
  • … contemporaries, he nonetheless clung to a single scale of civilisation on which different peoples …

John Lubbock

Summary

John Lubbock was eight years old when the Darwins moved into the neighbouring property of Down House, Down, Kent; the total of one hundred and seventy surviving letters he went on to exchange with Darwin is a large number considering that the two men lived…

Matches: 2 hits

  • … ( Descent p. 233).  Lubbock’s Origin of civilisation , published in 1870 as Darwin was …
  • … the result of degeneration from a natural state of civilisation. Darwin used Lubbock's counter …

The evolution of a misquotation

Summary

We gave you six things Darwin never said (despite what you may read elsewhere).   None of the fake soundbites is more insidious than the first: It is not the strongest of the species that survives, nor the most intelligent that survives. It is…

Matches: 1 hits

  • … as a discussion of Darwin’s views in a 1960s textbook,  Civilisation Past and Present , was quoted …

4.53 Claud Warren, 'Outlines of Hands'

Summary

< Back to Introduction Claud Warren’s The Life-size Outlines of the Hands of Twenty-four Celebrated Persons was a ‘portfolio’, circulated in varying editions in 1881-2. It is an amateurish and rather eccentric work, without typographic letterpress –…

Matches: 1 hits

  • … he would probably have been burnt at the stake. Although civilisation has advanced since then, and …

'An Appeal' against animal cruelty

Summary

The four-page pamphlet transcribed below and entitled 'An Appeal', was composed jointly by Emma and Charles Darwin (see letter from Emma Darwin to W. D. Fox, [29 September 1863]). The pamphlet, which protested against the cruelty of steel vermin…

Matches: 2 hits

  • … was one of the noblest moral qualities possessed by human civilisation. However, Darwin was not …
  • … cruelty can have been permitted to continue in these days of civilisation; and no doubt if men of …

Language: Interview with Gregory Radick

Summary

Darwin made a famous comment about parallels between changes in language and species change. Gregory Radick, Professor of History and Philosophy of Science at Leeds University, talks about the importance of the development of language to Darwin, what…

Matches: 2 hits

  • … circumstances with no interesting technology, no advanced civilisation, speaking lowly languages. …
  • … that all human peoples, no matter what the states of their civilisation, speak languages of more or …

4.58 'Simian, savage' . . . drawings

Summary

< Back to Introduction An anonymous satire in the Darwin archive has been descriptively titled ‘Simian, savage and savant’. Darwin on the right, elegantly dressed and carrying a top hat, represents the acme of civilisation. The central, nearly naked,…

Matches: 1 hits

  • … dressed and carrying a top hat, represents the acme of civilisation. The central, nearly naked, …

Six things Darwin never said – and one he did

Summary

Spot the fakes! Darwin is often quoted – and as often misquoted. Here are some sayings regularly attributed to Darwin that never flowed from his pen.

Matches: 1 hits

  • … Spot the fakes! Darwin is often quoted – and as often misquoted. Here are some sayings regularly …

St George Jackson Mivart

Summary

In the second half of 1874, Darwin’s peace was disturbed by an anonymous article in the Quarterly Review suggesting that his son George was opposed to the institution of marriage and in favour of ‘unrestrained licentiousness’. Darwin suspected, correctly,…

Matches: 2 hits

  • … can co-exist with the most varied appliances of a complex civilisation.’ p. 77: ‘A deep debt …
  • … can co-exist with the most varied appliances of a complex civilisation.’ The Review thus …

Religion

Summary

Design|Personal Belief|Beauty|The Church Perhaps the most notorious realm of controversy over evolution in Darwin's day was religion. The same can be said of the evolution controversy today; however the nature of the disputes and the manner in…

Matches: 1 hits

  • … believes natural selection is doing more for progress of civilisation than Graham admits. …

Darwin’s reading notebooks

Summary

In April 1838, Darwin began recording the titles of books he had read and the books he wished to read in Notebook C (Notebooks, pp. 319–28). In 1839, these lists were copied and continued in separate notebooks. The first of these reading notebooks (DAR 119…

Matches: 2 hits

  • … on Navvies [C. M. Marsh] 1858] Buckle History of Civilisation [Buckle 1857] Feb. 28 …
  • … practice;   and its moral influence on the progress of civilisation . Edinburgh: William and …

Race, Civilization, and Progress

Summary

Darwin's first reflections on human progress were prompted by his experiences in the slave-owning colony of Brazil, and by his encounters with the Yahgan peoples of Tierra del Fuego. Harsh conditions, privation, poor climate, bondage and servitude,…

Matches: 1 hits

  • … selection having done and doing more for the progress of civilisation than you seem inclined to …

Darwin in letters, 1860: Answering critics

Summary

On 7 January 1860, John Murray published the second edition of Darwin’s Origin of species, printing off another 3000 copies to satisfy the demands of an audience that surprised both the publisher and the author. It wasn't long, however, before ‘the…

Matches: 1 hits

  • … paper giving a Darwinian view of the development of Western civilisation. Wilberforce, Hooker …

Darwin's in letters, 1873: Animal or vegetable?

Summary

Having laboured for nearly five years on human evolution, sexual selection, and the expression of emotions, Darwin was able to devote 1873 almost exclusively to his beloved plants. He resumed work on the digestive powers of sundews and Venus fly traps, and…

Matches: 1 hits

  • … all over their bodies, which had receded with the advance of civilisation and good breeding ( …

Darwin in letters, 1875: Pulling strings

Summary

‘I am getting sick of insectivorous plants’, Darwin confessed in January 1875. He had worked on the subject intermittently since 1859, and had been steadily engaged on a book manuscript for nine months; January also saw the conclusion of a bitter dispute…

Matches: 1 hits

  • … to the sterility of many wild animals when made captive. The civilisation of savages & the …

Darwin in letters, 1881: Old friends and new admirers

Summary

In May 1881, Darwin, one of the best-known celebrities in England if not the world, began writing about all the eminent men he had met. He embarked on this task, which formed an addition to his autobiography, because he had nothing else to do. He had…

Matches: 1 hits

  • … selection had not contributed greatly to the progress of civilisation was contested by Darwin, who …