On the Origin of a Theory
Charles Darwin's bid for enduring fame was sparked 150 years ago by word of a rival's research
- By Richard Conniff
- Smithsonian magazine, June 2008, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 3)
Wallace was more receptive to Vestiges. He was just 22 when the controversy raged. He also came from a downwardly mobile family and had a penchant for progressive political causes. But Vestiges led him to the same conclusion about what needed to be done next. "I do not consider it as a hasty generalization," Wallace wrote to a friend, "but rather as an ingenious speculation" in need of more facts and further research. Later he added, "I begin to feel rather dissatisfied with a mere local collection.... I should like to take some one family to study thoroughly—principally with a view to the theory of the origin of species." In April 1848, having saved £100 from his wages as a railroad surveyor, he and a fellow collector sailed for the Amazon. From then on, Wallace and Darwin were asking the same fundamental questions.
Ideas that seem obvious in retrospect are anything but in real life. As Wallace collected on both sides of the Amazon, he began to think about the distribution of species and whether geographic barriers, such as a river, could be a key to their formation. Traveling on HMS Beagle as a young naturalist, Darwin had also wondered about species distribution in the Galápagos Islands. But pinning down the details was tedious work. As he sorted through the barnacles of the world in 1850, Darwin muttered darkly about "this confounded variation." Two years later, still tangled up in taxonomic minutiae, he exclaimed, "I hate a Barnacle as no man ever did before."
Wallace was returning from the Amazon in 1852, after four years of hard collecting, when his ship caught fire and sank, taking down drawings, notes, journals and what he told a friend were "hundreds of new and beautiful species." But Wallace was as optimistic as Darwin was cautious, and soon headed off on another collecting expedition, to the islands of Southeast Asia. In 1856, he published his first paper on evolution, focusing on the island distribution of closely related species—but leaving out the critical issue of how one species might have evolved from its neighbors. Alarmed, Darwin's friends urged him to get on with his book.
By now, the two men were corresponding. Wallace sent specimens; Darwin replied with encouragement. He also gently warned Wallace off: "This summer will make the 20th year (!) since I opened my first-note-book" on the species question, he wrote, adding that it might take two more years to go to press. Events threatened to bypass them both. In England, a furious debate erupted about whether there were significant structural differences between the brains of humans and gorillas, a species discovered by science only ten years earlier. Other researchers had lately found the fossil remains of brutal-looking humans, the Neanderthals, in Europe itself.
Eight thousand miles away, on an island called Gilolo, Wallace spent much of February 1858 wrapped in blankets against the alternating hot and cold fits of malaria. He passed the time mulling over the species question, and one day, the same book that had inspired Darwin came to mind—Malthus' Essay on the Principle of Population. "It occurred to me to ask the question, Why do some die and some live?" he later recalled. Thinking about how the healthiest individuals survive disease, and the strongest or swiftest escape from predators, "it suddenly flashed upon me...in every generation the inferior would inevitably be killed off and the superior would remain—that is, the fittest would survive." Over the next three days, literally in a fever, he wrote out the idea and posted it to Darwin.
Less than two years later, on November 22, 1859, Darwin published his great work On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection, and the unthinkable—that man was descended from beasts—became more than thinkable. Darwin didn't just supply the how of evolution; his painstaking work on barnacles and other species made the idea plausible. Characteristically, Darwin gave credit to Wallace, and also to Malthus, Lamarck and even the anonymous "Mr. Vestiges." Reading the book, which Darwin sent to him in New Guinea, Wallace was plainly thrilled: "Mr. Darwin has given the world a new science, and his name should, in my opinion, stand above that of every philosopher of ancient or modern times."
Wallace seems to have felt no twinge of envy or possessiveness about the idea that would bring Darwin such renown. Alfred Russel Wallace had made the postman knock, and that was apparently enough.
Richard Conniff is a longtime contributor to Smithsonian and the author of The Ape in the Corner Office.
Subscribe now for more of Smithsonian's coverage on history, science and nature.









Comments (23)
+ View All Comments
We do not see evolved versions of ourselves because we are the evolved versions of ourselves. No species that exists today is more evolved or less evolved. They just evolved differently.
Believing that evolution is true does not mean believing some creature is evolving into human. As stated the other animals evolved in their own direction according to random mutation and natural selection. That statement alone conveys amazing ignorance about what evolution is. Humans are arrogant and like to think we are the most highly evolved. This however is not true. We are no more evolved then the apes we put in zoos.
The stupidity shown on this page shows people should get their noses out of a bible for a few minutes and actually read what the theory of evolution is.
It is a common myth that we originate from the apes we see today. However we do not. We evolved from a common ancestor. The apes we have today evolved to be apes and we evolved to be human.
There is absolutely overwhelming proof for evolution. We in fact use it, do you have a pet dog for example? Have you ever used a newer form of antibiotics because the bacteria evolved to be resistant to the old one?
Posted by Cassie on January 20,2011 | 06:00 PM
science is from god
Posted by jane unogwn on May 29,2009 | 12:11 PM
What most of you fail to realize is that most species have remained static in their changes. I agree that if evolution is true, why do we still have single cell organisms, fish, apes, man, and why there are no life forms higher than man. We do not see an evolved form of ourselves. I believe in micro evolution. Species making small changes and turning into related species. I believe that God created the world and everything in it. Evolution has so many holes, but yet it is being taught to our children as fact, rather than the theory it is. There is no overwhelming proof for evolution. However, a creation stance can fill in the gaps. Such as how life got here in the first place. Darwin did not answer that question, he argued for micro evolution, not macro evolution.
Posted by Laura Krauss on April 21,2009 | 06:08 PM
if darwin was corect? how come apes ARE NOT STILL turning into man?
Posted by kathryn mott on April 17,2009 | 12:10 PM
Darwin's evolution theory may apply to animal species, but not to human beings. We human beings all come from one father: ADAM and one mother: EVE and both our parents are from soil. Therefore, it is incorrect and sinfull to believe that we human beings derive from apes or whatever the theory teaches.
Posted by abdallah omar al-saggaf on February 22,2009 | 03:10 AM
Why can no-one answer Deborah's question? And, assuming man evolved from some kind of amoeba, why did only SOME (or one) amoeba evolve, and why are there STILL amoebae? And are these evolving? Where are your answers?
Posted by Alwyn Wood on February 13,2009 | 10:33 AM
Anyone interested in reading my recent research entitled "It's Not Darwin's or Wallace's Theory" can do so by searching "wainwrightscience" on Google. Best Wishes, Dr Milton Wainwright,Dept. Molecular Biology and Biotechnology,University of Sheffield,UK.
Posted by Dr Milton Wainwright on September 25,2008 | 04:47 PM
To believe in evolution, does that mean, right at this moment, there is some type of creature "evolving" into a human?
Posted by Deborah on July 11,2008 | 01:27 PM
INTRIGUING DARWINIAN IMPLICATIONS Look at it, reflect about its implications... --------------------------------- Comprehensive Definitions Of Earth Life, Earth Organism, Gene, Genome And Cellular Organisms. Earth Life: 1. a format of temporarily constrained energy, retained in temporary constrained genetic energy packages in forms of genes, genomes and organisms 2. a real virtual affair that pops in and out of existence in its matrix, which is the energy constrained in Earth's biosphere. Earth organism: a temporary self-replicable constrained-energy genetic system that supports and maintains Earth's biosphere by maintenance of genes. Gene: a primal Earth's organism. Genome: a multigenes organism consisting of a cooperative commune of its member genes. Cellular organisms: mono- or multi-celled earth organisms. Suggesting, Dov Henis http://blog.360.yahoo.com/blog-P81pQcU1dLBbHgtjQjxG_Q--?cq=1
Posted by Dov Henis on June 25,2008 | 07:41 PM
" 1. While statistical information theory has a quantity called "entropy", it does not have anything equivalent to the second law of thermodynamics. In a general information processing/transmitting system, entropy can freely decrease or increase. 2. There are some classes of information systems in which information can only decrease, for example a deterministic, causally isolated system with discrete states. However (at least in this case) the information loss corresponds to a decrease in entropy. 3. Information theory does sort of have a principle of degradation, but it is only applicable in certain situations (which evolution isn't one of). It implies, essentially, that information change is irreversible: information gets more and more different from how it started out, and the more it gets changed, the harder it is to tell how it started out. In a communication or information storage system, where the goal is to transmit or replay the original message intact, change is necessarily bad, so this corresponds to degradation. In evolution, change is not necessarily bad, so this is not a principle of degradation. " Obviously the 2nd Law of Thermodynamics does not apply. A large amount of fossils "coming on the scene" at one time in no way would hurt the Theory of Evolution, it could possibly mean this particular location preserved fossils far better. It is no longer "survival of the fittest" it is survival of the good enough, as long as you are adequate at surviving your particular environment, you are fine. Thus species can continue to live without changing much for vast periods of time, because they are good enough. (Although they will change some.) I understand what the first comment was referring to, and, if you think about it, it still applies. Obviously through sexual preference genes are chosen, thus certain trains will continue to be passed on, while others could eventually be lost.
Posted by Aaron on June 20,2008 | 12:54 AM
I think the theory has serious issues. 2nd law of thermodynamics basically says, "Everything falls apart". That is easily recognizable as a truth in our world. Survival of the fittest and evolving to better is in opposition to that basic law. Darwin thought if the fossil record showed a large amount of species coming on the scene at one time that would be detrimental to his theory. What does the fossil record show? That what it show.
Posted by Terry on June 20,2008 | 01:40 PM
Our species now has the ability to fool around with evolution. We know that there is no place on the planet for a war. We need to focus on how to help each other live with a bubbling, shaking, drying earth. ALSO, how about shrinking our species so that we use less recouces? (says she whose gtrandson is 6'8")
Posted by Margery Johnson on June 20,2008 | 11:52 AM
As seasons pass we become more knowledgeable about our past and wonder if our information is correct or not when we discuss subjects like the Origin Theory. The education community seem to be too weary of what might be. Considering that the Theory subject has been studied from one angle or another for three of four centuries we have learned a lot but the fear of discovery still binds many of us into inaction. I am very appreciative that we have the Smithsonian writer who aren't afraid to bring old and new information to us. I'm asking everyone to continue to gather facts and present conclusions without fear. WRD
Posted by William R. Drews on June 19,2008 | 10:06 PM
I am sixty six years old and have been searching for the answers about the beginning of time since I was about thirteen and have come to the conclusion,that it cant be explained mathematically or theologically.
Posted by George W. Welliver on June 14,2008 | 04:30 PM
+ View All Comments