AUTHOR'S PREFACE

When a life of pleasant labour is drawing towards a close, the wish naturally asserts itself to gather together the main results, and to combine them in a well-defined and harmonious picture which may be left as a legacy to succeeding generations.

This wish has been my main motive in the publication of these lectures, which I delivered in the University of Freiburg in Breisgau. But there has been an additional motive in the fact that the theory of heredity published by me a decade ago has given rise not only to many investigations prompted by it, but also to a whole literature of 'refutations,' and, what is much better, has brought to light a mass of new facts which, at first sight at least, seem to contradict my main theory. As I remain as convinced that the essential part of my theory is well grounded as I was when I first sketched it, I naturally wish to show how the new facts may be brought into harmony with it.

It is by no means only with the theory of heredity by itself that I am concerned, for that has served, so to speak, as a means to a higher end, as a groundwork on which to base an interpretation of the transformations of life through the course of the ages. For the phenomena of heredity, like all the functions of individual life, stand in the closest association with the whole evolution of life upon our earth; indeed, they form its roots, the nutritive basis from which all its innumerable branches and twigs are, in the long run, derived. Thus the phenomena of the individual life, and especially those of reproduction and inheritance, must be considered in connexion with the Theory of Descent, that the latter may be illumined by them, and so brought nearer our understanding.

I make this attempt to sum up and present as a harmonious whole the theories which for forty years I have been gradually building up on the basis of the legacy of the great workers of the past, and on the results of my own investigations and those of many fellow workers, not because I regard the picture as complete or incapable of improvement, but because I believe its essential features to be correct, and because an eye-trouble which has hindered my work for many years makes it uncertain whether I shall have much more time and strength granted to me for its further elaboration. We are standing in the midst of a flood-tide of investigation, which is ceaselessly heaping up new facts bearing upon the problem of evolution. Every theory formulated at this time must be prepared shortly to find itself face to face with a mass of new facts which may necessitate its more or less complete reconstruction. How much or how little of it may remain, in face of the facts of the future, it is impossible to predict. But this will be so for a long time, and it seems to me we must not on that account refrain from following out our convictions to the best of our ability and presenting them sharply and definitely, for it is only well-defined arguments which can be satisfactorily criticized, and can be improved if they are imperfect, or rejected if they are erroneous. In both these processes progress lies.

This book consists of 'Lectures' which were given publicly at the university here. In my introductory lecture in 1867 I championed the Theory of Descent, which was then the subject of lively controversy, but it was not till seven years later that I gave, by way of experiment, a short summer course with a view to aiding in the dissemination of Darwin's views. Then very gradually my own studies and researches and those of others led me to add to the Darwinian edifice, and to attempt a further elaboration of it, and accordingly these 'Lectures,' which were delivered almost regularly every year from 1880 onwards, were gradually modified in accordance with the state of my knowledge at the time, so that they have been, I may say, a mirror of the course of my own intellectual evolution.

In the last two decades of the nineteenth century much that is new has been introduced into biological science; Nägeli's idea of 'idioplasm'—the substance which determines form; Roux's Struggle of the Parts, the recognition of a special hereditary substance, 'the germ-plasm,' its analysis into chromosomes, and its continuity from generation to generation; the potential immortality of unicellular organisms and of the germ-cells in contrast to the natural death of higher forms and 'bodies'; a deeper interpretation of mitotic nuclear division, the discovery of the centrosphere—the marvellous dividing apparatus of the cell—which at once allowed us to penetrate a whole stratum deeper into the unfathomable mine of microscopic vital structure; then the clearing up of our ideas in regard to fertilization, and the analysis of this into the two processes combined in it, reproduction and the mingling of the germ-plasms (Amphimixis); in connexion with this, the phenomena of maturation, first in the female and then in the male cell, and their significance as a reduction of the hereditary units:—all this and much more we have gained during this period. Finally, there is the refutation of the Lamarckian principle, and the consequent elaboration of the principle of selection by applying it to the hitherto closed region of the ultimate vital elements of the germ-plasm.

The actual form of these lectures has developed as they were transcribed. But although the form is thus to some extent new, I have followed in the main the same train of thought as in the lectures of recent years. The lecture-form has been adhered to in the book, not merely because of the greater vividness of presentation which it implies, but for many other reasons, of which the greater freedom in the choice of material and the limiting of quotation to a minimum are not the least. That all polemics of a personal kind have thus been excluded will not injure the book, but it is by no means lacking in discussions of opinion, and will, therefore, I trust, contribute something towards the clearing up of disputed points.

I have endeavoured to introduce as much of the researches and writings of others as possible without making the book heavy; but my aim has been to write a book to be read, not merely one to be referred to.