As soon as it is realised how largely the phenomena of variation and stability must be an index of the internal constitution of organisms, and not mere consequences of their relations to the outer world, such phenomena acquire a new and more profound significance.
CHAPTER II
Meristic Phenomena
Twenty years ago in describing the facts of Variation, argument was necessary to show that these phenomena had a special value in the sciences of Zoology and Botany. This value is now universally understood and appreciated. In spite however of the general attention devoted to the study of Variation, and the accumulation of material bearing on the problem, no satisfactory or searching classification of the phenomena is possible. The reason for this failure is that a real classification must presuppose knowledge of the chemistry and physics of living things which at present is quite beyond our reach.
It is however becoming probable that if more knowledge of the chemical and physical structure of organisms is to be attained, the clue will be found through Genetics, and thus that even in the uncoordinated accumulation of facts of Variation we are providing the means of analysis applicable not only to them, but to the problems of normality also.
The only classification that we can yet institute with any confidence among the phenomena of Variation is that which distinguishes on the one hand variations in the processes of division from variations in the nature of the substances divided.
Variations in the processes of division are most often made apparent by a change in the number of the parts, and are therefore called Meristic Variations, while the changes in actual composition of material are spoken of as Substantive Variations. The Meristic Variations form on the whole a natural and fairly well defined group, but the Substantive Variations are obviously a heterogeneous assemblage.
Though this distinction does not go very far, it is useful, and in all probability fundamental. It is of value inasmuch as it brings into prominence the distinct and peculiar part which the process of division, or, more generally, repetition of parts, plays in the constitution of the forms of living things.