18 chapters
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Selected Chapters
18 chapters
Social Environment and Moral Progress
Social Environment and Moral Progress
BY Alfred Russel Wallace O.M., D.C.L.Oxon. F.R.S., &c. Author of "The Malay Archipelago," "Darwinism," "Man's Place in the Universe," "The World of Life," &c. &c. Cassell and Company, Ltd London, New York, Toronto and Melbourne 1913 Social Environment and Moral Progress...
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CHAPTER I INTRODUCTORY
CHAPTER I INTRODUCTORY
Before entering on the question of the relation of morality to our existing social environment, it will be advisable to inquire what we mean by moral progress, and what evidence there is that any such progress has occurred in recent times, or even within the period of well-established history. By morals we mean right conduct, not only in our immediate social relations, but also in our dealings with our fellow citizens and with the whole human race. It is based upon the possession of clear ideals
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CHAPTER II MORALITY AS BASED UPON CHARACTER
CHAPTER II MORALITY AS BASED UPON CHARACTER
Though much of what we term morality has no absolute sanction in human nature, yet it is to some extent, and perhaps very largely, based upon it. It will be well, therefore, to consider briefly the nature and probable origin of what we term "character"—in individuals, in societies, and especially in those more ancient and more fundamental divisions of mankind which we term "races." Character may be defined as the aggregate of mental faculties and emotions which constitute personal or national in
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CHAPTER III PERMANENCE OF CHARACTER
CHAPTER III PERMANENCE OF CHARACTER
I will now call attention to a few of the facts which lead to the conclusion as to the stationary condition of general character from the earliest periods of human history, and presumably from the dawn of civilisation. In the earliest records which have come down to us from the past we find ample indications that general ethical conceptions, the accepted standard of morality, and the conduct resulting from these, were in no degree inferior to those which prevail to-day, though in some respects t
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CHAPTER IV PERMANENCE OF HIGH INTELLECT
CHAPTER IV PERMANENCE OF HIGH INTELLECT
Accompanying this fine literature and moral teaching in Ancient India was a civilisation equal to that of early classical races, in grand temples, forts and palaces, weapons and implements, jewelry and exquisite fabrics. Their architecture was highly decorative and peculiar, and has continued to quite recent times. Owing perhaps to the tropical or sub-tropical climate, with marked wet and dry seasons, the oldest buildings that have survived, even as ruins, are less ancient than those of Greece o
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CHAPTER V SPEECH AND WRITING AS PROOFS OF INTELLIGENCE
CHAPTER V SPEECH AND WRITING AS PROOFS OF INTELLIGENCE
There is yet another proof that the faculties of mankind at a very early epoch were fully equal to those of our own time. There is perhaps nothing more difficult in its nature, more utterly beyond the mere lower animal, than the faculty of articulate speech possessed by every race of mankind. We cannot but believe that its acquisition was an extremely slow process, and that it is rendered possible by special cerebral developments giving the necessary mental power for its acquirement. How long a
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CHAPTER VI SAVAGES NOT MORALLY INFERIOR TO CIVILISED RACES
CHAPTER VI SAVAGES NOT MORALLY INFERIOR TO CIVILISED RACES
If the facts and arguments set forth in the preceding chapters are correct we should not expect to find any living examples of the unspiritualised man, since the assumption is that the whole race received the influx which started them on their course of purely human development within a strictly limited period, perhaps of a very few generations or even one generation. The ancestral form—the supposed missing link—would then have become extinct. If this were not so we should expect to find some is
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CHAPTER VII A SELECTIVE AGENCY NEEDED TO IMPROVE CHARACTER
CHAPTER VII A SELECTIVE AGENCY NEEDED TO IMPROVE CHARACTER
The general result of the facts and arguments now set forth in the merest outline leads us to conclude that there has been no definite advance of morality from age to age, and that even the lowest races, at each period, possessed the same intellectual and moral nature as the higher. The manifestations of this essentially human nature in habits and conduct were often very diverse, in accordance with diversities of the social and moral environment. This is quite in accordance with the now well-est
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CHAPTER VIII ENVIRONMENT DURING THE NINETEENTH CENTURY
CHAPTER VIII ENVIRONMENT DURING THE NINETEENTH CENTURY
During the eighteenth century our material civilisation, which had long been almost stationary, began to advance with the growth of the physical sciences, but at first with extreme slowness. The earliest steps were made by the application of machinery to some of the domestic arts. Some refinements were made in the manners and customs of our daily life; but there were few, if any, indications of permanent or widespread change, either for better or worse, in our intellectual or moral nature. The n
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CHAPTER IX INSANITARY DWELLINGS AND LIFE-DESTROYING TRADES
CHAPTER IX INSANITARY DWELLINGS AND LIFE-DESTROYING TRADES
The enormous difference between town and country dwellers as regards duration of life and the prevalence of zymotic diseases has been known statistically since the era of registration, and a body of Health Officers have been set up to report upon the worst cases. The local authorities have power to compel the owners of unhealthy dwellings to put them into a sanitary condition, or even order them to be entirely rebuilt. But as many of the members of Corporations and other Local Boards are often t
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CHAPTER X ADULTERATION, BRIBERY, AND GAMBLING
CHAPTER X ADULTERATION, BRIBERY, AND GAMBLING
After the terrible national crime of deadly employments it is almost an anti-climax to enumerate the vast mass of dishonesty and falsehood that pervades our commercial system in every department. Almost every fabric, whether of cotton, linen, wool, or silk, is so widely and ingeniously adulterated by the intermixture of cheaper materials that the pure article as supplied to our grandparents is hardly to be obtained. Of this one example only must serve. Calicoes have been successively dressed wit
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CHAPTER XI OUR ADMINISTRATION OF "JUSTICE" IS IMMORAL
CHAPTER XI OUR ADMINISTRATION OF "JUSTICE" IS IMMORAL
When we read about the Turkish or other Eastern law courts, in which direct bribery of every official up to the judge himself is a regular feature, we are horrified, and are apt to proclaim the fact that our judges never take bribes. But, practically, it comes to very nearly the same thing in England. No single step can be made for the purpose of getting justice without paying fees; while the whole process of bringing or defending an action-at-law is so absurdly complex as to be almost incredibl
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CHAPTER XII INDICATIONS OF INCREASING MORAL DEGRADATION
CHAPTER XII INDICATIONS OF INCREASING MORAL DEGRADATION
There are in the Reports of the Registrar-General a few statistics of special importance because they clearly point to certain kinds of moral degradation which have been increasing for the last half-century, thus coinciding with our exceptionally rapid increase in wealth; and also, as I have shown in preceding chapters, with various forms of national, economic, and social deterioration. The first of these is the continuous increase in deaths from alcoholism, in proportion to population, since th
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CHAPTER XIII NATURAL SELECTION AMONG ANIMALS
CHAPTER XIII NATURAL SELECTION AMONG ANIMALS
While writing the present volume I was led to refer to it during some of the numerous interviews on the occasion of my recent birthday. This led to some misrepresentation of my views, and showed me how few popular press-writers have any real knowledge of the nature and extent of "natural selection," more especially as it affects the human race. There is also the same ignorance as regards "heredity"; and this latter has become almost a word to conjure with, and is thought by most writers to expla
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CHAPTER XIV SELECTION AS MODIFIED BY MIND
CHAPTER XIV SELECTION AS MODIFIED BY MIND
The theory of natural selection as expounded by Darwin was so completely successful in explaining the origin of the almost infinitely varied forms of the organic world, step by step, during the long succession of the geological ages, that it was naturally supposed to be equally applicable to mankind. This was thought to be almost certain when, in his later work, The Descent of Man , Darwin proved by a series of converging facts and convincing arguments that the physical structure of man was in a
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CHAPTER XV THE LAWS OF HEREDITY AND ENVIRONMENT
CHAPTER XV THE LAWS OF HEREDITY AND ENVIRONMENT
In dealing with the great problems of organic development there is probably no department in which so much error and misconception prevails as on the nature and limitations of Heredity. These misconceptions not only pervade most popular writings on the subject of evolution, but even those of men of science and of specialists in biology, and they are the more important and dangerous because their promulgators are able to quote Herbert Spencer, and to a less extent Darwin, as holding similar views
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CHAPTER XVI MORAL PROGRESS THROUGH A NEW FORM OF SELECTION
CHAPTER XVI MORAL PROGRESS THROUGH A NEW FORM OF SELECTION
Many readers, and some writers of books on organic evolution, seem quite unaware that Darwin established two modes of selection, both alike "natural" but acting in different ways and producing somewhat different results. He termed the second mode "sexual selection," and in his Origin of Species he briefly describes it as consisting in the fighting of males for the possession of females, which undoubtedly occurs in numbers of the higher vertebrates and also in insects. But he also includes under
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CHAPTER XVII HOW TO INITIATE AN ERA OF MORAL PROGRESS
CHAPTER XVII HOW TO INITIATE AN ERA OF MORAL PROGRESS
In Chapters VIII to XII of this volume I have given in briefest outline a summary of the growth during the nineteenth century of the actual social environment in the midst of which we live. We see a continuous advance of man's power to utilise the forces of Nature, to an extent which surpasses everything he had been able to do during all the preceding centuries of his recorded history. We also see that the result of this vast economic revolution has been almost wholly evil. We see that this hund
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