CHAPTER III
COMPARISON OF THE MENTAL POWERS OF MAN AND THE LOWER ANIMALS.
The difference in mental power between the highest ape and the lowest savage,
immense--Certain instincts in common--The emotions--Curiosity--
Imitation--Attention--Memory--Imagination--Reason--Progressive improvement
--Tools and weapons used by animals--Abstraction, Self-consciousness--
Language--Sense of beauty--Belief in God, spiritual agencies, superstitions.
We have seen in the last two chapters that man bears in his bodily structure
clear traces of his descent from some lower form; but it may be urged that, as
man differs so greatly in his mental power from all other animals, there must be
some error in this conclusion. No doubt the difference in this respect is
enormous, even if we compare the mind of one of the lowest savages, who has no
words to express any number higher than four, and who uses hardly any abstract
terms for common objects or for the affections (1. See the evidence on those
points, as given by Lubbock, 'Prehistoric Times,' p. 354, etc.), with that of
the most highly organised ape. The difference would, no doubt, still remain
immense, even if one of the higher apes had been improved or civilised as much
as a dog has been in comparison with its parent-form, the wolf or jackal. The
Fuegians rank amongst the lowest barbarians; but I was continually struck with
surprise how closely the three natives on board H.M.S. "Beagle," who
had lived some years in England, and could talk a little English, resembled us
in disposition and in most of our mental faculties. If no organic being
excepting man had possessed any mental power, or if his powers had been of a
wholly different nature from those of the lower animals, then we should never
have been able to convince ourselves that our high faculties had been gradually
developed. But it can be shewn that there is no fundamental difference of this
kind. We must also admit that there is a much wider interval in mental power
between one of the lowest fishes, as a lamprey or lancelet, and one of the
higher apes, than between an ape and man; yet this interval is filled up by
numberless gradations.
Nor is the difference slight in moral disposition between a barbarian, such
as the man described by the old navigator Byron, who dashed his child on the
rocks for dropping a basket of sea-urchins, and a Howard or Clarkson; and in
intellect, between a savage who uses hardly any abstract terms, and a Newton or
Shakspeare. Differences of this kind between the highest men of the highest
races and the lowest savages, are connected by the finest gradations. Therefore
it is possible that they might pass and be developed into each other.
My object in this chapter is to shew that there is no fundamental difference
between man and the higher mammals in their mental faculties. Each division of
the subject might have been extended into a separate essay, but must here be
treated briefly. As no classification of the mental powers has been universally
accepted, I shall arrange my remarks in the order most convenient for my
purpose; and will select those facts which have struck me most, with the hope
that they may produce some effect on the reader.
With respect to animals very low in the scale, I shall give some additional
facts under Sexual Selection, shewing that their mental powers are much higher
than might have been expected. The variability of the faculties in the
individuals of the same species is an important point for us, and some few
illustrations will here be given. But it would be superfluous to enter into many
details on this head, for I have found on frequent enquiry, that it is the
unanimous opinion of all those who have long attended to animals of many kinds,
including birds, that the individuals differ greatly in every mental
characteristic. In what manner the mental powers were first developed in the
lowest organisms, is as hopeless an enquiry as how life itself first originated.
These are problems for the distant future, if they are ever to be solved by man.
As man possesses the same senses as the lower animals, his fundamental
intuitions must be the same. Man has also some few instincts in common, as that
of self-preservation, sexual love, the love of the mother for her new- born
offspring, the desire possessed by the latter to suck, and so forth. But man,
perhaps, has somewhat fewer instincts than those possessed by the animals which
come next to him in the series. The orang in the Eastern islands, and the
chimpanzee in Africa, build platforms on which they sleep; and, as both species
follow the same habit, it might be argued that this was due to instinct, but we
cannot feel sure that it is not the result of both animals having similar wants,
and possessing similar powers of reasoning. These apes, as we may assume, avoid
the many poisonous fruits of the tropics, and man has no such knowledge: but as
our domestic animals, when taken to foreign lands, and when first turned out in
the spring, often eat poisonous herbs, which they afterwards avoid, we cannot
feel sure that the apes do not learn from their own experience or from that of
their parents what fruits to select. It is, however, certain, as we shall
presently see, that apes have an instinctive dread of serpents, and probably of
other dangerous animals.
The fewness and the comparative simplicity of the instincts in the higher
animals are remarkable in contrast with those of the lower animals. Cuvier
maintained that instinct and intelligence stand in an inverse ratio to each
other; and some have thought that the intellectual faculties of the higher
animals have been gradually developed from their instincts. But Pouchet, in an
interesting essay (2. 'L'Instinct chez les Insectes,' 'Revue des Deux Mondes,'
Feb. 1870, p. 690.), has shewn that no such inverse ratio really exists. Those
insects which possess the most wonderful instincts are certainly the most
intelligent. In the vertebrate series, the least intelligent members, namely
fishes and amphibians, do not possess complex instincts; and amongst mammals the
animal most remarkable for its instincts, namely the beaver, is highly
intelligent, as will be admitted by every one who has read Mr. Morgan's
excellent work. (3. 'The American Beaver and His Works,' 1868.)
Although the first dawnings of intelligence, according to Mr. Herbert Spencer
(4. 'The Principles of Psychology,' 2nd edit., 1870, pp. 418- 443.), have been
developed through the multiplication and co-ordination of reflex actions, and
although many of the simpler instincts graduate into reflex actions, and can
hardly be distinguished from them, as in the case of young animals sucking, yet
the more complex instincts seem to have originated independently of
intelligence. I am, however, very far from wishing to deny that instinctive
actions may lose their fixed and untaught character, and be replaced by others
performed by the aid of the free will. On the other hand, some intelligent
actions, after being performed during several generations, become converted into
instincts and are inherited, as when birds on oceanic islands learn to avoid
man. These actions may then be said to be degraded in character, for they are no
longer performed through reason or from experience. But the greater number of
the more complex instincts appear to have been gained in a wholly different
manner, through the natural selection of variations of simpler instinctive
actions. Such variations appear to arise from the same unknown causes acting on
the cerebral organisation, which induce slight variations or individual
differences in other parts of the body; and these variations, owing to our
ignorance, are often said to arise spontaneously. We can, I think, come to no
other conclusion with respect to the origin of the more complex instincts, when
we reflect on the marvellous instincts of sterile worker- ants and bees, which
leave no offspring to inherit the effects of experience and of modified habits.
Although, as we learn from the above-mentioned insects and the beaver, a high
degree of intelligence is certainly compatible with complex instincts, and
although actions, at first learnt voluntarily can soon through habit be
performed with the quickness and certainty of a reflex action, yet it is not
improbable that there is a certain amount of interference between the
development of free intelligence and of instinct,--which latter implies some
inherited modification of the brain. Little is known about the functions of the
brain, but we can perceive that as the intellectual powers become highly
developed, the various parts of the brain must be connected by very intricate
channels of the freest intercommunication; and as a consequence each separate
part would perhaps tend to be less well fitted to answer to particular
sensations or associations in a definite and inherited--that is
instinctive--manner. There seems even to exist some relation between a low
degree of intelligence and a strong tendency to the formation of fixed, though
not inherited habits; for as a sagacious physician remarked to me, persons who
are slightly imbecile tend to act in everything by routine or habit; and they
are rendered much happier if this is encouraged.
I have thought this digression worth giving, because we may easily underrate
the mental powers of the higher animals, and especially of man, when we compare
their actions founded on the memory of past events, on foresight, reason, and
imagination, with exactly similar actions instinctively performed by the lower
animals; in this latter case the capacity of performing such actions has been
gained, step by step, through the variability of the mental organs and natural
selection, without any conscious intelligence on the part of the animal during
each successive generation. No doubt, as Mr. Wallace has argued (5.
'Contributions to the Theory of Natural Selection,' 1870, p. 212.), much of the
intelligent work done by man is due to imitation and not to reason; but there is
this great difference between his actions and many of those performed by the
lower animals, namely, that man cannot, on his first trial, make, for instance,
a stone hatchet or a canoe, through his power of imitation. He has to learn his
work by practice; a beaver, on the other hand, can make its dam or canal, and a
bird its nest, as well, or nearly as well, and a spider its wonderful web, quite
as well (6. For the evidence on this head, see Mr. J. Traherne Moggridge's most
interesting work, 'Harvesting Ants and Trap-Door Spiders,' 1873, pp. 126, 128.),
the first time it tries as when old and experienced.
To return to our immediate subject: the lower animals, like man, manifestly
feel pleasure and pain, happiness and misery. Happiness is never better
exhibited than by young animals, such as puppies, kittens, lambs, etc., when
playing together, like our own children. Even insects play together, as has been
described by that excellent observer, P. Huber (7. 'Recherches sur les Moeurs
des Fourmis,' 1810, p. 173.), who saw ants chasing and pretending to bite each
other, like so many puppies.
The fact that the lower animals are excited by the same emotions as ourselves
is so well established, that it will not be necessary to weary the reader by
many details. Terror acts in the same manner on them as on us, causing the
muscles to tremble, the heart to palpitate, the sphincters to be relaxed, and
the hair to stand on end. Suspicion, the offspring of fear, is eminently
characteristic of most wild animals. It is, I think, impossible to read the
account given by Sir E. Tennent, of the behaviour of the female elephants, used
as decoys, without admitting that they intentionally practise deceit, and well
know what they are about. Courage and timidity are extremely variable qualities
in the individuals of the same species, as is plainly seen in our dogs. Some
dogs and horses are ill-tempered, and easily turn sulky; others are
good-tempered; and these qualities are certainly inherited. Every one knows how
liable animals are to furious rage, and how plainly they shew it. Many, and
probably true, anecdotes have been published on the long-delayed and artful
revenge of various animals. The accurate Rengger, and Brehm (8. All the
following statements, given on the authority of these two naturalists, are taken
from Rengger's 'Naturgesch. der Saugethiere von Paraguay,' 1830, s. 41-57, and
from Brehm's 'Thierleben,' B. i. s. 10-87.) state that the American and African
monkeys which they kept tame, certainly revenged themselves. Sir Andrew Smith, a
zoologist whose scrupulous accuracy was known to many persons, told me the
following story of which he was himself an eye- witness; at the Cape of Good
Hope an officer had often plagued a certain baboon, and the animal, seeing him
approaching one Sunday for parade, poured water into a hole and hastily made
some thick mud, which he skilfully dashed over the officer as he passed by, to
the amusement of many bystanders. For long afterwards the baboon rejoiced and
triumphed whenever he saw his victim.
The love of a dog for his master is notorious; as an old writer quaintly says
(9. Quoted by Dr. Lauder Lindsay, in his 'Physiology of Mind in the Lower
Animals,' 'Journal of Mental Science,' April 1871, p. 38.), "A dog is the
only thing on this earth that luvs you more than he luvs himself."
In the agony of death a dog has been known to caress his master, and every
one has heard of the dog suffering under vivisection, who licked the hand of the
operator; this man, unless the operation was fully justified by an increase of
our knowledge, or unless he had a heart of stone, must have felt remorse to the
last hour of his life.
As Whewell (10. 'Bridgewater Treatise,' p. 263.) has well asked, "who
that reads the touching instances of maternal affection, related so often of the
women of all nations, and of the females of all animals, can doubt that the
principle of action is the same in the two cases?" We see maternal
affection exhibited in the most trifling details; thus Rengger observed an
American monkey (a Cebus) carefully driving away the flies which plagued her
infant; and Duvaucel saw a Hylobates washing the faces of her young ones in a
stream. So intense is the grief of female monkeys for the loss of their young,
that it invariably caused the death of certain kinds kept under confinement by
Brehm in N. Africa. Orphan monkeys were always adopted and carefully guarded by
the other monkeys, both males and females. One female baboon had so capacious a
heart that she not only adopted young monkeys of other species, but stole young
dogs and cats, which she continually carried about. Her kindness, however, did
not go so far as to share her food with her adopted offspring, at which Brehm
was surprised, as his monkeys always divided everything quite fairly with their
own young ones. An adopted kitten scratched this affectionate baboon, who
certainly had a fine intellect, for she was much astonished at being scratched,
and immediately examined the kitten's feet, and without more ado bit off the
claws. (11. A critic, without any grounds ('Quarterly Review,' July 1871, p.
72), disputes the possibility of this act as described by Brehm, for the sake of
discrediting my work. Therefore I tried, and found that I could readily seize
with my own teeth the sharp little claws of a kitten nearly five weeks old.) In
the Zoological Gardens, I heard from the keeper that an old baboon (C. chacma)
had adopted a Rhesus monkey; but when a young drill and mandrill were placed in
the cage, she seemed to perceive that these monkeys, though distinct species,
were her nearer relatives, for she at once rejected the Rhesus and adopted both
of them. The young Rhesus, as I saw, was greatly discontented at being thus
rejected, and it would, like a naughty child, annoy and attack the young drill
and mandrill whenever it could do so with safety; this conduct exciting great
indignation in the old baboon. Monkeys will also, according to Brehm, defend
their master when attacked by any one, as well as dogs to whom they are
attached, from the attacks of other dogs. But we here trench on the subjects of
sympathy and fidelity, to which I shall recur. Some of Brehm's monkeys took much
delight in teasing a certain old dog whom they disliked, as well as other
animals, in various ingenious ways.
Most of the more complex emotions are common to the higher animals and
ourselves. Every one has seen how jealous a dog is of his master's affection, if
lavished on any other creature; and I have observed the same fact with monkeys.
This shews that animals not only love, but have desire to be loved. Animals
manifestly feel emulation. They love approbation or praise; and a dog carrying a
basket for his master exhibits in a high degree self-complacency or pride. There
can, I think, be no doubt that a dog feels shame, as distinct from fear, and
something very like modesty when begging too often for food. A great dog scorns
the snarling of a little dog, and this may be called magnanimity. Several
observers have stated that monkeys certainly dislike being laughed at; and they
sometimes invent imaginary offences. In the Zoological Gardens I saw a baboon
who always got into a furious rage when his keeper took out a letter or book and
read it aloud to him; and his rage was so violent that, as I witnessed on one
occasion, he bit his own leg till the blood flowed. Dogs shew what may be fairly
called a sense of humour, as distinct from mere play; if a bit of stick or other
such object be thrown to one, he will often carry it away for a short distance;
and then squatting down with it on the ground close before him, will wait until
his master comes quite close to take it away. The dog will then seize it and
rush away in triumph, repeating the same manoeuvre, and evidently enjoying the
practical joke.
We will now turn to the more intellectual emotions and faculties, which are
very important, as forming the basis for the development of the higher mental
powers. Animals manifestly enjoy excitement, and suffer from ennui, as may be
seen with dogs, and, according to Rengger, with monkeys. All animals feel
WONDER, and many exhibit CURIOSITY. They sometimes suffer from this latter
quality, as when the hunter plays antics and thus attracts them; I have
witnessed this with deer, and so it is with the wary chamois, and with some
kinds of wild-ducks. Brehm gives a curious account of the instinctive dread,
which his monkeys exhibited, for snakes; but their curiosity was so great that
they could not desist from occasionally satiating their horror in a most human
fashion, by lifting up the lid of the box in which the snakes were kept. I was
so much surprised at his account, that I took a stuffed and coiled-up snake into
the monkey-house at the Zoological Gardens, and the excitement thus caused was
one of the most curious spectacles which I ever beheld. Three species of
Cercopithecus were the most alarmed; they dashed about their cages, and uttered
sharp signal cries of danger, which were understood by the other monkeys. A few
young monkeys and one old Anubis baboon alone took no notice of the snake. I
then placed the stuffed specimen on the ground in one of the larger
compartments. After a time all the monkeys collected round it in a large circle,
and staring intently, presented a most ludicrous appearance. They became
extremely nervous; so that when a wooden ball, with which they were familiar as
a plaything, was accidentally moved in the straw, under which it was partly
hidden, they all instantly started away. These monkeys behaved very differently
when a dead fish, a mouse (12. I have given a short account of their behaviour
on this occasion in my 'Expression of the Emotions in Man and Animals,' p. 43.),
a living turtle, and other new objects were placed in their cages; for though at
first frightened, they soon approached, handled and examined them. I then placed
a live snake in a paper bag, with the mouth loosely closed, in one of the larger
compartments. One of the monkeys immediately approached, cautiously opened the
bag a little, peeped in, and instantly dashed away. Then I witnessed what Brehm
has described, for monkey after monkey, with head raised high and turned on one
side, could not resist taking a momentary peep into the upright bag, at the
dreadful object lying quietly at the bottom. It would almost appear as if
monkeys had some notion of zoological affinities, for those kept by Brehm
exhibited a strange, though mistaken, instinctive dread of innocent lizards and
frogs. An orang, also, has been known to be much alarmed at the first sight of a
turtle. (13. W.C.L. Martin, 'Natural History of Mammalia,' 1841, p. 405.)
The principle of IMITATION is strong in man, and especially, as I have myself
observed, with savages. In certain morbid states of the brain this tendency is
exaggerated to an extraordinary degree: some hemiplegic patients and others, at
the commencement of inflammatory softening of the brain, unconsciously imitate
every word which is uttered, whether in their own or in a foreign language, and
every gesture or action which is performed near them. (14. Dr. Bateman, 'On
Aphasia,' 1870, p. 110.) Desor (15. Quoted by Vogt, 'Memoire sur les
Microcephales,' 1867, p. 168.) has remarked that no animal voluntarily imitates
an action performed by man, until in the ascending scale we come to monkeys,
which are well known to be ridiculous mockers. Animals, however, sometimes
imitate each other's actions: thus two species of wolves, which had been reared
by dogs, learned to bark, as does sometimes the jackal (16. The 'Variation of
Animals and Plants under Domestication,' vol. i. p. 27.), but whether this can
be called voluntary imitation is another question. Birds imitate the songs of
their parents, and sometimes of other birds; and parrots are notorious imitators
of any sound which they often hear. Dureau de la Malle gives an account (17. 'Annales
des Sciences Nat.' (1st Series), tom. xxii. p. 397.) of a dog reared by a cat,
who learnt to imitate the well-known action of a cat licking her paws, and thus
washing her ears and face; this was also witnessed by the celebrated naturalist
Audouin. I have received several confirmatory accounts; in one of these, a dog
had not been suckled by a cat, but had been brought up with one, together with
kittens, and had thus acquired the above habit, which he ever afterwards
practised during his life of thirteen years. Dureau de la Malle's dog likewise
learnt from the kittens to play with a ball by rolling it about with his fore
paws, and springing on it. A correspondent assures me that a cat in his house
used to put her paws into jugs of milk having too narrow a mouth for her head. A
kitten of this cat soon learned the same trick, and practised it ever
afterwards, whenever there was an opportunity.
The parents of many animals, trusting to the principle of imitation in their
young, and more especially to their instinctive or inherited tendencies, may be
said to educate them. We see this when a cat brings a live mouse to her kittens;
and Dureau de la Malle has given a curious account (in the paper above quoted)
of his observations on hawks which taught their young dexterity, as well as
judgment of distances, by first dropping through the air dead mice and sparrows,
which the young generally failed to catch, and then bringing them live birds and
letting them loose.
Hardly any faculty is more important for the intellectual progress of man
than ATTENTION. Animals clearly manifest this power, as when a cat watches by a
hole and prepares to spring on its prey. Wild animals sometimes become so
absorbed when thus engaged, that they may be easily approached. Mr. Bartlett has
given me a curious proof how variable this faculty is in monkeys. A man who
trains monkeys to act in plays, used to purchase common kinds from the
Zoological Society at the price of five pounds for each; but he offered to give
double the price, if he might keep three or four of them for a few days, in
order to select one. When asked how he could possibly learn so soon, whether a
particular monkey would turn out a good actor, he answered that it all depended
on their power of attention. If when he was talking and explaining anything to a
monkey, its attention was easily distracted, as by a fly on the wall or other
trifling object, the case was hopeless. If he tried by punishment to make an
inattentive monkey act, it turned sulky. On the other hand, a monkey which
carefully attended to him could always be trained.
It is almost superfluous to state that animals have excellent MEMORIES for
persons and places. A baboon at the Cape of Good Hope, as I have been informed
by Sir Andrew Smith, recognised him with joy after an absence of nine months. I
had a dog who was savage and averse to all strangers, and I purposely tried his
memory after an absence of five years and two days. I went near the stable where
he lived, and shouted to him in my old manner; he shewed no joy, but instantly
followed me out walking, and obeyed me, exactly as if I had parted with him only
half an hour before. A train of old associations, dormant during five years, had
thus been instantaneously awakened in his mind. Even ants, as P. Huber (18. 'Les
Moeurs des Fourmis,' 1810, p. 150.) has clearly shewn, recognised their
fellow-ants belonging to the same community after a separation of four months.
Animals can certainly by some means judge of the intervals of time between
recurrent events.
The IMAGINATION is one of the highest prerogatives of man. By this faculty he
unites former images and ideas, independently of the will, and thus creates
brilliant and novel results. A poet, as Jean Paul Richter remarks (19. Quoted in
Dr. Maudsley's 'Physiology and Pathology of Mind,' 1868, pp. 19, 220.),
"who must reflect whether he shall make a character say yes or no--to the
devil with him; he is only a stupid corpse." Dreaming gives us the best
notion of this power; as Jean Paul again says, "The dream is an involuntary
art of poetry." The value of the products of our imagination depends of
course on the number, accuracy, and clearness of our impressions, on our
judgment and taste in selecting or rejecting the involuntary combinations, and
to a certain extent on our power of voluntarily combining them. As dogs, cats,
horses, and probably all the higher animals, even birds (20. Dr. Jerdon, 'Birds
of India,' vol. i. 1862, p. xxi. Houzeau says that his parokeets and
canary-birds dreamt: 'Etudes sur les Facultes Mentales des Animaux,' tom. ii. p.
136.) have vivid dreams, and this is shewn by their movements and the sounds
uttered, we must admit that they possess some power of imagination. There must
be something special, which causes dogs to howl in the night, and especially
during moonlight, in that remarkable and melancholy manner called baying. All
dogs do not do so; and, according to Houzeau (21. ibid. 1872, tom. ii. p. 181.),
they do not then look at the moon, but at some fixed point near the horizon.
Houzeau thinks that their imaginations are disturbed by the vague outlines of
the surrounding objects, and conjure up before them fantastic images: if this be
so, their feelings may almost be called superstitious.
Of all the faculties of the human mind, it will, I presume, be admitted that
REASON stands at the summit. Only a few persons now dispute that animals possess
some power of reasoning. Animals may constantly be seen to pause, deliberate,
and resolve. It is a significant fact, that the more the habits of any
particular animal are studied by a naturalist, the more he attributes to reason
and the less to unlearnt instincts. (22. Mr. L.H. Morgan's work on 'The American
Beaver,' 1868, offers a good illustration of this remark. I cannot help
thinking, however, that he goes too far in underrating the power of instinct.)
In future chapters we shall see that some animals extremely low in the scale
apparently display a certain amount of reason. No doubt it is often difficult to
distinguish between the power of reason and that of instinct. For instance, Dr.
Hayes, in his work on 'The Open Polar Sea,' repeatedly remarks that his dogs,
instead of continuing to draw the sledges in a compact body, diverged and
separated when they came to thin ice, so that their weight might be more evenly
distributed. This was often the first warning which the travellers received that
the ice was becoming thin and dangerous. Now, did the dogs act thus from the
experience of each individual, or from the example of the older and wiser dogs,
or from an inherited habit, that is from instinct? This instinct, may possibly
have arisen since the time, long ago, when dogs were first employed by the
natives in drawing their sledges; or the Arctic wolves, the parent-stock of the
Esquimaux dog, may have acquired an instinct impelling them not to attack their
prey in a close pack, when on thin ice.
We can only judge by the circumstances under which actions are performed,
whether they are due to instinct, or to reason, or to the mere association of
ideas: this latter principle, however, is intimately connected with reason. A
curious case has been given by Prof. Mobius (23. 'Die Bewegungen der Thiere,'
etc., 1873, p. 11.), of a pike, separated by a plate of glass from an adjoining
aquarium stocked with fish, and who often dashed himself with such violence
against the glass in trying to catch the other fishes, that he was sometimes
completely stunned. The pike went on thus for three months, but at last learnt
caution, and ceased to do so. The plate of glass was then removed, but the pike
would not attack these particular fishes, though he would devour others which
were afterwards introduced; so strongly was the idea of a violent shock
associated in his feeble mind with the attempt on his former neighbours. If a
savage, who had never seen a large plate-glass window, were to dash himself even
once against it, he would for a long time afterwards associate a shock with a
window-frame; but very differently from the pike, he would probably reflect on
the nature of the impediment, and be cautious under analogous circumstances. Now
with monkeys, as we shall presently see, a painful or merely a disagreeable
impression, from an action once performed, is sometimes sufficient to prevent
the animal from repeating it. If we attribute this difference between the monkey
and the pike solely to the association of ideas being so much stronger and more
persistent in the one than the other, though the pike often received much the
more severe injury, can we maintain in the case of man that a similar difference
implies the possession of a fundamentally different mind?
Houzeau relates (24. 'Etudes sur les Facultes Mentales des Animaux,' 1872,
tom. ii. p. 265.) that, whilst crossing a wide and arid plain in Texas, his two
dogs suffered greatly from thirst, and that between thirty and forty times they
rushed down the hollows to search for water. These hollows were not valleys, and
there were no trees in them, or any other difference in the vegetation, and as
they were absolutely dry there could have been no smell of damp earth. The dogs
behaved as if they knew that a dip in the ground offered them the best chance of
finding water, and Houzeau has often witnessed the same behaviour in other
animals.
I have seen, as I daresay have others, that when a small object is thrown on
the ground beyond the reach of one of the elephants in the Zoological Gardens,
he blows through his trunk on the ground beyond the object, so that the current
reflected on all sides may drive the object within his reach. Again a well-known
ethnologist, Mr. Westropp, informs me that he observed in Vienna a bear
deliberately making with his paw a current in some water, which was close to the
bars of his cage, so as to draw a piece of floating bread within his reach.
These actions of the elephant and bear can hardly be attributed to instinct or
inherited habit, as they would be of little use to an animal in a state of
nature. Now, what is the difference between such actions, when performed by an
uncultivated man, and by one of the higher animals?
The savage and the dog have often found water at a low level, and the
coincidence under such circumstances has become associated in their minds. A
cultivated man would perhaps make some general proposition on the subject; but
from all that we know of savages it is extremely doubtful whether they would do
so, and a dog certainly would not. But a savage, as well as a dog, would search
in the same way, though frequently disappointed; and in both it seems to be
equally an act of reason, whether or not any general proposition on the subject
is consciously placed before the mind. (25. Prof. Huxley has analysed with
admirable clearness the mental steps by which a man, as well as a dog, arrives
at a conclusion in a case analogous to that given in my text. See his article,
'Mr. Darwin's Critics,' in the 'Contemporary Review,' Nov. 1871, p. 462, and in
his 'Critiques and Essays,' 1873, p. 279.) The same would apply to the elephant
and the bear making currents in the air or water. The savage would certainly
neither know nor care by what law the desired movements were effected; yet his
act would be guided by a rude process of reasoning, as surely as would a
philosopher in his longest chain of deductions. There would no doubt be this
difference between him and one of the higher animals, that he would take notice
of much slighter circumstances and conditions, and would observe any connection
between them after much less experience, and this would be of paramount
importance. I kept a daily record of the actions of one of my infants, and when
he was about eleven months old, and before he could speak a single word, I was
continually struck with the greater quickness, with which all sorts of objects
and sounds were associated together in his mind, compared with that of the most
intelligent dogs I ever knew. But the higher animals differ in exactly the same
way in this power of association from those low in the scale, such as the pike,
as well as in that of drawing inferences and of observation.
The promptings of reason, after very short experience, are well shewn by the
following actions of American monkeys, which stand low in their order. Rengger,
a most careful observer, states that when he first gave eggs to his monkeys in
Paraguay, they smashed them, and thus lost much of their contents; afterwards
they gently hit one end against some hard body, and picked off the bits of shell
with their fingers. After cutting themselves only ONCE with any sharp tool, they
would not touch it again, or would handle it with the greatest caution. Lumps of
sugar were often given them wrapped up in paper; and Rengger sometimes put a
live wasp in the paper, so that in hastily unfolding it they got stung; after
this had ONCE happened, they always first held the packet to their ears to
detect any movement within. (26. Mr. Belt, in his most interesting work, 'The
Naturalist in Nicaragua,' 1874, (p. 119,) likewise describes various actions of
a tamed Cebus, which, I think, clearly shew that this animal possessed some
reasoning power.)
The following cases relate to dogs. Mr. Colquhoun (27. 'The Moor and the
Loch,' p. 45. Col. Hutchinson on 'Dog Breaking,' 1850, p. 46.) winged two
wild-ducks, which fell on the further side of a stream; his retriever tried to
bring over both at once, but could not succeed; she then, though never before
known to ruffle a feather, deliberately killed one, brought over the other, and
returned for the dead bird. Col. Hutchinson relates that two partridges were
shot at once, one being killed, the other wounded; the latter ran away, and was
caught by the retriever, who on her return came across the dead bird; "she
stopped, evidently greatly puzzled, and after one or two trials, finding she
could not take it up without permitting the escape of the winged bird, she
considered a moment, then deliberately murdered it by giving it a severe crunch,
and afterwards brought away both together. This was the only known instance of
her ever having wilfully injured any game." Here we have reason though not
quite perfect, for the retriever might have brought the wounded bird first and
then returned for the dead one, as in the case of the two wild-ducks. I give the
above cases, as resting on the evidence of two independent witnesses, and
because in both instances the retrievers, after deliberation, broke through a
habit which is inherited by them (that of not killing the game retrieved), and
because they shew how strong their reasoning faculty must have been to overcome
a fixed habit.
I will conclude by quoting a remark by the illustrious Humboldt. (28.
'Personal Narrative,' Eng. translat., vol. iii. p. 106.) "The muleteers in
S. America say, 'I will not give you the mule whose step is easiest, but la mas
racional,--the one that reasons best'"; and; as, he adds, "this
popular expression, dictated by long experience, combats the system of animated
machines, better perhaps than all the arguments of speculative philosophy."
Nevertheless some writers even yet deny that the higher animals possess a trace
of reason; and they endeavour to explain away, by what appears to be mere
verbiage, (29. I am glad to find that so acute a reasoner as Mr. Leslie Stephen
('Darwinism and Divinity, Essays on Free Thinking,' 1873, p. 80), in speaking of
the supposed impassable barrier between the minds of man and the lower animals,
says, "The distinctions, indeed, which have been drawn, seem to us to rest
upon no better foundation than a great many other metaphysical distinctions;
that is, the assumption that because you can give two things different names,
they must therefore have different natures. It is difficult to understand how
anybody who has ever kept a dog, or seen an elephant, can have any doubt as to
an animal's power of performing the essential processes of reasoning.") all
such facts as those above given.
It has, I think, now been shewn that man and the higher animals, especially
the Primates, have some few instincts in common. All have the same senses,
intuitions, and sensations,--similar passions, affections, and emotions, even
the more complex ones, such as jealousy, suspicion, emulation, gratitude, and
magnanimity; they practise deceit and are revengeful; they are sometimes
susceptible to ridicule, and even have a sense of humour; they feel wonder and
curiosity; they possess the same faculties of imitation, attention,
deliberation, choice, memory, imagination, the association of ideas, and reason,
though in very different degrees. The individuals of the same species graduate
in intellect from absolute imbecility to high excellence. They are also liable
to insanity, though far less often than in the case of man. (30. See 'Madness in
Animals,' by Dr. W. Lauder Lindsay, in 'Journal of Mental Science,' July 1871.)
Nevertheless, many authors have insisted that man is divided by an insuperable
barrier from all the lower animals in his mental faculties. I formerly made a
collection of above a score of such aphorisms, but they are almost worthless, as
their wide difference and number prove the difficulty, if not the impossibility,
of the attempt. It has been asserted that man alone is capable of progressive
improvement; that he alone makes use of tools or fire, domesticates other
animals, or possesses property; that no animal has the power of abstraction, or
of forming general concepts, is self-conscious and comprehends itself; that no
animal employs language; that man alone has a sense of beauty, is liable to
caprice, has the feeling of gratitude, mystery, etc.; believes in God, or is
endowed with a conscience. I will hazard a few remarks on the more important and
interesting of these points.
Archbishop Sumner formerly maintained (31. Quoted by Sir C. Lyell, 'Antiquity
of Man,' p. 497.) that man alone is capable of progressive improvement. That he
is capable of incomparably greater and more rapid improvement than is any other
animal, admits of no dispute; and this is mainly due to his power of speaking
and handing down his acquired knowledge. With animals, looking first to the
individual, every one who has had any experience in setting traps, knows that
young animals can he caught much more easily than old ones; and they can be much
more easily approached by an enemy. Even with respect to old animals, it is
impossible to catch many in the same place and in the same kind of trap, or to
destroy them by the same kind of poison; yet it is improbable that all should
have partaken of the poison, and impossible that all should have been caught in
a trap. They must learn caution by seeing their brethren caught or poisoned. In
North America, where the fur-bearing animals have long been pursued, they
exhibit, according to the unanimous testimony of all observers, an almost
incredible amount of sagacity, caution and cunning; but trapping has been there
so long carried on, that inheritance may possibly have come into play. I have
received several accounts that when telegraphs are first set up in any district,
many birds kill themselves by flying against the wires, but that in the course
of a very few years they learn to avoid this danger, by seeing, as it would
appear, their comrades killed. (32. For additional evidence, with details, see
M. Houzeau, 'Etudes sur les Facultes Mentales des Animaux,' tom. ii. 1872, p.
147.)
If we look to successive generations, or to the race, there is no doubt that
birds and other animals gradually both acquire and lose caution in relation to
man or other enemies (33. See, with respect to birds on oceanic islands, my
'Journal of Researches during the Voyage of the "Beagle,"' 1845, p.
398. 'Origin of Species,' 5th ed. p. 260.); and this caution is certainly in
chief part an inherited habit or instinct, but in part the result of individual
experience. A good observer, Leroy (34. 'Lettres Phil. sur l'Intelligence des
Animaux,' nouvelle edit., 1802, p. 86.), states, that in districts where foxes
are much hunted, the young, on first leaving their burrows, are incontestably
much more wary than the old ones in districts where they are not much disturbed.
Our domestic dogs are descended from wolves and jackals (35. See the evidence
on this head in chap. i. vol. i., 'On the Variation of Animals and Plants under
Domestication.'), and though they may not have gained in cunning, and may have
lost in wariness and suspicion, yet they have progressed in certain moral
qualities, such as in affection, trust- worthiness, temper, and probably in
general intelligence. The common rat has conquered and beaten several other
species throughout Europe, in parts of North America, New Zealand, and recently
in Formosa, as well as on the mainland of China. Mr. Swinhoe (36. 'Proceedings
Zoological Society,' 1864, p. 186.), who describes these two latter cases,
attributes the victory of the common rat over the large Mus coninga to its
superior cunning; and this latter quality may probably be attributed to the
habitual exercise of all its faculties in avoiding extirpation by man, as well
as to nearly all the less cunning or weak-minded rats having been continuously
destroyed by him. It is, however, possible that the success of the common rat
may be due to its having possessed greater cunning than its fellow- species,
before it became associated with man. To maintain, independently of any direct
evidence, that no animal during the course of ages has progressed in intellect
or other mental faculties, is to beg the question of the evolution of species.
We have seen that, according to Lartet, existing mammals belonging to several
orders have larger brains than their ancient tertiary prototypes.
It has often been said that no animal uses any tool; but the chimpanzee in a
state of nature cracks a native fruit, somewhat like a walnut, with a stone.
(37. Savage and Wyman in 'Boston Journal of Natural History,' vol. iv. 1843-44,
p. 383.) Rengger (38. 'Saugethiere von Paraguay,' 1830, s. 51-56.) easily taught
an American monkey thus to break open hard palm-nuts; and afterwards of its own
accord, it used stones to open other kinds of nuts, as well as boxes. It thus
also removed the soft rind of fruit that had a disagreeable flavour. Another
monkey was taught to open the lid of a large box with a stick, and afterwards it
used the stick as a lever to move heavy bodies; and I have myself seen a young
orang put a stick into a crevice, slip his hand to the other end, and use it in
the proper manner as a lever. The tamed elephants in India are well known to
break off branches of trees and use them to drive away the flies; and this same
act has been observed in an elephant in a state of nature. (39. The Indian
Field, March 4, 1871.) I have seen a young orang, when she thought she was going
to be whipped, cover and protect herself with a blanket or straw. In these
several cases stones and sticks were employed as implements; but they are
likewise used as weapons. Brehm (40. 'Thierleben,' B. i. s. 79, 82.) states, on
the authority of the well-known traveller Schimper, that in Abyssinia when the
baboons belonging to one species (C. gelada) descend in troops from the
mountains to plunder the fields, they sometimes encounter troops of another
species (C. hamadryas), and then a fight ensues. The Geladas roll down great
stones, which the Hamadryas try to avoid, and then both species, making a great
uproar, rush furiously against each other. Brehm, when accompanying the Duke of
Coburg-Gotha, aided in an attack with fire-arms on a troop of baboons in the
pass of Mensa in Abyssinia. The baboons in return rolled so many stones down the
mountain, some as large as a man's head, that the attackers had to beat a hasty
retreat; and the pass was actually closed for a time against the caravan. It
deserves notice that these baboons thus acted in concert. Mr. Wallace (41. 'The
Malay Archipelago,' vol. i. 1869, p. 87.) on three occasions saw female orangs,
accompanied by their young, "breaking off branches and the great spiny
fruit of the Durian tree, with every appearance of rage; causing such a shower
of missiles as effectually kept us from approaching too near the tree." As
I have repeatedly seen, a chimpanzee will throw any object at hand at a person
who offends him; and the before-mentioned baboon at the Cape of Good Hope
prepared mud for the purpose.
In the Zoological Gardens, a monkey, which had weak teeth, used to break open
nuts with a stone; and I was assured by the keepers that after using the stone,
he hid it in the straw, and would not let any other monkey touch it. Here, then,
we have the idea of property; but this idea is common to every dog with a bone,
and to most or all birds with their nests.
The Duke of Argyll (42. 'Primeval Man,' 1869, pp. 145, 147.) remarks, that
the fashioning of an implement for a special purpose is absolutely peculiar to
man; and he considers that this forms an immeasurable gulf between him and the
brutes. This is no doubt a very important distinction; but there appears to me
much truth in Sir J. Lubbock's suggestion (43. 'Prehistoric Times,' 1865, p.
473, etc.), that when primeval man first used flint-stones for any purpose, he
would have accidentally splintered them, and would then have used the sharp
fragments. From this step it would be a small one to break the flints on
purpose, and not a very wide step to fashion them rudely. This latter advance,
however, may have taken long ages, if we may judge by the immense interval of
time which elapsed before the men of the neolithic period took to grinding and
polishing their stone tools. In breaking the flints, as Sir J. Lubbock likewise
remarks, sparks would have been emitted, and in grinding them heat would have
been evolved: thus the two usual methods of "obtaining fire may have
originated." The nature of fire would have been known in the many volcanic
regions where lava occasionally flows through forests. The anthropomorphous
apes, guided probably by instinct, build for themselves temporary platforms; but
as many instincts are largely controlled by reason, the simpler ones, such as
this of building a platform, might readily pass into a voluntary and conscious
act. The orang is known to cover itself at night with the leaves of the
Pandanus; and Brehm states that one of his baboons used to protect itself from
the heat of the sun by throwing a straw-mat over its head. In these several
habits, we probably see the first steps towards some of the simpler arts, such
as rude architecture and dress, as they arose amongst the early progenitors of
man.
ABSTRACTION, GENERAL CONCEPTIONS, SELF-CONSCIOUSNESS, MENTAL INDIVIDUALITY.
It would be very difficult for any one with even much more knowledge than I
possess, to determine how far animals exhibit any traces of these high mental
powers. This difficulty arises from the impossibility of judging what passes
through the mind of an animal; and again, the fact that writers differ to a
great extent in the meaning which they attribute to the above terms, causes a
further difficulty. If one may judge from various articles which have been
published lately, the greatest stress seems to be laid on the supposed entire
absence in animals of the power of abstraction, or of forming general concepts.
But when a dog sees another dog at a distance, it is often clear that he
perceives that it is a dog in the abstract; for when he gets nearer his whole
manner suddenly changes, if the other dog be a friend. A recent writer remarks,
that in all such cases it is a pure assumption to assert that the mental act is
not essentially of the same nature in the animal as in man. If either refers
what he perceives with his senses to a mental concept, then so do both. (44. Mr.
Hookham, in a letter to Prof. Max Muller, in the 'Birmingham News,' May 1873.)
When I say to my terrier, in an eager voice (and I have made the trial many
times), "Hi, hi, where is it?" she at once takes it as a sign that
something is to be hunted, and generally first looks quickly all around, and
then rushes into the nearest thicket, to scent for any game, but finding
nothing, she looks up into any neighbouring tree for a squirrel. Now do not
these actions clearly shew that she had in her mind a general idea or concept
that some animal is to be discovered and hunted?
It may be freely admitted that no animal is self-conscious, if by this term
it is implied, that he reflects on such points, as whence he comes or whither he
will go, or what is life and death, and so forth. But how can we feel sure that
an old dog with an excellent memory and some power of imagination, as shewn by
his dreams, never reflects on his past pleasures or pains in the chase? And this
would be a form of self-consciousness. On the other hand, as Buchner (45.
'Conferences sur la Theorie Darwinienne,' French translat. 1869, p. 132.) has
remarked, how little can the hard- worked wife of a degraded Australian savage,
who uses very few abstract words, and cannot count above four, exert her
self-consciousness, or reflect on the nature of her own existence. It is
generally admitted, that the higher animals possess memory, attention,
association, and even some imagination and reason. If these powers, which differ
much in different animals, are capable of improvement, there seems no great
improbability in more complex faculties, such as the higher forms of
abstraction, and self- consciousness, etc., having been evolved through the
development and combination of the simpler ones. It has been urged against the
views here maintained that it is impossible to say at what point in the
ascending scale animals become capable of abstraction, etc.; but who can say at
what age this occurs in our young children? We see at least that such powers are
developed in children by imperceptible degrees.
That animals retain their mental individuality is unquestionable. When my
voice awakened a train of old associations in the mind of the before- mentioned
dog, he must have retained his mental individuality, although every atom of his
brain had probably undergone change more than once during the interval of five
years. This dog might have brought forward the argument lately advanced to crush
all evolutionists, and said, "I abide amid all mental moods and all
material changes...The teaching that atoms leave their impressions as legacies
to other atoms falling into the places they have vacated is contradictory of the
utterance of consciousness, and is therefore false; but it is the teaching
necessitated by evolutionism, consequently the hypothesis is a false one."
(46. The Rev. Dr. J. M'Cann, 'Anti-Darwinism,' 1869, p. 13.)
LANGUAGE.
This faculty has justly been considered as one of the chief distinctions
between man and the lower animals. But man, as a highly competent judge,
Archbishop Whately remarks, "is not the only animal that can make use of
language to express what is passing in his mind, and can understand, more or
less, what is so expressed by another." (47. Quoted in 'Anthropological
Review,' 1864, p. 158.) In Paraguay the Cebus azarae when excited utters at
least six distinct sounds, which excite in other monkeys similar emotions. (48.
Rengger, ibid. s. 45.) The movements of the features and gestures of monkeys are
understood by us, and they partly understand ours, as Rengger and others
declare. It is a more remarkable fact that the dog, since being domesticated,
has learnt to bark (49. See my 'Variation of Animals and Plants under
Domestication,' vol. i. p. 27.) in at least four or five distinct tones.
Although barking is a new art, no doubt the wild parent-species of the dog
expressed their feelings by cries of various kinds. With the domesticated dog we
have the bark of eagerness, as in the chase; that of anger, as well as growling;
the yelp or howl of despair, as when shut up; the baying at night; the bark of
joy, as when starting on a walk with his master; and the very distinct one of
demand or supplication, as when wishing for a door or window to be opened.
According to Houzeau, who paid particular attention to the subject, the domestic
fowl utters at least a dozen significant sounds. (50. 'Facultes Mentales des
Animaux,' tom. ii. 1872, p. 346-349.)
The habitual use of articulate language is, however, peculiar to man; but he
uses, in common with the lower animals, inarticulate cries to express his
meaning, aided by gestures and the movements of the muscles of the face. (51.
See a discussion on this subject in Mr. E.B. Tylor's very interesting work,
'Researches into the Early History of Mankind,' 1865, chaps. ii. to iv.) This
especially holds good with the more simple and vivid feelings, which are but
little connected with our higher intelligence. Our cries of pain, fear,
surprise, anger, together with their appropriate actions, and the murmur of a
mother to her beloved child are more expressive than any words. That which
distinguishes man from the lower animals is not the understanding of articulate
sounds, for, as every one knows, dogs understand many words and sentences. In
this respect they are at the same stage of development as infants, between the
ages of ten and twelve months, who understand many words and short sentences,
but cannot yet utter a single word. It is not the mere articulation which is our
distinguishing character, for parrots and other birds possess this power. Nor is
it the mere capacity of connecting definite sounds with definite ideas; for it
is certain that some parrots, which have been taught to speak, connect
unerringly words with things, and persons with events. (52. I have received
several detailed accounts to this effect. Admiral Sir B.J. Sulivan, whom I know
to be a careful observer, assures me that an African parrot, long kept in his
father's house, invariably called certain persons of the household, as well as
visitors, by their names. He said "good morning" to every one at
breakfast, and "good night" to each as they left the room at night,
and never reversed these salutations. To Sir B.J. Sulivan's father, he used to
add to the " good morning" a short sentence, which was never once
repeated after his father's death. He scolded violently a strange dog which came
into the room through the open window; and he scolded another parrot (saying
"you naughty polly") which had got out of its cage, and was eating
apples on the kitchen table. See also, to the same effect, Houzeau on parrots,
'Facultes Mentales,' tom. ii. p. 309. Dr. A. Moschkau informs me that he knew a
starling which never made a mistake in saying in German "good morning"
to persons arriving, and "good bye, old fellow," to those departing. I
could add several other such cases.) The lower animals differ from man solely in
his almost infinitely larger power of associating together the most diversified
sounds and ideas; and this obviously depends on the high development of his
mental powers.
As Horne Tooke, one of the founders of the noble science of philology,
observes, language is an art, like brewing or baking; but writing would have
been a better simile. It certainly is not a true instinct, for every language
has to be learnt. It differs, however, widely from all ordinary arts, for man
has an instinctive tendency to speak, as we see in the babble of our young
children; whilst no child has an instinctive tendency to brew, bake, or write.
Moreover, no philologist now supposes that any language has been deliberately
invented; it has been slowly and unconsciously developed by many steps. (53. See
some good remarks on this head by Prof. Whitney, in his 'Oriental and Linguistic
Studies,' 1873, p. 354. He observes that the desire of communication between man
is the living force, which, in the development of language, "works both
consciously and unconsciously; consciously as regards the immediate end to be
attained; unconsciously as regards the further consequences of the act.")
The sounds uttered by birds offer in several respects the nearest analogy to
language, for all the members of the same species utter the same instinctive
cries expressive of their emotions; and all the kinds which sing, exert their
power instinctively; but the actual song, and even the call-notes, are learnt
from their parents or foster-parents. These sounds, as Daines Barrington (54.
Hon. Daines Barrington in 'Philosoph. Transactions,' 1773, p. 262. See also
Dureau de la Malle, in 'Ann. des. Sc. Nat.' 3rd series, Zoolog., tom. x. p.
119.) has proved, "are no more innate than language is in man." The
first attempts to sing "may be compared to the imperfect endeavour in a
child to babble." The young males continue practising, or as the
bird-catchers say, "recording," for ten or eleven months. Their first
essays shew hardly a rudiment of the future song; but as they grow older we can
perceive what they are aiming at; and at last they are said "to sing their
song round." Nestlings which have learnt the song of a distinct species, as
with the canary-birds educated in the Tyrol, teach and transmit their new song
to their offspring. The slight natural differences of song in the same species
inhabiting different districts may be appositely compared, as Barrington
remarks, "to provincial dialects"; and the songs of allied, though
distinct species may be compared with the languages of distinct races of man. I
have given the foregoing details to shew that an instinctive tendency to acquire
an art is not peculiar to man.
With respect to the origin of articulate language, after having read on the
one side the highly interesting works of Mr. Hensleigh Wedgwood, the Rev. F.
Farrar, and Prof. Schleicher (55. 'On the Origin of Language,' by H. Wedgwood,
1866. 'Chapters on Language,' by the Rev. F.W. Farrar, 1865. These works are
most interesting. See also 'De la Phys. et de Parole,' par Albert Lemoine, 1865,
p. 190. The work on this subject, by the late Prof. Aug. Schleicher, has been
translated by Dr. Bikkers into English, under the title of 'Darwinism tested by
the Science of Language,' 1869.), and the celebrated lectures of Prof. Max
Muller on the other side, I cannot doubt that language owes its origin to the
imitation and modification of various natural sounds, the voices of other
animals, and man's own instinctive cries, aided by signs and gestures. When we
treat of sexual selection we shall see that primeval man, or rather some early
progenitor of man, probably first used his voice in producing true musical
cadences, that is in singing, as do some of the gibbon-apes at the present day;
and we may conclude from a widely-spread analogy, that this power would have
been especially exerted during the courtship of the sexes,--would have expressed
various emotions, such as love, jealousy, triumph,--and would have served as a
challenge to rivals. It is, therefore, probable that the imitation of musical
cries by articulate sounds may have given rise to words expressive of various
complex emotions. The strong tendency in our nearest allies, the monkeys, in
microcephalous idiots (56. Vogt, 'Memoire sur les Microcephales,' 1867, p. 169.
With respect to savages, I have given some facts in my 'Journal of Researches,'
etc., 1845, p. 206.), and in the barbarous races of mankind, to imitate whatever
they hear deserves notice, as bearing on the subject of imitation. Since monkeys
certainly understand much that is said to them by man, and when wild, utter
signal-cries of danger to their fellows (57. See clear evidence on this head in
the two works so often quoted, by Brehm and Rengger.); and since fowls give
distinct warnings for danger on the ground, or in the sky from hawks (both, as
well as a third cry, intelligible to dogs) (58. Houzeau gives a very curious
account of his observations on this subject in his 'Facultes Mentales des
Animaux,' tom. ii. p. 348.), may not some unusually wise ape- like animal have
imitated the growl of a beast of prey, and thus told his fellow-monkeys the
nature of the expected danger? This would have been a first step in the
formation of a language.
As the voice was used more and more, the vocal organs would have been
strengthened and perfected through the principle of the inherited effects of
use; and this would have reacted on the power of speech. But the relation
between the continued use of language and the development of the brain, has no
doubt been far more important. The mental powers in some early progenitor of man
must have been more highly developed than in any existing ape, before even the
most imperfect form of speech could have come into use; but we may confidently
believe that the continued use and advancement of this power would have reacted
on the mind itself, by enabling and encouraging it to carry on long trains of
thought. A complex train of thought can no more be carried on without the aid of
words, whether spoken or silent, than a long calculation without the use of
figures or algebra. It appears, also, that even an ordinary train of thought
almost requires, or is greatly facilitated by some form of language, for the
dumb, deaf, and blind girl, Laura Bridgman, was observed to use her fingers
whilst dreaming. (59. See remarks on this head by Dr. Maudsley, 'The Physiology
and Pathology of Mind,' 2nd ed., 1868, p. 199.) Nevertheless, a long succession
of vivid and connected ideas may pass through the mind without the aid of any
form of language, as we may infer from the movements of dogs during their
dreams. We have, also, seen that animals are able to reason to a certain extent,
manifestly without the aid of language. The intimate connection between the
brain, as it is now developed in us, and the faculty of speech, is well shewn by
those curious cases of brain-disease in which speech is specially affected, as
when the power to remember substantives is lost, whilst other words can be
correctly used, or where substantives of a certain class, or all except the
initial letters of substantives and proper names are forgotten. (60. Many
curious cases have been recorded. See, for instance, Dr. Bateman 'On Aphasia,'
1870, pp. 27, 31, 53, 100, etc. Also, 'Inquiries Concerning the Intellectual
Powers,' by Dr. Abercrombie, 1838, p. 150.) There is no more improbability in
the continued use of the mental and vocal organs leading to inherited changes in
their structure and functions, than in the case of hand-writing, which depends
partly on the form of the hand and partly on the disposition of the mind; and
handwriting is certainly inherited. (61. 'The Variation of Animals and Plants
under Domestication,' vol. ii. p. 6.'
Several writers, more especially Prof. Max Muller (62. Lectures on 'Mr.
Darwin's Philosophy of Language,' 1873.), have lately insisted that the use of
language implies the power of forming general concepts; and that as no animals
are supposed to possess this power, an impassable barrier is formed between them
and man. (63. The judgment of a distinguished philologist, such as Prof.
Whitney, will have far more weight on this point than anything that I can say.
He remarks ('Oriental and Linguistic Studies,' 1873, p. 297), in speaking of
Bleek's views: "Because on the grand scale language is the necessary
auxiliary of thought, indispensable to the development of the power of thinking,
to the distinctness and variety and complexity of cognitions to the full mastery
of consciousness; therefore he would fain make thought absolutely impossible
without speech, identifying the faculty with its instrument. He might just as
reasonably assert that the human hand cannot act without a tool. With such a
doctrine to start from, he cannot stop short of Max Muller's worst paradoxes,
that an infant (in fans, not speaking) is not a human being, and that deaf-mutes
do not become possessed of reason until they learn to twist their fingers into
imitation of spoken words." Max Muller gives in italics ('Lectures on Mr.
Darwin's Philosophy of Language,' 1873, third lecture) this aphorism:
"There is no thought without words, as little as there are words without
thought." What a strange definition must here be given to the word
thought!) With respect to animals, I have already endeavoured to shew that they
have this power, at least in a rude and incipient degree. As far as concerns
infants of from ten to eleven months old, and deaf-mutes, it seems to me
incredible, that they should be able to connect certain sounds with certain
general ideas as quickly as they do, unless such ideas were already formed in
their minds. The same remark may be extended to the more intelligent animals; as
Mr. Leslie Stephen observes (64. 'Essays on Free Thinking,' etc., 1873, p. 82.),
"A dog frames a general concept of cats or sheep, and knows the
corresponding words as well as a philosopher. And the capacity to understand is
as good a proof of vocal intelligence, though in an inferior degree, as the
capacity to speak."
Why the organs now used for speech should have been originally perfected for
this purpose, rather than any other organs, it is not difficult to see. Ants
have considerable powers of intercommunication by means of their antennae, as
shewn by Huber, who devotes a whole chapter to their language. We might have
used our fingers as efficient instruments, for a person with practice can report
to a deaf man every word of a speech rapidly delivered at a public meeting; but
the loss of our hands, whilst thus employed, would have been a serious
inconvenience. As all the higher mammals possess vocal organs, constructed on
the same general plan as ours, and used as a means of communication, it was
obviously probable that these same organs would be still further developed if
the power of communication had to be improved; and this has been effected by the
aid of adjoining and well adapted parts, namely the tongue and lips. (65. See
some good remarks to this effect by Dr. Maudsley, 'The Physiology and Pathology
of Mind,' 1868, p. 199.) The fact of the higher apes not using their vocal
organs for speech, no doubt depends on their intelligence not having been
sufficiently advanced. The possession by them of organs, which with
long-continued practice might have been used for speech, although not thus used,
is paralleled by the case of many birds which possess organs fitted for singing,
though they never sing. Thus, the nightingale and crow have vocal organs
similarly constructed, these being used by the former for diversified song, and
by the latter only for croaking. (66. Macgillivray, 'Hist. of British Birds,'
vol. ii. 1839, p. 29. An excellent observer, Mr. Blackwall, remarks that the
magpie learns to pronounce single words, and even short sentences, more readily
than almost any other British bird; yet, as he adds, after long and closely
investigating its habits, he has never known it, in a state of nature, display
any unusual capacity for imitation. 'Researches in Zoology,' 1834, p. 158.) If
it be asked why apes have not had their intellects developed to the same degree
as that of man, general causes only can be assigned in answer, and it is
unreasonable to expect any thing more definite, considering our ignorance with
respect to the successive stages of development through which each creature has
passed.
The formation of different languages and of distinct species, and the proofs
that both have been developed through a gradual process, are curiously parallel.
(67. See the very interesting parallelism between the development of species and
languages, given by Sir C. Lyell in 'The Geological Evidences of the Antiquity
of Man,' 1863, chap. xxiii.) But we can trace the formation of many words
further back than that of species, for we can perceive how they actually arose
from the imitation of various sounds. We find in distinct languages striking
homologies due to community of descent, and analogies due to a similar process
of formation. The manner in which certain letters or sounds change when others
change is very like correlated growth. We have in both cases the reduplication
of parts, the effects of long-continued use, and so forth. The frequent presence
of rudiments, both in languages and in species, is still more remarkable. The
letter m in the word am, means I; so that in the expression I am, a superfluous
and useless rudiment has been retained. In the spelling also of words, letters
often remain as the rudiments of ancient forms of pronunciation. Languages, like
organic beings, can be classed in groups under groups; and they can be classed
either naturally according to descent, or artificially by other characters.
Dominant languages and dialects spread widely, and lead to the gradual
extinction of other tongues. A language, like a species, when once extinct,
never, as Sir C. Lyell remarks, reappears. The same language never has two
birth-places. Distinct languages may be crossed or blended together. (68. See
remarks to this effect by the Rev. F.W. Farrar, in an interesting article,
entitled 'Philology and Darwinism,' in 'Nature,' March 24th, 1870, p. 528.) We
see variability in every tongue, and new words are continually cropping up; but
as there is a limit to the powers of the memory, single words, like whole
languages, gradually become extinct. As Max Muller (69. 'Nature,' January 6th,
1870, p. 257.) has well remarked:--"A struggle for life is constantly going
on amongst the words and grammatical forms in each language. The better, the
shorter, the easier forms are constantly gaining the upper hand, and they owe
their success to their own inherent virtue." To these more important causes
of the survival of certain words, mere novelty and fashion may be added; for
there is in the mind of man a strong love for slight changes in all things. The
survival or preservation of certain favoured words in the struggle for existence
is natural selection.
The perfectly regular and wonderfully complex construction of the languages
of many barbarous nations has often been advanced as a proof, either of the
divine origin of these languages, or of the high art and former civilisation of
their founders. Thus F. von Schlegel writes: "In those languages which
appear to be at the lowest grade of intellectual culture, we frequently observe
a very high and elaborate degree of art in their grammatical structure. This is
especially the case with the Basque and the Lapponian, and many of the American
languages." (70. Quoted by C.S. Wake, 'Chapters on Man,' 1868, p. 101.) But
it is assuredly an error to speak of any language as an art, in the sense of its
having been elaborately and methodically formed. Philologists now admit that
conjugations, declensions, etc., originally existed as distinct words, since
joined together; and as such words express the most obvious relations between
objects and persons, it is not surprising that they should have been used by the
men of most races during the earliest ages. With respect to perfection, the
following illustration will best shew how easily we may err: a Crinoid sometimes
consists of no less than 150,000 pieces of shell (71. Buckland, 'Bridgewater
Treatise,' p. 411.), all arranged with perfect symmetry in radiating lines; but
a naturalist does not consider an animal of this kind as more perfect than a
bilateral one with comparatively few parts, and with none of these parts alike,
excepting on the opposite sides of the body. He justly considers the
differentiation and specialisation of organs as the test of perfection. So with
languages: the most symmetrical and complex ought not to be ranked above
irregular, abbreviated, and bastardised languages, which have borrowed
expressive words and useful forms of construction from various conquering,
conquered, or immigrant races.
From these few and imperfect remarks I conclude that the extremely complex
and regular construction of many barbarous languages, is no proof that they owe
their origin to a special act of creation. (72. See some good remarks on the
simplification of languages, by Sir J. Lubbock, 'Origin of Civilisation,' 1870,
p. 278.) Nor, as we have seen, does the faculty of articulate speech in itself
offer any insuperable objection to the belief that man has been developed from
some lower form.
SENSE OF BEAUTY.
This sense has been declared to be peculiar to man. I refer here only to the
pleasure given by certain colours, forms, and sounds, and which may fairly be
called a sense of the beautiful; with cultivated men such sensations are,
however, intimately associated with complex ideas and trains of thought. When we
behold a male bird elaborately displaying his graceful plumes or splendid
colours before the female, whilst other birds, not thus decorated, make no such
display, it is impossible to doubt that she admires the beauty of her male
partner. As women everywhere deck themselves with these plumes, the beauty of
such ornaments cannot be disputed. As we shall see later, the nests of
humming-birds, and the playing passages of bower-birds are tastefully ornamented
with gaily- coloured objects; and this shews that they must receive some kind of
pleasure from the sight of such things. With the great majority of animals,
however, the taste for the beautiful is confined, as far as we can judge, to the
attractions of the opposite sex. The sweet strains poured forth by many male
birds during the season of love, are certainly admired by the females, of which
fact evidence will hereafter be given. If female birds had been incapable of
appreciating the beautiful colours, the ornaments, and voices of their male
partners, all the labour and anxiety exhibited by the latter in displaying their
charms before the females would have been thrown away; and this it is impossible
to admit. Why certain bright colours should excite pleasure cannot, I presume,
be explained, any more than why certain flavours and scents are agreeable; but
habit has something to do with the result, for that which is at first unpleasant
to our senses, ultimately becomes pleasant, and habits are inherited. With
respect to sounds, Helmholtz has explained to a certain extent on physiological
principles, why harmonies and certain cadences are agreeable. But besides this,
sounds frequently recurring at irregular intervals are highly disagreeable, as
every one will admit who has listened at night to the irregular flapping of a
rope on board ship. The same principle seems to come into play with vision, as
the eye prefers symmetry or figures with some regular recurrence. Patterns of
this kind are employed by even the lowest savages as ornaments; and they have
been developed through sexual selection for the adornment of some male animals.
Whether we can or not give any reason for the pleasure thus derived from vision
and hearing, yet man and many of the lower animals are alike pleased by the same
colours, graceful shading and forms, and the same sounds.
The taste for the beautiful, at least as far as female beauty is concerned,
is not of a special nature in the human mind; for it differs widely in the
different races of man, and is not quite the same even in the different nations
of the same race. Judging from the hideous ornaments, and the equally hideous
music admired by most savages, it might be urged that their aesthetic faculty
was not so highly developed as in certain animals, for instance, as in birds.
Obviously no animal would be capable of admiring such scenes as the heavens at
night, a beautiful landscape, or refined music; but such high tastes are
acquired through culture, and depend on complex associations; they are not
enjoyed by barbarians or by uneducated persons.
Many of the faculties, which have been of inestimable service to man for his
progressive advancement, such as the powers of the imagination, wonder,
curiosity, an undefined sense of beauty, a tendency to imitation, and the love
of excitement or novelty, could hardly fail to lead to capricious changes of
customs and fashions. I have alluded to this point, because a recent writer (73.
'The Spectator,' Dec. 4th, 1869, p. 1430.) has oddly fixed on Caprice "as
one of the most remarkable and typical differences between savages and
brutes." But not only can we partially understand how it is that man is
from various conflicting influences rendered capricious, but that the lower
animals are, as we shall hereafter see, likewise capricious in their affections,
aversions, and sense of beauty. There is also reason to suspect that they love
novelty, for its own sake.
BELIEF IN GOD--RELIGION.
There is no evidence that man was aboriginally endowed with the ennobling
belief in the existence of an Omnipotent God. On the contrary there is ample
evidence, derived not from hasty travellers, but from men who have long resided
with savages, that numerous races have existed, and still exist, who have no
idea of one or more gods, and who have no words in their languages to express
such an idea. (74. See an excellent article on this subject by the Rev. F.W.
Farrar, in the 'Anthropological Review,' Aug. 1864, p. ccxvii. For further facts
see Sir J. Lubbock, 'Prehistoric Times,' 2nd edit., 1869, p. 564; and especially
the chapters on Religion in his 'Origin of Civilisation,' 1870.) The question is
of course wholly distinct from that higher one, whether there exists a Creator
and Ruler of the universe; and this has been answered in the affirmative by some
of the highest intellects that have ever existed.
If, however, we include under the term "religion" the belief in
unseen or spiritual agencies, the case is wholly different; for this belief
seems to be universal with the less civilised races. Nor is it difficult to
comprehend how it arose. As soon as the important faculties of the imagination,
wonder, and curiosity, together with some power of reasoning, had become
partially developed, man would naturally crave to understand what was passing
around him, and would have vaguely speculated on his own existence. As Mr.
M'Lennan (75. 'The Worship of Animals and Plants,' in the 'Fortnightly Review,'
Oct. 1, 1869, p. 422.) has remarked, "Some explanation of the phenomena of
life, a man must feign for himself, and to judge from the universality of it,
the simplest hypothesis, and the first to occur to men, seems to have been that
natural phenomena are ascribable to the presence in animals, plants, and things,
and in the forces of nature, of such spirits prompting to action as men are
conscious they themselves possess." It is also probable, as Mr. Tylor has
shewn, that dreams may have first given rise to the notion of spirits; for
savages do not readily distinguish between subjective and objective impressions.
When a savage dreams, the figures which appear before him are believed to have
come from a distance, and to stand over him; or "the soul of the dreamer
goes out on its travels, and comes home with a remembrance of what it has
seen." (76. Tylor, 'Early History of Mankind,' 1865, p. 6. See also the
three striking chapters on the 'Development of Religion,' in Lubbock's 'Origin
of Civilisation,' 1870. In a like manner Mr. Herbert Spencer, in his ingenious
essay in the 'Fortnightly Review' (May 1st, 1870, p. 535), accounts for the
earliest forms of religious belief throughout the world, by man being led
through dreams, shadows, and other causes, to look at himself as a double
essence, corporeal and spiritual. As the spiritual being is supposed to exist
after death and to be powerful, it is propitiated by various gifts and
ceremonies, and its aid invoked. He then further shews that names or nicknames
given from some animal or other object, to the early progenitors or founders of
a tribe, are supposed after a long interval to represent the real progenitor of
the tribe; and such animal or object is then naturally believed still to exist
as a spirit, is held sacred, and worshipped as a god. Nevertheless I cannot but
suspect that there is a still earlier and ruder stage, when anything which
manifests power or movement is thought to be endowed with some form of life, and
with mental faculties analogous to our own.) But until the faculties of
imagination, curiosity, reason, etc., had been fairly well developed in the mind
of man, his dreams would not have led him to believe in spirits, any more than
in the case of a dog.
The tendency in savages to imagine that natural objects and agencies are
animated by spiritual or living essences, is perhaps illustrated by a little
fact which I once noticed: my dog, a full-grown and very sensible animal, was
lying on the lawn during a hot and still day; but at a little distance a slight
breeze occasionally moved an open parasol, which would have been wholly
disregarded by the dog, had any one stood near it. As it was, every time that
the parasol slightly moved, the dog growled fiercely and barked. He must, I
think, have reasoned to himself in a rapid and unconscious manner, that movement
without any apparent cause indicated the presence of some strange living agent,
and that no stranger had a right to be on his territory.
The belief in spiritual agencies would easily pass into the belief in the
existence of one or more gods. For savages would naturally attribute to spirits
the same passions, the same love of vengeance or simplest form of justice, and
the same affections which they themselves feel. The Fuegians appear to be in
this respect in an intermediate condition, for when the surgeon on board the
"Beagle" shot some young ducklings as specimens, York Minster declared
in the most solemn manner, "Oh, Mr. Bynoe, much rain, much snow, blow
much"; and this was evidently a retributive punishment for wasting human
food. So again he related how, when his brother killed a "wild man,"
storms long raged, much rain and snow fell. Yet we could never discover that the
Fuegians believed in what we should call a God, or practised any religious
rites; and Jemmy Button, with justifiable pride, stoutly maintained that there
was no devil in his land. This latter assertion is the more remarkable, as with
savages the belief in bad spirits is far more common than that in good ones.
The feeling of religious devotion is a highly complex one, consisting of
love, complete submission to an exalted and mysterious superior, a strong sense
of dependence (77. See an able article on the 'Physical Elements of Religion,'
by Mr. L. Owen Pike, in 'Anthropological Review,' April 1870, p. lxiii.), fear,
reverence, gratitude, hope for the future, and perhaps other elements. No being
could experience so complex an emotion until advanced in his intellectual and
moral faculties to at least a moderately high level. Nevertheless, we see some
distant approach to this state of mind in the deep love of a dog for his master,
associated with complete submission, some fear, and perhaps other feelings. The
behaviour of a dog when returning to his master after an absence, and, as I may
add, of a monkey to his beloved keeper, is widely different from that towards
their fellows. In the latter case the transports of joy appear to be somewhat
less, and the sense of equality is shewn in every action. Professor Braubach
goes so far as to maintain that a dog looks on his master as on a god. (78.
'Religion, Moral, etc., der Darwin'schen Art-Lehre,' 1869, s. 53. It is said
(Dr. W. Lauder Lindsay, 'Journal of Mental Science,' 1871, p. 43), that Bacon
long ago, and the poet Burns, held the same notion.)
The same high mental faculties which first led man to believe in unseen
spiritual agencies, then in fetishism, polytheism, and ultimately in monotheism,
would infallibly lead him, as long as his reasoning powers remained poorly
developed, to various strange superstitions and customs. Many of these are
terrible to think of--such as the sacrifice of human beings to a blood-loving
god; the trial of innocent persons by the ordeal of poison or fire; witchcraft,
etc.--yet it is well occasionally to reflect on these superstitions, for they
shew us what an infinite debt of gratitude we owe to the improvement of our
reason, to science, and to our accumulated knowledge. As Sir J. Lubbock (79.
'Prehistoric Times,' 2nd edit., p. 571. In this work (p. 571) there will be
found an excellent account of the many strange and capricious customs of
savages.) has well observed, "it is not too much to say that the horrible
dread of unknown evil hangs like a thick cloud over savage life, and embitters
every pleasure." These miserable and indirect consequences of our highest
faculties may be compared with the incidental and occasional mistakes of the
instincts of the lower animals.