第 40 节
作者:无组织      更新:2022-04-21 11:08      字数:9322
  for he and they are alike identical with the primordial cell; and we
  have already noted it as an axiom that things which are identical
  with the same are identical with one another。  This is practically
  making him one with all living things; whether animal or vegetable;
  that ever have existed or ever willsomething of all which may have
  been in the mind of Sophocles when he wrote:…
  〃Nor seest thou yet the gathering hosts of ill
  That shall en…one thee both with thine own self
  And with thine offspring。〃
  And all this has come of admitting that a man may be the same person
  for two days running!  As for sopping common sense it will be enough
  to say that these remarks are to be taken in a strictly scientific
  sense; and have no appreciable importance as regards life and
  conduct。  True they deal with the foundations on which all life and
  conduct are based; but like other foundations they are hidden out of
  sight; and the sounder they are; the less we trouble ourselves about
  them。
  What other main common features between heredity and memory may we
  note besides the fact that neither can exist without that kind of
  physical continuity which we call personal identity?  First; the
  development of the embryo proceeds in an established order; so must
  all habitual actions based on memory。  Disturb the normal order and
  the performance is arrested。  The better we know 〃God save the
  Queen;〃 the less easily can we play or sing it backwards。  The
  return of memory again depends on the return of ideas associated
  with the particular thing that is rememberedwe remember nothing
  but for the presence of these; and when enough of these are
  presented to us we remember everything。  So; if the development of
  an embryo is due to memory; we should suppose the memory of the
  impregnate ovum to revert not to yesterday; when it was in the
  persons of its parents; but to the last occasion on which it was an
  impregnate ovum。  The return of the old environment and the presence
  of old associations would at once involve recollection of the course
  that should be next taken; and the same should happen throughout the
  whole course of development。  The actual course of development
  presents precisely the phenomena agreeable with this。  For fuller
  treatment of this point I must refer the reader to the chapter on
  the abeyance of memory in my book 〃Life and Habit;〃 already referred
  to。
  Secondly; we remember best our last few performances of any given
  kind; so our present performance will probably resemble some one or
  other of these; we remember our earlier performances by way of
  residuum only; but every now and then we revert to an earlier habit。
  This feature of memory is manifested in heredity by the way in which
  offspring commonly resembles most its nearer ancestors; but
  sometimes reverts to earlier ones。  Brothers and sisters; each as it
  were giving their own version of the same story; but in different
  words; should generally resemble each other more closely than more
  distant relations。  And this is what actually we find。
  Thirdly; the introduction of slightly new elements into a method
  already established varies it beneficially; the new is soon fused
  with the old; and the monotony ceases to be oppressive。  But if the
  new be too foreign; we cannot fuse the old and the newnature
  seeming to hate equally too wide a deviation from ordinary practice
  and none at all。  This fact reappears in heredity as the beneficial
  effects of occasional crossing on the one hand; and on the other; in
  the generally observed sterility of hybrids。  If heredity be an
  affair of memory; how can an embryo; say of a mule; be expected to
  build up a mule on the strength of but two mule…memories?  Hybridism
  causes a fault in the chain of memory; and it is to this cause that
  the usual sterility of hybrids must be referred。
  Fourthly; it requires many repeated impressions to fix a method
  firmly; but when it has been engrained into us we cease to have much
  recollection of the manner in which it came to be so; or indeed of
  any individual repetition; but sometimes a single impression; if
  prolonged as well as profound; produces a lasting impression and is
  liable to return with sudden force; and then to go on returning to
  us at intervals。  As a general rule; however; abnormal impressions
  cannot long hold their own against the overwhelming preponderance of
  normal authority。  This appears in heredity as the normal non…
  inheritance of mutilations on the one hand; and on the other as
  their occasional inheritance in the case of injuries followed by
  disease。
  Fifthly; if heredity and memory are essentially the same; we should
  expect that no animal would develop new structures of importance
  after the age at which its species begins ordinarily to continue its
  race; for we cannot suppose offspring to remember anything that
  happens to the parent subsequently to the parent's ceasing to
  contain the offspring within itself。  From the average age;
  therefore; of reproduction; offspring should cease to have any
  farther steady; continuous memory to fall back upon; what memory
  there is should be full of faults; and as such unreliable。  An
  organism ought to develop as long as it is backed by memorythat is
  to say; until the average age at which reproduction begins; it
  should then continue to go for a time on the impetus already
  received; and should eventually decay through failure of any memory
  to support it; and tell it what to do。  This corresponds absolutely
  with what we observe in organisms generally; and explains; on the
  one hand; why the age of puberty marks the beginning of completed
  developmenta riddle hitherto not only unexplained but; so far as I
  have seen; unasked; it explains; on the other hand; the phenomena of
  old agehitherto without even attempt at explanation。
  Sixthly; those organisms that are the longest in reaching maturity
  should on the average be the longest…lived; for they will have
  received the most momentous impulse from the weight of memory behind
  them。  This harmonises with the latest opinion as to the facts。  In
  his article on Weismann in the Contemporary Review for May 1890; Mr。
  Romanes writes:  〃Professor Weismann has shown that there is
  throughout the metazoa a general correlation between the natural
  lifetime of individuals composing any given species; and the age at
  which they reach maturity or first become capable of procreation。〃
  This; I believe; has been the conclusion generally arrived at by
  biologists for some years past。
  Lateness; then; in the average age of reproduction appears to be the
  principle underlying longevity。  There does not appear at first
  sight to be much connection between such distinct and apparently
  disconnected phenomena as 1; the orderly normal progress of
  development; 2; atavism and the resumption of feral characteristics;
  3; the more ordinary resemblance inter se of nearer relatives; 4;
  the benefit of an occasional cross; and the usual sterility of
  hybrids; 5; the unconsciousness with which alike bodily development
  and ordinary physiological functions proceed; so long as they are
  normal; 6; the ordinary non…inheritance; but occasional inheritance
  of mutilations; 7; the fact that puberty indicates the approach of
  maturity; 8; the phenomena of middle life and old age; 9; the
  principle underlying longevity。  These phenomena have no conceivable
  bearing on one another until heredity and memory are regarded as
  part of the same story。  Identify these two things; and I know no
  phenomenon of heredity that does not immediately become infinitely
  more intelligible。  Is it conceivable that a theory which harmonises
  so many facts hitherto regarded as without either connection or
  explanation should not deserve at any rate consideration from those
  who profess to take an interest in biology?
  It is not as though the theory were unknown; or had been condemned
  by our leading men of science。  Professor Ray Lankester introduced
  it to English readers in an appreciative notice of Professor
  Hering's address; which appeared in Nature; July 18; 1876。  He wrote
  to the Athenaeum; March 24; 1884; and claimed credit for having done
  so; but I do not believe he has ever said more in public about it
  than what I have here referred to。  Mr。 Romanes did indeed try to
  crush it in Nature; January 27; 1881; but in 1883; in his 〃Mental
  Evolution in Animals;〃 he adopted its main conclusion without
  acknowledgment。  The Athenaeum; to my unbounded surprise; called him
  to task for this (March 1; 1884); and since that time he has given
  the Heringian theory a sufficiently wide berth。  Mr。 Wallace showed
  himself favourably enough disposed towards the view that heredity
  and memory are part of the same story when he reviewed my book 〃Life
  and Habit〃 in Nature; March 27; 1879; but he has never since
  betrayed any sign of being aware that such a theory existed。  Mr。
  Herbert Spencer wrote to the Athenaeum (April 5; 1884); and claimed
  the theory for himself; but; in spite of his doing this; he has
  never; that I have seen; referred to the matter again。  I have dealt
  sufficiently with his claim in my book; 〃Luck or Cunning。〃 {43}
  Lastly; Professor Hering himself has never that I know of touche