Lamarck, the Founder of 
Evolution, by 
 
Alpheus Spring Packard This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere 
at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, 
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Title: Lamarck, the Founder of Evolution His Life and Work 
Author: Alpheus Spring Packard 
Release Date: February 10, 2007 [EBook #20556] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
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LAMARCK 
[Illustration: Attempt at a reconstruction of the Profile of Lamarck from
an unpublished etching by Dr. Cachet] 
 
LAMARCK 
THE FOUNDER OF EVOLUTION 
HIS LIFE AND WORK 
WITH TRANSLATIONS OF HIS WRITINGS ON ORGANIC 
EVOLUTION 
By ALPHEUS S. PACKARD, M.D., LL.D. 
Professor of Zoölogy and Geology in Brown University; author of 
"Guide to the Study of Insects," "Text-book of Entomology," etc., etc. 
"La postérité vous honorera!" --Mlle. Cornelie de Lamarck 
LONGMANS, GREEN, AND CO. 91 AND 93 FIFTH AVENUE, 
NEW YORK LONDON AND BOMBAY 1901 
 
COPYRIGHT, 1901, BY LONGMANS, GREEN, AND CO. 
All rights reserved 
Press of J. J. Little & Co. Astor Place, New York 
 
PREFACE 
Although it is now a century since Lamarck published the germs of his 
theory, it is perhaps only within the past fifty years that the scientific 
world and the general public have become familiar with the name of 
Lamarck and of Lamarckism. 
The rise and rehabilitation of the Lamarckian theory of organic
evolution, so that it has become a rival of Darwinism; the prevalence of 
these views in the United States, Germany, England, and especially in 
France, where its author is justly regarded as the real founder of organic 
evolution, has invested his name with a new interest, and led to a desire 
to learn some of the details of his life and work, and of his theory as he 
unfolded it in 1800 and subsequent years, and finally expounded it in 
1809. The time seems ripe, therefore, for a more extended sketch of 
Lamarck and his theory, as well as of his work as a philosophical 
biologist, than has yet appeared. 
But the seeker after the details of his life is baffled by the general 
ignorance about the man--his antecedents, his parentage, the date of his 
birth, his early training and education, his work as a professor in the 
Jardin des Plantes, the house he lived in, the place of his burial, and his 
relations to his scientific contemporaries. 
Except the éloges of Geoffroy St. Hilaire and Cuvier, and the brief 
notices of Martins, Duval, Bourguignat, and Bourguin, there is no 
special biography, however brief, except a brochure of thirty-one pages, 
reprinted from a few scattered articles by the distinguished 
anthropologist, M. Gabriel de Mortillet, in the fourth and last volume of 
a little-known journal, l'Homme, entitled Lamarck. Par un Groupe de 
Transformistes, ses Disciples, Paris, 1887. This exceedingly rare 
pamphlet was written by the late M. Gabriel de Mortillet, with the 
assistance of Philippe Salmon and Dr. A. Mondière, who with others, 
under the leadership of Paul Nicole, met in 1884 and formed a Réunion 
Lamarck and a Dîner Lamarck, to maintain and perpetuate the memory 
of the great French transformist. Owing to their efforts, the exact date 
of Lamarck's birth, the house in which he lived during his lifetime at 
Paris, and all that we shall ever know of his place of burial have been 
established. It is a lasting shame that his remains were not laid in a 
grave, but were allowed to be put into a trench, with no headstone to 
mark the site, on one side of a row of graves of others better cared for, 
from which trench his bones, with those of others unknown and 
neglected, were exhumed and thrown into the catacombs of Paris. 
Lamarck left behind him no letters or manuscripts; nothing could be 
ascertained regarding the dates of his marriages, the names of his wives
or of all his children. Of his descendants but one is known to be living, 
an officer in the army. But his aims in life, his undying love of science, 
his noble character and generous disposition are constantly revealed in 
his writings. 
The name of Lamarck has been familiar to me from my youth up. 
When a boy, I used to arrange my collection of shells by the 
Lamarckian system, which had replaced the old Linnean classification. 
For over thirty years the Lamarckian factors of evolution have seemed 
to me to afford the foundation on which natural selection rests,    
    
		
	
	
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