The Theories of Darwin and 
Their Relation
by Rudolf 
Schmid 
 
The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Theories of Darwin and Their 
Relation 
to Philosophy, Religion, and Morality, by Rudolf Schmid This eBook 
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Title: The Theories of Darwin and Their Relation to Philosophy, 
Religion, and Morality 
Author: Rudolf Schmid 
Translator: G. A. Zimmermann 
Release Date: July 26, 2007 [EBook #22150] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THEORIES 
OF DARWIN ***
Produced by Marilynda Fraser-Cunliffe, Keith Edkins and the Online 
Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was 
made using scans of public domain works from the University of 
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Transcriber's note: A few typographical errors have been corrected: 
they are listed at the end of the text. 
THE THEORIES OF DARWIN. 
HALL, STUTTGART, April 5, 1880. 
We hereby authorize the Rev. Dr. G. A. Zimmermann to translate into 
English the book entitled 
Die Darwin'schen Theorien und ihre Stellung zur Philosophie, Religion 
und Moral von Rudolf Schmid. 
We declare that we know of no other translation of the said book and 
that Dr. Zimmermann's translation will be the only one authorized by 
us for the United States as well as for the British Empire and its 
Dominions. 
(The Author) RUDOLF SCHMID. 
(The Publisher) PAUL MOSER. 
* * * * * 
THE 
THEORIES OF DARWIN 
AND THEIR RELATION TO 
PHILOSOPHY, RELIGION AND MORALITY. 
By RUDOLF SCHMID, President of the Theological Seminary at
Schönthal, Würtemberg. 
TRANSLATED FROM THE GERMAN BY G. A. ZIMMERMANN, 
PH.D. 
WITH AN INTRODUCTION BY THE DUKE OF ARGYLL 
CHICAGO: JANSEN McCLURG. & COMPANY 1883. 
* * * * * 
COPYRIGHT BY JANSEN, MCCLURG & CO. A.D. 1882. 
R. R. DONNELLEY & SONS, PRINTERS. 
* * * * * {1} 
AUTHOR'S PREFACE 
* * * * * 
The movement which received its impulse as well as its name from 
Darwin, seems to have recently passed its distinctest phase; but the 
more prominent points of opposition, religious, ethical, and scientific, 
which have been revealed through it, remain as sharply contrasted as 
before. The author of this book desires, in the first place, to be of 
service to such readers as feel the need of setting themselves right upon 
these questions, which touch the highest interests of mankind, but who 
lack time and opportunity to investigate independently a realm in which 
so many and so heterogeneous sciences come into mutual contact. The 
illogical and confused manner in which some noisy leaders confound 
these sciences and their problems and consequences, renders it still 
more difficult to arrive at a satisfactory result; and thus perhaps many 
readers will look with interest upon an investigation designed to 
simplify the different problems and the different attempts at their 
solution, and to treat them not only in their relations to each other, but 
also separately. But with this primary object, the author combines 
another: to render a service to some among the many who perceive the
harmony between their scientific conviction and their religious need 
threatened or shaken by the results of science, and who are unwilling to 
lose this harmony, or, having lost it, desire to regain it. Those voices 
are indeed becoming louder, and more generally and willingly heard, 
which proclaim an irreconcilability between faith and {2} knowledge, 
between the religious and the scientific views of the world; which 
declare that peace between the two can only be had at the price either 
of permitting the religious impulses of the heart to be stifled in favor of 
science, of satisfying the religious need of the mind with a nourishment 
which in the light of science proves to be an illusion, or, as sceptics in 
theory and eclectics in practice, of renouncing with resignation a 
logical connection and foundation to their former view of the world. 
The most striking proof of the extent to which these voices are heard, is 
the fact that it has been possible for a one-sided pessimism to become 
the fashionable system of philosophy in a Christian nation. The most 
effective means for opposing such discordant voices, and for making 
amends for the disagreements which they have occasioned, 
undoubtedly consists in the actual proof of the contrary of their theories, 
in the clear presentation of a standpoint from which not only the most 
unrestricted freedom of investigation and the most unreserved 
acknowledgment of its results shall be in perfect harmony with the 
undiminished care of our entire religious possession, but in which this 
peace is preserved and forever established by the very fact that one 
function of the mind directly requires the other, one    
    
		
	
	
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