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Social Darwinism: The Two Sources
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 July 2014
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“Social Darwinism” means almost as many things as there are people who have written on it; but this paper takes it to be a generic term for theories of human social development and maintenance which are in some way inspired by biological evolutionary theories—this “inspiration” could take the form of seeing human sociality as a straight extension of the animal (and perhaps plant) domain, or it could involve some sort of analogy. In discussion of the roots of social Darwinism two names invariably appear—that of Charles Darwin himself, obviously, and that of Herbert Spencer. Here, however is the end of agreement. Who was the more important and influential, divides scholars right down the middle; as also do the questions of who really came first and whether their doctrines were essentially the same.
Because there is so much disagreement, no one has yet adequately argued to precisely the right conclusion. To anticipate, this paper argues that both Darwin and Spencer represent fundamental advances (or, less normatively, shifts beyond) their common major source, Thomas Robert Malthus; and that although there was overlap (and undoubted mutual borrowing) their positions were fundamentally dissimilar. Consequently, a search for the roots of Social Darwinism yields two sources, Darwin and Spencer respectively, and that what came from these sources was different. This essay begins with a brief discussion of Malthus's views, paying special attention to his relevance to social Darwinian lines of thought, considers the views of Spencer and Darwin on human social structures, and concludes by comparing the two thinkers, noting their similarities, but arguing that these are far outweighed by their differences.
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References
1 See, for example, Himmelfarb, Gertrude, “Varieties of Social Darwinism,” in Victorian Minds (London, 1968)Google Scholar; Halliday, R. J., “Social Darwinism: A definition,” Victorian Studies, 14 (1971): 389–409Google Scholar; and Rogers, James A., “Darwinism and Social Darwinism,” Journal of the History of Ideas, 33 (1973): 265–80.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
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10 There is some justification for considering Darwin before Spencer: he discovered his key mechanism of evolutionary change (natural selection) in 1838, and by 1844 he had written up his ideas into a 230 page essay; moreover, from the start Darwin included man in his evolutionary scheme of things (Ruse, Michael, The Darwinian Revolution: Science Red in Tooth and Claw [Chicago, 1979])Google Scholar. Nevertheless, since Darwin did not publish the Origin of Species until 1859, and his work on humans, the Descent of Man, did not appear until 1871, whereas Spencer started publishing on evolution (including humans) right through the 1850s, I shall consider Spencer before Darwin.
It might be added parenthetically that Spencer was not the first major public evolutionist of the Victorian era. In 1844 Robert Chambers had published his widely-read (and widely-condemned!) evolutionary tract, Vestiges of the Natural History of Creation. However, while Chambers was certainly not above suggesting that humans have evolved from lower forms— indeed, Chambers thought we are going to go on evolving into something better—and whilst indeed Chamber's ideas were taken up by the most prestigious of authorities—by no less a person than Alfred Tennyson who became Poet Laureate on the strength of his In Memoriam, published in 1850, in which it is suggested that Arthur Hallam was a forerunner of that breed of super-humans into which we are all evolving (see Killham, John, Tennyson and “The Princess”: Reflections of an Age [London, 1958]Google Scholar)—Chambers does not really appear as a Social Darwinian in any real sense. He does not have much at all to say about society and its possible evolution. It is rather to Spencer and Darwin that we must look.
11 Spencer, Herbert, “Progress: its Law and Cause,” Westminster Review (1857)Google Scholar, reprinted in Spencer, Herbert, Essays: Scientific, Political and Speculative, 3 vols. (London, 1868), I:3.Google Scholar
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41 See Greene, “Darwin,” for a full (although I believe on-sided) discussion of this aspect of Darwin's thinking.
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