JF Ptak Science Books Overall Post 5130
There are many hopeful headings that appear in the fantastically-readable journal Nature (especially in the 19th century), and this one--"The Last Attack on Darwinism"--is certainly one of them. It was written for the 25 July 1872 issue by Alfred Russell Wallace in 1872 in response to Dr. Charles R. Bree's1 An Exposition of Fallacies in the Hypothesis of Mr. Darwin, and it pretty much eviscerates Dr. Bree's attack. No doubt this title can be read two ways--one meaning the most recent attack on Darwinism, and the other meaning the final attack. I suspect Wallace hoped that this would be the last such thing he'd have to read or review, but being a thinking man he probably felt that no mater what proof and evidence was established for evolution there would always be someone/group/society that would argue their belief over the science, and so on into the future the debate would go. In any event, I've reproduced the first and last paragraphs of the Wallace review. Also there's a further quotation on Bree from The Lancet as an example of the many scathing reviews Bree's book received. The reviews are surgical and denunciating, though from what I've read they do not reach the high/low level of book reviews by Poe, whose book reviews read as though he read the work with a sledge-scalpel.
And the last short paragraph from Wallace: "In conclusion, I must again repeat that the only reason for devoting so much space to a book so little worthy of its title or its author, is the wish to warn such as are not well acquainted with Mr. Darwin's works from implicitly relying either on Dr. Bree's facts and arguments, or on the accuracy of his representation of those of Mr. Darwin and his supporters."
Now a snippet from one of many such reviews that greeted Dr. Bree's work, this from The Lancet (volume 2 1872):
"This book is the production of an uncompromising opponent of the Darwinian hypothesis. Dr. Bree can see no good in it at all, but hews away at it root and branch...The position taken up by Dr. Bree would, it appears to put a stop to all investigation of nature, for he contends that it is beyond the limits of human reason to furnish any sound explanation of the modus operandi of God in creation." And: "Upon the whole, we should scarcely expect to find Dr. Bree's work exercise much influence in staying the progress of the new opinions, or do more than satisfy those who have already made up their minds against them."
Notes:
1. Charles R. Bree (1811-1886). An Exposition of Fallacies in the Hypothesis of Mr. Darwin. London: Longmans, Green, and Co., 1872. 8vo., 418 pp. + 32 pp.(publisher's list).
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