WCP5250

Published letter (WCP5250.5783)

[1] [p. 126]

There are things in [Arthur] Schopenhauer which make one blush for philosophy. The day may dawn when this man will be read not for what he says, but for how he says it; he being one of the few of his race who can write in their own [2] [p. 127] language. Impossible, of course, not to hit upon a good thing now and then, if you brood as much as he did. So I remember one passage wherein he adumbrates the theory of "Recognition Marks" propounded later by A. R. Wallace, who, when I drew his attention to it, wrote that he thought it a most interesting anticipation.1

He [Schopenhauer?] must have stumbled upon it by accident, during one of his excursions into the inane...

Note (from Wallace) Appearing in the Original Work

1. Parkstone, Dorset. July 19, 1894. "Many thanks for your reference to Schopenhauer's remarks on Recognition Marks, which I thought I was the first to fully point out. It is a most interesting anticipation. I do not read German, but from what I have heard of his works he was the last man I should have expected to make such an acute suggestion in Natural History." [at the bottom of p. 127]

Editor Charles H. Smith's Note: A portion of a letter to the writer Norman Douglas, whose 1922 book Alone contains a wide range of observations, including one of interest to students of evolutionary biology. The relevant portion of Douglas's remarks is reproduced below; Wallace's comments appeared in a note placed at the bottom of page 127.

Please cite as “WCP5250,” in Beccaloni, G. W. (ed.), Ɛpsilon: The Alfred Russel Wallace Collection accessed on 29 April 2024, https://epsilon.ac.uk/view/wallace/letters/WCP5250