Unconscious Memory(Fiscle Part-3) by Samuel Butler (classic books to read .TXT) π
Time The "Origin Of Species" Was Published In 1859.
There Are Few Things Which Strike Us With More Surprise, When We
Review The Course Taken By Opinion In The Last Century, Than The
Suddenness With Which Belief In Witchcraft And Demoniacal Possession
Came To An End.
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- Author: Samuel Butler
Read book online Β«Unconscious Memory(Fiscle Part-3) by Samuel Butler (classic books to read .TXT) πΒ». Author - Samuel Butler
Supplied By Unconscious Idea, Which, However, Is Always Accurately
Prescient, Inasmuch As It Contains Something Which Is Neither Given
Directly To The Animal Through Sensual Perception, Nor Can Be Deduced
Inferentially Through The Understanding.
Most Wonderful Of All Are The Instincts Connected With The
Continuation Of The Species. The Males Always Find Out The Females
Of Their Own Kind, But Certainly Not Solely Through Their Resemblance
To Themselves. With Many Animals, As, For Example, Parasitic Crabs,
The Sexes So Little Resemble One Another That The Male Would Be More
Likely To Seek A Mate From The Females Of A Thousand Other Species
Than From His Own. Certain Butterflies Are Polymorphic, And Not Only
Do The Males And Females Of The Same Species Differ, But The Females
Present Two Distinct Forms, One Of Which As A General Rule Mimics The
Chapter 8 Pg 102Outward Appearance Of A Distant But Highly Valued Species; Yet The
Males Will Pair Only With The Females Of Their Own Kind, And Not With
The Strangers, Though These May Be Very Likely Much More Like The
Males Themselves. Among The Insect Species Of The Strepsiptera, The
Female Is A Shapeless Worm Which Lives Its Whole Life Long In The
Hind Body Of A Wasp; Its Head, Which Is Of The Shape Of A Lentil,
Protrudes Between Two Of The Belly Rings Of The Wasp, The Rest Of The
Body Being Inside. The Male, Which Only Lives For A Few Hours, And
Resembles A Moth, Nevertheless Recognises His Mate In Spite Of These
Adverse Circumstances, And Fecundates Her.
Before Any Experience Of Parturition, The Knowledge That It Is
Approaching Drives All Mammals Into Solitude, And Bids Them Prepare A
Nest For Their Young In A Hole Or In Some Other Place Of Shelter.
The Bird Builds Her Nest As Soon As She Feels The Eggs Coming To
Maturity Within Her. Snails, Land-Crabs, Tree-Frogs, And Toads, All
Of Them Ordinarily Dwellers Upon Land, Now Betake Themselves To The
Water; Sea-Tortoises Go On Shore, And Many Saltwater Fishes Come Up
Into The Rivers In Order To Lay Their Eggs Where They Can Alone Find
The Requisites For Their Development. Insects Lay Their Eggs In The
Most Varied Kinds Of Situations,--In Sand, On Leaves, Under The Hides
And Horny Substances Of Other Animals; They Often Select The Spot
Where The Larva Will Be Able Most Readily To Find Its Future
Sustenance, As In Autumn Upon The Trees That Will Open First In The
Coming Spring, Or In Spring Upon The Blossoms That Will First Bear
Fruit In Autumn, Or In The Insides Of Those Caterpillars Which Will
Soonest As Chrysalides Provide The Parasitic Larva At Once With Food
And With Protection. Other Insects Select The Sites From Which They
Will First Get Forwarded To The Destination Best Adapted For Their
Development. Thus Some Horseflies Lay Their Eggs Upon The Lips Of
Horses Or Upon Parts Where They Are Accustomed To Lick Themselves.
The Eggs Get Conveyed Hence Into The Entrails, The Proper Place For
Their Development,--And Are Excreted Upon Their Arrival At Maturity.
The Flies That Infest Cattle Know So Well How To Select The Most
Vigorous And Healthiest Beasts, That Cattle-Dealers And Tanners Place
Entire Dependence Upon Them, And Prefer Those Beasts And Hides That
Are Most Scarred By Maggots. This Selection Of The Best Cattle By
The Help Of These Flies Is No Evidence In Support Of The Conclusion
That The Flies Possess The Power Of Making Experiments Consciously
And Of Reflecting Thereupon, Even Though The Men Whose Trade It Is To
Do This Recognise Them As Their Masters. The Solitary Wasp Makes A
Hole Several Inches Deep In The Sand, Lays Her Egg, And Packs Along
With It A Number Of Green Maggots That Have No Legs, And Which, Being
On The Point Of Becoming Chrysalides, Are Well Nourished And Able To
Go A Long Time Without Food; She Packs These Maggots So Closely
Together That They Cannot Move Nor Turn Into Chrysalides, And Just
Enough Of Them To Support The Larva Until It Becomes A Chrysalis. A
Kind Of Bug (Cerceris Bupresticida), Which Itself Lives Only Upon
Pollen, Lays Her Eggs In An Underground Cell, And With Each One Of
Them She Deposits Three Beetles, Which She Has Lain In Wait For And
Captured When They Were Still Weak Through Having Only Just Left Off
Being Chrysalides. She Kills These Beetles, And Appears To Smear
Them With A Fluid Whereby She Preserves Them Fresh And Suitable For
Food. Many Kinds Of Wasps Open The Cells In Which Their Larvae Are
Chapter 8 Pg 103Confined When These Must Have Consumed The Provision That Was Left
With Them. They Supply Them With More Food, And Again Close The
Cell. Ants, Again, Hit Always Upon Exactly The Right Moment For
Opening The Cocoons In Which Their Larvae Are Confined And For
Setting Them Free, The Larva Being Unable To Do This For Itself. Yet
The Life Of Only A Few Kinds Of Insects Lasts Longer Than A Single
Breeding Season. What Then Can They Know About The Contents Of Their
Eggs And The Fittest Place For Their Development? What Can They Know
About The Kind Of Food The Larva Will Want When It Leaves The Egg--A
Food So Different From Their Own? What, Again, Can They Know About
The Quantity Of Food That Will Be Necessary? How Much Of All This At
Least Can They Know Consciously? Yet Their Actions, The Pains They
Take, And The Importance They Evidently Attach To These Matters,
Prove That They Have A Foreknowledge Of The Future: This Knowledge
Therefore Can Only Be An Unconscious Clairvoyance. For Clairvoyance
It Must Certainly Be That Inspires The Will Of An Animal To Open
Cells And Cocoons At The Very Moment That The Larva Is Either Ready
For More Food Or Fit For Leaving The Cocoon. The Eggs Of The Cuckoo
Do Not Take Only From Two To Three Days To Mature In Her Ovaries, As
Those Of Most Birds Do, But Require From Eleven To Twelve; The
Cuckoo, Therefore, Cannot Sit Upon Her Own Eggs, For Her First Egg
Would Be Spoiled Before The Last Was Laid. She Therefore Lays In
Other Birds' Nests--Of Course Laying Each Egg In A Different Nest.
But In Order That The Birds May Not Perceive Her Egg To Be A Stranger
And Turn It Out Of The Nest, Not Only Does She Lay An Egg Much
Smaller Than Might Be Expected From A Bird Of Her Size (For She Only
Finds Her Opportunity Among Small Birds), But, As Already Said, She
Imitates The Other Eggs In The Nest She Has Selected With Surprising
Accuracy In Respect Both Of Colour And Marking. As The Cuckoo
Chooses The Nest Some Days Beforehand, It May Be Thought, If The Nest
Is An Open One, That The Cuckoo Looks Upon The Colour Of The Eggs
Within It While Her Own Is In Process Of Maturing Inside Her, And
That It Is Thus Her Egg Comes To Assume The Colour Of The Others; But
This Explanation Will Not Hold Good For Nests That Are Made In The
Holes Of Trees, As That Of Sylvia Phaenicurus, Or Which Are Oven-
Shaped With A Narrow Entrance, As With Sylvia Rufa. In These Cases
The Cuckoo Can Neither Slip In Nor Look In, And Must Therefore Lay
Her Egg Outside The Nest And Push It Inside With Her Beak; She Can
Therefore Have No Means Of Perceiving Through Her Senses What The
Eggs Already In The Nest Are Like. If, Then, In Spite Of All This,
Her Egg Closely Resembles The Others, This Can Only Have Come About
Through An Unconscious Clairvoyance Which Directs The Process That
Goes On Within The Ovary In Respect Of Colour And Marking.
An Important Argument In Support Of The Existence Of A Clairvoyance
In The Instincts Of Animals Is To Be Found In The Series Of Facts
Which Testify To The Existence Of A Like Clairvoyance, Under Certain
Circumstances, Even Among Human Beings, While The Self-Curative
Instincts Of Children And Of Pregnant Women Have Been Already
Mentioned. Here, However, {124} In Correspondence With The Higher
Stage Of Development Which Human Consciousness Has Attained, A
Stronger Echo Of The Unconscious Clairvoyance Commonly Resounds
Within Consciousness Itself, And This Is Represented By A More Or
Less Definite Presentiment Of The Consequences That Will Ensue. It
Chapter 8 Pg 104Is Also In Accord With The Greater Independence Of The Human
Intellect That This Kind Of Presentiment Is Not Felt Exclusively
Immediately Before The Carrying Out Of An Action, But Is Occasionally
Disconnected From The Condition That An Action Has To Be Performed
Immediately, And Displays Itself Simply As An Idea Independently Of
Conscious Will, Provided Only That The Matter Concerning Which The
Presentiment Is Felt Is One Which In A High Degree Concerns The Will
Of The Person Who Feels It. In The Intervals Of An Intermittent
Fever Or Of Other Illness, It Not Unfrequently Happens That Sick
Persons Can Accurately Foretell The Day Of An Approaching Attack And
How Long It Will Last. The Same Thing Occurs Almost Invariably In
The Case Of Spontaneous, And Generally In That Of Artificial,
Somnambulism; Certainly The Pythia, As Is Well Known, Used To
Announce The Date Of Her Next Ecstatic State. In Like Manner The
Curative Instinct Displays Itself In Somnambulists, And They Have
Been Known To Select Remedies That Have Been No Less Remarkable For
The Success Attending Their Employment Than For The Completeness With
Which They Have Run Counter To Received Professional Opinion. The
Indication Of Medicinal Remedies Is The Only Use Which Respectable
Electro-Biologists Will Make Of The Half-Sleeping, Half-Waking
Condition Of Those Whom They Are Influencing. "People In Perfectly
Sound Health Have Been Known, Before Childbirth Or At The
Commencement Of An Illness, To Predict Accurately Their Own
Approaching Death. The Accomplishment Of Their Predictions Can
Hardly Be Explained As The Result Of Mere Chance, For If This Were
All, The Prophecy Should Fail At Least As Often As Not, Whereas The
Reverse Is Actually The Case. Many Of These Persons Neither Desire
Death Nor Fear It, So That The Result Cannot Be Ascribed To
Imagination." So Writes The Celebrated Physiologist, Burdach, From
Whose Chapter On Presentiment In His Work "Bhicke In's Leben" A Great
Part Of My Most Striking Examples Is Taken. This Presentiment Of
Deaths, Which Is The Exception Among Men, Is Quite Common With
Animals, Even Though They Do Not Know Nor Understand What Death Is.
When They Become Aware That Their End Is Approaching, They Steal Away
To Outlying And Solitary Places. This Is Why
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