Descent Of Man Quotes (3)
Descended from the apes? My dear, we will hope it is not true. But if it is, let us pray that it may not become generally known.
Remark by the wife of a canon of Worcester Cathedral. Quoted in Ashley Montagu, Manʹs Most Dangerous Myth: the Fallacy of Race (1945), 27.
It appears, nevertheless, that all such simple solutions of the problem of vertebrate ancestry are without warrant. They arise from a very common tendency of the mind, against which the naturalist has to guard himself,—a tendency which finds expression in the very widespread notion that the existing anthropoid apes, and more especially the gorilla, must be looked upon as the ancestors of mankind, if once the doctrine of the descent of man from ape-like forefathers is admitted. A little reflexion suffices to show that any given living form, such as the gorilla, cannot possibly be the ancestral form from which man was derived, since ex-hypothesi that ancestral form underwent modification and development, and in so doing, ceased to exist.
'Vertebrata', entry in Encyclopaedia Britannica, 9th edition (1899), Vol. 24, 180.
See also: | Ancestor (6) | Ape (20) | Development (20) | Exist (4) | Gorilla (4) | Mankind (34) | Mind (116) | Modification (5) | Naturalist (11) | Problem (63) | Solution (44) | Vertebrate (7)
The probable fact is that we are descended not only from monkeys but from monks.
A Thousand and One Epigrams (1911). In Preachments: Elbert Hubbard's Selected Writings (1998), Part 4, 438.