(1809–1873) suggested a link between the environment and
social degeneration. The concept of degenerative evolution was used by scientists in the 19th century; at this time it was believed by most
biologists that evolution had some kind of direction. In 1857 the physician
Bénédict Morel, influenced by
Lamarckism, claimed that environmental factors such as taking
drugs or
alcohol would produce
social degeneration in the offspring of those individuals, and would revert those
offspring to a primitive state. Morel, a devout
Catholic, had believed that mankind had started in perfection, contrasting modern humanity to the past. Morel claimed there had been "Morbid deviation from an original type". His theory of devolution was later advocated by some biologists. According to Roger Luckhurst: Darwin soothed readers that evolution was progressive, and directed towards human perfectibility. The next generation of biologists were less confident or consoling. Using Darwin's theory, and many rival biological accounts of development then in circulation, scientists suspected that it was just as possible to
devolve, to slip back down the evolutionary scale to prior states of development. One of the first biologists to suggest devolution was
Ray Lankester, he explored the possibility that evolution by
natural selection may in some cases lead to devolution, an example he studied was the regressions in the life cycle of
sea squirts. Lankester discussed the idea of devolution in his book
Degeneration: A Chapter in Darwinism (1880). He was a critic of progressive evolution, pointing out that higher forms existed in the past which have since degenerated into simpler forms. Lankester argued that "if it was possible to evolve, it was also possible to devolve, and that complex organisms could devolve into simpler forms or animals".
Anton Dohrn also developed a theory of degenerative evolution based on his studies of
vertebrates. According to Dohrn many
chordates are degenerated because of their environmental conditions. Dohrn claimed
cyclostomes such as
lampreys are degenerate fish as there is no evidence their jawless state is an ancestral feature but is the product of environmental adaptation due to
parasitism. According to Dohrn if cyclostomes would devolve further then they would resemble something like an
Amphioxus. The historian of biology
Peter J. Bowler has written that devolution was taken seriously by proponents of
orthogenesis and others in the late 19th century who at this period of time firmly believed that there was a direction in evolution.
Orthogenesis was the belief that evolution travels in internally directed trends and levels. The
paleontologist Alpheus Hyatt discussed devolution in his work, using the concept of
racial senility as the mechanism of devolution. Bowler defines
racial senility as "an evolutionary retreat back to a state resembling that from which it began." Hyatt who studied the
fossils of
invertebrates believed that up to a point
ammonoids developed by regular stages up until a specific level but would later due to unfavourable conditions descend back to a previous level, this according to Hyatt was a form of lamarckism as the degeneration was a direct response to external factors. To Hyatt after the level of degeneration the species would then become extinct, according to Hyatt there was a "phase of youth, a phase of maturity, a phase of senility or degeneration foreshadowing the extinction of a type". To Hyatt the devolution was predetermined by internal factors which organisms can neither control or reverse. This idea of all evolutionary branches eventually running out of energy and degenerating into
extinction was a pessimistic view of
evolution and was unpopular amongst many scientists of the time.
Carl H. Eigenmann an
ichthyologist wrote
Cave vertebrates of America: a study in degenerative evolution (1909) in which he concluded that
cave evolution was essentially degenerative. The
entomologist William Morton Wheeler and the
Lamarckian Ernest MacBride (1866–1940) also advocated degenerative evolution. According to Macbride
invertebrates were actually degenerate
vertebrates, his argument was based on the idea that "crawling on the seabed was inherently less stimulating than swimming in open waters." ==Degeneration theory==