Tuesday, 9th February, 2010

Marx of Respect

Dear Sir:
   I thank you for the honour which you have done me by sending me your great work on Capital; & I heartily wish that I was more worthy to receive it, by understanding more of the deep and important subject of political Economy. Though our studies have been so different, I believe that we both earnestly desire the extension of Knowledge, & that this is in the long run sure to add to the happiness of Mankind.
   I remain, Dear Sir
      Yours faithfully,
         Charles Darwin
Letter from Charles Darwin to Karl Marx
October, 1873
Although it is developed in the crude English style, this is a book which contains the basis of natural history for our views.
Karl Marx on Darwin's On the Origin of Species
December, 1860

Mythical Chestnut

It's a well-known chestnut of Darwinian trivia that the father of international socialism, Karl Marx, once offered to dedicate one of the volumes of his magnum opus, Das Kapital, to that other 19th Century bearded revolutionary living in the south of England, Charles Darwin. Unfortunately, it turns out that this particular chestnut is something of a myth, although the story of how it came about is of interest in its own right.

Kapital Idea

Marx genuinely admired Darwin's Origin, despite its crude English style. He even sent Darwin a personally inscribed copy of the recently published second edition of Das Kapital in 1873. Darwin's letter of acknowledgment (quoted above) delighted Marx, who used it as proof that the great scientist appreciated his work. In fact, Darwin, ever the gentleman (and no German scholar), was merely being polite: he never read Marx's book, the vast majority of whose pages remained uncut in his library.

But, although Marx admired Darwin's work, some of its implications, particularly the support it gave to the theories of Thomas Malthus, gave him great cause for concern. This makes it extremely unlikely that Marx would ever have considered dedicating Das Kapital to Darwin.

Myth Conception

So, how did the dedication story come about? The answer is given, amongst other places, in Francis Wheen's highly readable biography, Karl Marx (Fourth Estate, ISBN: 1-85702-637-3). It all started with a second Darwin letter unearthed amongst Marx's papers, dated 13th October, 1880:

Dear Sir:
   I am much obliged for your kind letter & the Enclosure.— The publication in any form of your remarks on my writing really requires no consent on my part, & it would be ridiculous in me to give consent to what requires none. I shd prefer the Part or Volume not to be dedicated to me (though I thank you for the intended honour) as this implies to a certain extent my approval of the general publication, about which I know nothing.— Moreover though I am a strong advocate for free thought on all subjects, yet it appears to me (whether rightly or wrongly) that direct arguments against christianity and theism produce hardly any effect on the public; & freedom of thought is best promoted by the gradual illumination of men's minds, which follow from the advance of science. It has, therefore, always been my object to avoid writing on religion, & I have confined myself to science. I may, however, have been unduly biased by the pain which it would give some members of my family , if I aided in any way direct attacks on religion.— I am sorry to refuse you any request, but I am old & have very little strength, and looking over proof-sheets (as I know by present experience) fatigues me much.
   I remain Dear Sir,
      Yours faithfully,
         Ch. Darwin

This letter was published in a Soviet newspaper in 1931, which went on to suggest that the enclosures referred to in the letter might have been chapters from Das Kapital that dealt with evolution. No matter that Das Kapital, a book on economics, could never be considered a direct attack on religion, whatever Marx's well-documented views on the subject.

So what on Earth was going on?

Mystery Solved

The mystery was investigated and solved by Margaret Fay of the University of California, who came across an obscure book published in 1881, entitled The Students' Darwin. This was the second in a series of books sponsored by a pair of evangelical atheists.

The author of the book, Edward Aveling, later became the lover of Marx's daughter, Eleanor. In 1895, he and Eleanor began organising her late father's papers (which she had recently inherited from Engels). Later, in 1897, Aveling wrote an article about Marx and Darwin, in which he mentioned having corresponded with Darwin. Presumably, he then filed Darwin's letter to him along with Marx's papers.

Eventually, a letter from Aveling to Darwin (dated 12th October, 1880) was discovered amongst Darwin's papers at Cambridge University. Enclosed with this letter were sample chapters from The Students' Darwin. The letter requested permission to dedicate the book to Darwin.

So, it wasn't Karl Marx's Das Kapital that Darwin politely declined the dedication of; it was Edward Aveling's The Students' Darwin.

What It's All About

I must admit to having experienced a certain degree of disappointment on learning that the famous Das Kapital dedication chestnut was a myth. On reflection, however, I like to think that Darwin would have approved of the sort of reasoning that questioned a cherished long-standing belief, and of the search for literary missing links that eventually led to the truth. That's what science and historical research are all about.

Comments:
Fredrik Bendz

Hi! I read your article with great interest! In one of Julian Huxley's books about Darwin there is an image of the book Marx sent to Darwin. If I remember correctly it is in a museum somewhere. Do you know where the copy is currently located and where I can find images of it? I searched for it in vain in Google's image search function.

Regards,

Fredrik Bendz 

According to one of the many Darwin biographies I own, his presentation copy of Das Kapital still resides in the library at Down House.

The Francis Wheen book mentioned above gives the inscription as follows:

Mr Charles Darwin on the part of his sincere admirer Karl Marx.

tiffany
What's the purpose of showing a letter that was never written or even thought about being written? You shouldn't pretend to be someone especially because you would and could never ever think the same that they do. You may asume that the person might think a certain way but you're wrong because a person can change their mind in an instant. I think that you should take the letter off of your website because it is giving false information.
Tiffany, if you read my piece more carefully, you will see that both letters quoted above were indeed written by Charles Darwin. The first one was written to Karl Marx, the second to Edward Aveling (not Karl Marx, as had previously been believed).

Nana,

Hi! Did you know you have the same email address as Tiffany?

f lynch

thanks for providing the text of darwin's letters. any idea where i can get the text of Aveline's letter of 1880 to Darwin?

The Aveling letter was discovered amongst Darwin's papers at Cambridge University. I suggest you contact the Darwin Correspondence Project, who are also based in Cambridge, and who have access to the Darwin Archive there.

As he studied seriously economic sciences Marx knew that Darwin's theory was partly based on the wrong statistics of Malthus whose wistakes were known from the begining.

He knew too that Darwin took the idea of evolution from Lamarck's searches whom Marx quotes when he speaks about biological sciences in his letters.

Eduardo Blasina

Very interesting article. It is also interesting to note the destiny of Vavilov, the main soviet botanist, who died in jail for supporting darwinism and Lysenko who was the official agronomist, trying to improve wheat by non darwinian methods, and obviously failing.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nikolai_Vavilov

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trofim_Lysenko

doyle mccarthy

a most useful collection of information that I could not find anywhere else.

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