The Great Hippocampus Question was a 19th-century scientific controversy about the anatomy of apes and human uniqueness. The dispute between Thomas Henry Huxley and Richard Owen became central to the scientific debate on human evolution that followed Charles Darwin's publication of On the Origin of Species. The name comes from the title of a satire the Reverend Charles Kingsley wrote about the arguments, which in modified form appeared as "the great hippopotamus test" in Kingsley's book for children, The Water-Babies, A Fairy Tale for a Land Baby. Together with other humorous skits on the topic, this helped to spread and popularise Darwin's ideas on evolution.
The key point that Owen asserted was that only humans had part of the brain then known as the hippocampus minor (now called the calcar avis), and that this gave us our unique abilities. Careful dissection eventually showed that apes and monkeys also have a hippocampus minor.
The key point that Owen asserted was that only humans had part of the brain then known as the hippocampus minor (now called the calcar avis), and that this gave us our unique abilities. Careful dissection eventually showed that apes and monkeys also have a hippocampus minor.
Background
In October 1836 Charles Darwin returned from the Beagle voyage with fossil collections which the anatomist Richard Owen described, contributing to the inception of Darwin's theory of natural selection. Darwin outlined his theory in an Essay of 1844, and discussed transmutation with his friend Joseph Dalton Hooker. He did not tell Owen, who as the up-and-coming "English Cuvier"
held the conventional belief that every species was uniquely created
and perfectly adapted. Owen's brilliance and political skills made him a
leading figure in the scientific establishment, developing ideas of
divine archetypes produced by vague secondary laws similar to a form of theistic evolution, while emphasising the differences separating man from ape. At the end of 1844 the anonymous book Vestiges of the Natural History of Creation brought wide public interest in transmutation of species
and the idea that humans were descended from apes, and after a slow
initial response, strong condemnation from the scientific establishment.
Darwin discussed his interest in transmutation with friends including Charles Lyell, and Hooker eventually read Darwin's Essay in 1847. When Thomas Henry Huxley savagely reviewed the latest edition of Vestiges in 1854, Darwin wrote to him, making friends while cautiously admitting to being "almost as unorthodox about species".
Huxley had become increasingly irritated by Owen's condescension and
manipulation, and having gained a teaching position at the school of
mining, began openly attacking Owen's work.
Hippocampus minor
In 1564 a prominent feature on the floor of the lateral ventricles of the brain was named the hippocampus by Aranzi as its curved shape on each side supposedly reminded him of a seahorse, the Hippocampus (though Mayer mistakenly used the term hippopotamus in 1779, and was followed by several others until 1829). At that same time a ridge on the occipital horn was named the calcar avis, but in 1786 this was renamed the hippocampus minor, with the hippocampus being called the hippocampus major.
Richard Owen
presented several papers on the anatomical differences between apes and
humans, arguing that they had been created separately and stressing the
impossibility of apes being transmuted into men. In 1857 he went even further, presenting an authoritative paper to the Linnean Society of London on his anatomical studies of primate brains and asserting that humans were not merely a distinct biological order of primates, as had been accepted by great anatomists such as Carl Linnaeus and Georges Cuvier, but a separate sub-class of mammalia,
distinct from all the other primates and mammals generally. Owen
supported his argument with a figure by himself of a South American
monkey, a figure of a negro's brain by Friedrich Tiedemann, and of a chimpanzee's brain by Jacobus Schroeder van der Kolk and Willem Vrolik.
While Owen conceded the "all-pervading similitude of
structure—every tooth, every bone, strictly homologous" which made it
difficult for anatomists to determine the difference between man and
ape, he based his new classification on three characteristics which to
him distinguished mankind's "highest form of brain", the most important
being his claim that only the human brain has a hippocampus minor. To Owen in 1857, this feature together with the extent to which the "posterior lobe" projected beyond the cerebellum
and the presence of the posterior horn were how man "fulfills his
destiny as the supreme master of this earth and of the lower creation." Charles Darwin commented, "Owen's is a grand Paper; but I cannot swallow Man making a division as distinct from a Chimpanzee, as an ornithorhynchus from a Horse: I wonder what a Chimpanzee wd. say to this?". Owen repeated the paper as the Rede Lecture at the University of Cambridge on 10 May 1859 when he was the first to be given an honorary degree by the university.
To Thomas Henry Huxley
the claim about the hippocampus minor appeared to be a significant
blunder by Owen, and Huxley began systematically dissecting the brains
of monkeys, determined that "before I have done with that mendacious
humbug I will nail him out, like a kite to a barn door, an example to
all evil doers." He did not discuss this in public at this stage, but continued to attack Owen's other ideas, aiming to undermine Owen's status. At his 17 June 1858 Royal Institution Croonian Lecture
"On the Theory of the Vertebrate Skull", Huxley directly challenged
Owen's central idea of archetypes shown by homology, with Owen in the
audience. Huxley's aim was to overcome the domination of science by
wealthy clergymen led by Owen, in order to create a professional
salaried scientific civil service and make science secular.
Under Darwin's influence he took up transmutation as a way of dividing
science from theology, and in January 1859 argued that "it is as
respectable to be modified monkey as modified dirt".
Owen and Huxley debate human and ape brain structure
Huxley was among the friends rallying round the publication of Darwin's On the Origin of Species, and was sharpening his "beak and claws" to disembowel "the curs who will bark and yelp". Charles Kingsley
was sent a review copy, and told Darwin that he had "long since, from
watching the crossing of domesticated animals and plants, learnt to
disbelieve the dogma of the permanence of species."
Darwin was delighted that this "celebrated author and divine" had
"gradually learnt to see that it is just as noble a conception of the
Deity to believe that He created a few original forms capable of
self-development into other and needful forms, as to believe that He
required a fresh act of creation to supply the voids caused by the
action of His laws."
While reviews were by custom anonymous, their authors were usually known. Huxley's reviews of On the Origin of Species irritated Owen, whose own anonymous review in April praised himself and his own axiom of the continuous operation of the ordained becoming of living things, took offence at the way the creationist position had been depicted, and complained that his own pre-eminence had been ignored. Owen bitterly attacked Huxley, Hooker and Darwin, but also signalled acceptance of a kind of evolution as a teleological plan in a continuous "ordained becoming", with new species appearing by natural birth.
The dispute between Huxley and Owen over human uniqueness began in public at the 1860 Oxford evolution debate, during a meeting of the British Association for the Advancement of Science in Oxford on Thursday 28 June 1860. After Charles Daubeny's
paper "On the Final Causes of the Sexuality of Plants with Particular
Reference to Mr. Darwin's Work", the chairman asked Huxley for comments,
but he declined as he thought the public venue inappropriate. Owen then
spoke of facts which would enable the public to "come to some
conclusions ... of the truth of Mr. Darwin's theory", reportedly arguing
that "the brain of the gorilla was more different from that of man than
from that of the lowest primate particularly because only man had a
posterior lobe, a posterior horn, and a hippocampus minor." In response,
Huxley flatly but politely "denied altogether that the difference
between the brain of the gorilla and man was so great" in a "direct and
unqualified contradiction" of Owen, citing previous studies as well as
promising to provide detailed support for his position.
Anguish over the death of his son of scarlet fever
in September 1860 pushed Huxley to the brink, from which Kingsley
rescued him by a series of letters. Huxley put his fury over the death
into composing a paper which violently assaulted Owen's ideas and
professional reputation. It was published in January 1861 in the first
issue of Huxley's relaunched Natural History Review
magazine, and presented citations, quotations and letters from leading
anatomists to attack Owen's three claims, aiming to prove him "guilty of
wilful and deliberate falsehood" by citing Owen himself, and (with less
clear cut justification) the anatomists whose illustrations Owen had
used in the 1857 paper. While readily agreeing that the human brain
differed from that of apes in size, proportions and complexity of
convolutions, Huxley played the significance of these features down, and
argued that to a lesser extent these also differed between the
"highest" and "lowest" human races. Darwin congratulated Huxley on this "smasher" against the "canting humbug" Owen. From February to May Huxley delivered a very popular series of sixpenny lectures for working men at the School of Mines
where he taught, on "The Relation of Man to the Rest of the Animal
Kingdom". He told his wife that "My working men stick by me wonderfully,
the house being fuller than ever last night. By next Friday evening
they will all be convinced that they are monkeys."
Gorillas became the topic of the day with the return of the explorer Paul Du Chaillu. Owen arranged for him to speak and display his collections on stage at a spectacular Royal Geographical Society meeting on 25 February, and followed this by giving a lecture at the Royal Institution on 19 March on the brains of The Gorilla and the Negro, asserting that the dispute was one of interpretation rather than fact,
and hedging his previous claim by stating that humans alone had a
hippocampus minor "as defined in human anatomy". This lecture was
published in the Athenæum on 23 March with unlabelled and inaccurate illustrations, and Huxley's response in the next issue a week later, Man and the Apes,
ridiculed Owen's use of these illustrations and failure to mention the
findings of anatomists that the three structures were present in
animals. In the following week's issue Owen's letter blamed "the Artist"
for the illustrations, but claimed that the argument was correct and
referred the reader to his 1858 paper. In the Athenæum
of 13 April Huxley responded to this repetition of the claim by writing
that "Life is too short to occupy oneself with the slaying of the slain
more than once."
Each Saturday, Darwin read the latest ripostes in the Athenæum.
Owen tried to smear Huxley by portraying him as an "advocate of man's
origins from a transmuted ape", and one of his contributions was titled
"Ape-Origin of Man as Tested by the Brain". This backfired, as Huxley
had already delighted Darwin by speculating on "pithecoid man" (ape-like
man), and was glad of the invitation to publicly turn the anatomy of
brain structure into a question of human ancestry. Darwin egged him on
from Down, writing "Oh Lord what a thorn you must be in the poor dear
man's side". Huxley told Darwin's friend Joseph Dalton Hooker,
"Owen occupied an entirely untenable position ... The fact is he made a
prodigious blunder in commencing the attack, and now his only chance is
to be silent and let people forget the exposure. I do not believe that
in the whole history of science there is a case of any man of reputation
getting himself into such a contemptible position. He will be the
laughing-stock of all the continental anatomists."
Public interest and satire
This very public slanging match attracted wide attention, and humorists were quick to take up the opportunity for satire. Punch featured the issue several times that year, notably on 18 May 1861 when a cartoon under the heading Monkeyana showed a standing gorilla with a sign parodying Josiah Wedgwood's
anti-slavery slogan "Am I Not A Man And A Brother?". This was
accompanied by a satirical poem by "Gorilla" at the zoo asking to be
told if he was "A man in ape's shape, An anthropoid ape, Or monkey
deprived of his tail?", and noting:
- Says Owen, you can see
- The brain of Chimpanzee
- Is always exceedingly small,
- With the hindermost "horn"
- Of extremity shorn,
- And no "Hippocampus" at all.
It then recounts Huxley's ripostes, and:
- Next Huxley replies,
- That Owen he lies,
- And garbles his Latin quotation;
- That his facts are not new,
- His mistakes not a few.
- Detrimental to his reputation.
- "To twice slay the slain,"
- By dint of the Brain,
- (Thus Huxley concludes his review)
- Is but labour in vain,
- Unproductive of gain.
- And so I shall bid you "Adieu!"
— Gorilla (Sir Philip Egerton), Monkeyana.
The poem was actually by the eminent palaeontologist Sir Philip Egerton who, as a trustee of the Royal College of Surgeons and the British Museum,
acted as Owen's patron. When a delighted Huxley found out who the
author of the piece was, he thought it "speaks volumes for Owen's
perfect success in damning himself."
In the second issue of Huxley's Natural History Review, an article by George Rolleston on the orangutan brain showed the features that Owen claimed apes lacked, and when Owen responded in a letter to the Annals and Magazine of Natural History that the issue was a matter of definition rather than fact, Huxley made a public dissection of a spider monkey that had died at the zoo, to support his case. In the following issue John Marshall provided detailed measurements making the same point about the chimpanzee,
as well as explaining how a chimpanzee's brain could be distorted by
not being properly preserved and removed from the skull, so that it
would look like the one in Owen's illustration.
The Great Hippocampus Question
The debate continued in 1862. A detailed paper by William Henry Flower in the prestigious journal, the Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society,
reviewed the earlier literature and presented his own studies based on
having dissected sixteen species of primates, including prosimians, monkeys and an orangutan.
Having stated at the outset that he had no opinion on transmutation or
the origin of humans, he refuted Owen's three claims, and went further,
stating that in relation to the mass of the brain, the hippocampus minor
was proportionately largest in the marmoset,
and proportionately smallest in mankind. The paper used terms recently
coined by Huxley, and Flower was one of his close colleagues. Huxley
presented more evidence against Owen in his Natural History Review. The Dutch anatomists Jacobus Schroeder van der Kolk and Willem Vrolik
found that Owen had repeatedly used their 1849 illustration of a
chimpanzee's brain to support his arguments, and to prevent the public
from being misled they dissected the brain of an orangutan that had died
in the Amsterdam zoo, reporting at a meeting of the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences
that the three features Owen claimed were unique to humans were present
in this ape. They admitted that their earlier illustration was
incorrect due to the way they had removed the brain for inspection, and
suggested that Owen had become "lost" and "fell into a trap" in debating
against Darwin. Huxley reprinted the report, in French, in his Review. His confrontations with Owen went on.
At the 1862 British Association meeting in Cambridge that year, Owen presented two papers opposing Darwin: one claimed that the adaptations of the Aye-aye
disproved evolution, and the second paper reiterated Owen's claims
about human brains being unique, as well as discussing the question of
whether apes have toes or thumbs. Huxley said Owen appeared to be "lying
& shuffling", and Huxley's allies presented successive attacks on
Owen. This was the first British Association annual meeting attended by Charles Kingsley,
and during the meeting he produced a privately printed satirical skit
on the argument, "a little squib for circulation among his friends"
written in the style of the then popular stage character Lord Dundreary,
a good natured but brainless aristocrat known for huge bushy sideburns
and for mangling proverbs or sayings in "Dundrearyisms". The skit was
titled Speech of Lord Dundreary in Section D, on Friday Last, On the Great Hippocampus Question.
We were very much delighted, and I may say, quite interested, to find that we had all hippopotamuses in our brains. Of course they're right, you know, because seeing's believing.
Certainly, I never felt one in mine; but perhaps it's dead, and so didn't stir, and then of course, it don't count, you know. .... every one has brains in his head, unless he's a skeleton; and it curled its tail round things like a monkey, that I know, for I saw it with my own eyes. That was Professor Rolleston's theory, you know. It was Professor Huxley said it was in his tail–not Mr. Huxley's, of course, but the ape's: only apes have no tails, so I don't quite see that. And then the other gentleman who got up last, Mr. Flower, you know, he said that it was all over the ape, everywhere. All over hippocampuses, from head to foot, poor beast, like a dog all over ticks! I wonder why they don't rub bluestone into the back of its neck, as one does to a pointer. Well, then. Where was I? Oh! and Professor Owen said it wasn't in apes at all: but only in the order bimana, that's you and me. Well, he know best. And they all know best too, for they are monstrous clever fellows. So one must be right, and all the rest wrong, or else one of them wrong, and all the rest right–you see that? I wonder why they don't toss up about it.
Professor Huxley says there's a gulf between a man and an ape. I'm sure I'm glad of it, especially if the ape bit; and Professor Owen says there ain't. What? am I wrong, eh? Of course. Yes–beg a thousand pardons, really now. Of course–Professor Owen says there is, and Professor Huxley says there ain't. Well, a fellow can't recollect everything. But I say, if there's a gulf, the ape might get over it and bite one after all.
— Charles Kingsley, Speech of Lord Dundreary in Section D, on Friday Last, On the Great Hippocampus Question.
The British Medical Journal
asked, "Is it not high time that the annual passage of barbed words
between Professor Owen and Professor Huxley, on the cerebral distinction
between men and monkeys, should cease? ... Continued on its present
footing, it becomes a hindrance and an injury to science, a joke for the
populace, and a scandal to the scientific world." The London Quarterly Review took up the joke, describing the confrontation of Owen with Huxley and his supporters Rolleston
and Flower dramatically: "Animation increased, 'decorous reticence' was
at an end, and all parties enjoyed the scene except the disputants.
Surely apes were never before so honoured, as to be the theme of the
warmest discussion in one of the two principal university towns in
England. Strange sight was this, that three or four most accomplished
anatomists were contending against each other like so many gorillas, and
either reducing man to a monkey, or elevating the monkey to the man!" In October the Medical Times and Gazette
reported Owen's presentation with full detail of the responses by
Huxley, Rolleston and Flower, as well as Owen's rebuttal. The dispute
continued in the next two issues of the magazine.
The great hippopotamus test
At about the same time as he was attending the Cambridge British Association meeting in 1862, instalments of Charles Kingsley's story for children The Water-Babies, A Fairy Tale for a Land Baby were being published in Macmillan's Magazine as a serial. Kingsley incorporated material modified from his skit about Dundreary's speech On the Great Hippocampus Question,
as well as other references to the protagonists, the British
Association, and notable scientists of the day. When the protagonist Tom
is turned into a water-baby by the fairies, the question is raised that
if there were water-babies, surely someone would have caught one and
"put it into spirits, or into the Illustrated News, or perhaps
cut it into two halves, poor dear little thing, and sent one to
Professor Owen, and one to Professor Huxley, to see what they would each
say about it." As for the suggestion that a water-baby is contrary to nature:
You must not say that this cannot be, or that that is contrary to nature. You do not know what Nature is, or what she can do; and nobody knows; not even Sir Roderick Murchison, or Professor Owen, or Professor Sedgwick, or Professor Huxley, or Mr. Darwin, or Professor Faraday, or Mr. Grove, or any other of the great men whom good boys are taught to respect. They are very wise men; and you must listen respectfully to all they say: but even if they should say, which I am sure they never would, “That cannot exist. That is contrary to nature,” you must wait a little, and see; for perhaps even they may be wrong.
— Charles Kingsley, The Water Babies.
Keeping up an even-handed treatment, Kingsley introduced as a
character in the story Professor Ptthmllnsprts (Put-them-all-in-spirits)
as an amalgam of Owen and Huxley, satirising each in turn. Like the
very possessive Owen, the Professor was "very good to all the world as
long as it was good to him. Only one fault he had, which cock-robins
have likewise, as you may see if you look out of the nursery
window—that, when any one else found a curious worm, he would hop round
them, and peck them, and set up his tail, and bristle up his feathers,
just as a cock-robin would; and declare that he found the worm first;
and that it was his worm; and, if not, that then it was not a worm at
all." Like Huxley, "the professor had not the least notion of allowing
that things were true, merely because people thought them beautiful. ...
The professor, indeed, went further, and held that no man was forced to
believe anything to be true, but what he could see, hear, taste, or
handle." A paragraph on "the great hippopotamus test" opens with the
Professor, like Huxley, declaring "that apes had hippopotamus majors in
their brains just as men have", but then like Owen presenting the
argument that "If you have a hippopotamus major in your brain, you are
no ape".
He held very strange theories about a good many things. He had even got up once at the British Association, and declared that apes had hippopotamus majors in their brains just as men have. Which was a shocking thing to say; for, if it were so, what would become of the faith, hope, and charity of immortal millions? You may think that there are other more important differences between you and an ape, such as being able to speak, and make machines, and know right from wrong, and say your prayers, and other little matters of that kind; but that is a child’s fancy, my dear. Nothing is to be depended on but the great hippopotamus test. If you have a hippopotamus major in your brain, you are no ape, though you had four hands, no feet, and were more apish than the apes of all aperies. But if a hippopotamus major is ever discovered in one single ape’s brain, nothing will save your great-great-great-great-great-great-great-great-great-great-great-greater-greatest-grandmother from having been an ape too. No, my dear little man; always remember that the one true, certain, final, and all-important difference between you and an ape is, that you have a hippopotamus major in your brain, and it has none; and that, therefore, to discover one in its brain will be a very wrong and dangerous thing, at which every one will be very much shocked, as we may suppose they were at the professor.—Though really, after all, it don’t much matter; because—as Lord Dundreary and others would put it—nobody but men have hippopotamuses in their brains; so, if a hippopotamus was discovered in an ape’s brain, why it would not be one, you know, but something else.
— Charles Kingsley, The Water Babies.
Then, presented with the awkward question, "But why are there not
water-babies?", the Professor in Huxley's characteristic voice answered
quite sharply: "Because there ain’t."
The Water-Babies was published in book form in 1863, and in the same year an even more satirical short play was published anonymously by George Pycroft. In A Report of a Sad Case Recently Tried before the Lord Mayor, Owen versus Huxley... the Great Bone Case,
the vulgarity of the behaviour of Owen and Huxley is parodied as them
being taken to court for brawling
in the streets and disturbing the peace. In court, they shout terms such
as "posterior cornu" and "hippocampus minor". In giving evidence,
Huxley states "Well, as I was saying, Owen and me is in the same trade;
and we both cuts up monkeys, and I finds something in the brains of
them. Hallo! says I, here's a hippocampus. No, there ain't says Owen.
Look here says I. I can't see it he says and he sets to werriting and
haggling about it, and goes and tells everybody, as what I finds ain't
there, and what he finds is".
Man's Place in Nature
Huxley expanded his lectures for working men into a book titled Evidence as to Man's Place in Nature, published in 1863. His intention was expressed in a letter to Charles Lyell which referred to the Monkeyana
poem of 1861: "I do not think you will find room to complain of any
want of distinctness in my definition of Owen's position touching the
Hippocampus question. I mean to give the whole history of the business
in a note, so that the paraphrase of Sir Ph. Egerton's line 'To which
Huxley replies that Owen he lies', shall be unmistakable." Darwin exclaimed, "Hurrah the monkey book has come".
A central part of the book provides a step by step explanation suitable
for newcomers to anatomy of how the brains of apes and humans are
fundamentally similar, with particular reference to both having a
posterior lobe, a posterior horn, and a hippocampus minor. The chapter
concludes that this close similarity between apes and mankind proves
that the original definition by Linnaeus of the biological Order of Primates
was correct to include both, and mentions that an explanation of humans
originating from apes is provided by Darwin's theory. The book also
includes six pages of small print giving "a succinct History of the
Controversy respecting the Cerebral Structure of Man and the Apes"
describing how Owen had "suppressed" and denied what Huxley had now
shown to be the truth regarding the hippocampus minor, posterior horn,
and posterior lobe, describing this as reflecting on Owen's "personal
veracity". Reviewers regarded the book as a polemic against Owen, and a
majority of them sided with Huxley.
Sir Charles Lyell's authoritative Geological Evidences of the Antiquity of Man
was also published in 1863, and included a detailed review of the
hippocampus question which gave solid and unambiguous support to
Huxley's arguments. In an attempt to refute Lyell's judgement, Owen
again defended his classification scheme, introducing a new claim that
the hippocampus minor was virtually absent in an "idiot". Then in 1866
Owen's book On the Anatomy of Vertebrates presented accurate
brain illustrations. In a long footnote, Owen cited himself and the
earlier literature to admit at last that in apes "all the homologous
parts of the human cerebral organ exist". However, he still believed
that this did not invalidate his classification of man in a separate
subclass. He now claimed that the structures concerned – the posterior
lobe, the posterior horn, and the hippocampus minor – were in apes only
"under modified form and low grades of development". He accused Huxley
and his allies of making "puerile", "ridiculous" and "disgraceful"
attacks on his scheme of classification.
The publicity surrounding the affair tarnished Owen's reputation.
While Owen had a laudable aim of finding an objective way of defining
the uniqueness of humanity and distinguishing their brain anatomy in a
qualitative way, not just a quantitative way, his obstinacy in refusing
to admit his errors in trying to find that difference led to his fall
from the pinnacle of British science. Huxley gained influence, and his X Club of like minded scientists used the journal Nature to promote evolution and naturalism, shaping much of late Victorian science. Even many of his supporters, including Charles Lyell and Alfred Russel Wallace,
thought that though humans shared a common ancestor with apes, the
higher mental faculties could not have evolved through a purely material
process. Darwin published his own explanation in 1871 in the Descent of Man.
Modern relevance
In a talk about biological systematics (classification) and cladistics given at the American Museum of Natural History in 1981, the paleontologist Colin Patterson discussed an argument put in a paper by Ernst Mayr that humans could be distinguished from apes by the presence of Broca's area
in the brain. Patterson commented that this reminded him of "The Great
Hippocampus Question" as recorded in fiction by Kingsley, and as in fact
being a controversy between Huxley and Owen that "eventually as usual,
Huxley won."