7 Quotes & Sayings By Ernst Haeckel

Ernst Heinrich Haeckel was a German biologist, natural historian, artist, philosopher, and poet. He was an important figure in the history of evolutionary biology and popularised much of modern understandings of evolution. His works were very influential until the end of World War I, when he suffered a mental breakdown. He was born in Potsdam, Prussia (now Germany), on 18 June 1834 Read more

His father taught at the local gymnasium. Ernst was educated at the local Realschule before studying medicine at the Universities of Jena and Würzburg. He attended lectures by zoologist Rudolf Virchow and botanist Karl August Möller.

Following his graduation in 1852, he served as an assistant to pathologist Moritz Heinrich Alexander von Knebel at the University of Leipzig for one year.

1
Civilisation and the life of nations are governed by the same laws as prevail throughout nature and organic life. Ernst Haeckel
2
Where faith commences, science ends. Both these arts of the human mind must be strictly kept apart from each other. Faith has its origin in the poetic imagination; knowledge, on the other hand, originates in the reasoning intelligence of man. Science has to pluck the blessed fruits from the tree of knowledge, unconcerned whether these conquests trench upon the poetical imaginings of faith or not. . Ernst Haeckel
3
It is, however, a most astonishing but incontestable fact, that the history of the evolution of man as yet constitutes no part of general education. Indeed, our so-called 'educated classes' are to this day in total ignorance of the most important circumstances and the most remarkable phenomena which Anthropogeny has brought to light. Ernst Haeckel
4
An irrefutable proof that such single-celled primaeval animals really existed as the direct ancestors of Man, is furnished according to the fundamental law of biogeny by the fact that the human egg is nothing more than a simple cell. Ernst Haeckel
5
The ancestors of the higher animals must be regarded as one-celled beings, similar to the Amoebae which at the present day occur in our rivers, pools, and lakes. The incontrovertible fact that each human individual develops from an egg, which, in common with those of all animals, is a simple cell, most clearly proves that the most remote ancestors of man were primordial animals of this sort, of a form equivalent to a simple cell. When, therefore, the theory of the animal descent of man is condemned as a 'horrible, shocking, and immoral' doctrine, tho unalterable fact, which can be proved at any moment under the microscope, that the human egg is a simple cell, which is in no way different to those of other mammals, must equally be pronounced 'horrible, shocking, and immoral. Ernst Haeckel
6
As our mother earth is a mere speck in the sunbeam in the illimitable universe, so man himself is but a tiny grain of protoplasm in the perishable framework of organic nature. [This] clearly indicates the true place of man in nature, but it dissipates the prevalent illusion of man's supreme importance and the arrogance with which he sets himself apart from the illimitable universe and exalts himself to the position of its most valuable element. Ernst Haeckel