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Ballantyne Press.

BALLANTYNE, HANSON AND CO.

EDINBURGH AND LONDON

THE COLOUR-SENSE:

Ets Origin and Development.

AN ESSAY IN COMPARATIVE PSYCHOLOGY.

BY

GRANT ALLEN, B.A.,

AUTHOR OF "PHYSIOLOGICAL ESTHETICS."

LONDON:

TRÜBNER & CO., LUDGATE HILL.
1879.

[All rights reserved.]

LANE LIBRA

фь A42 1874

PREFACE.

THE materials which form the nucleus of the present volume were originally collected as part of the basis for a chapter on "the Genesis of Esthetics" in my little work on “Physiological Esthetics," published some two years since. I found, however, when I came to arrange them, that the subject had grown under my hands, and that it would be impossible fully to develop my ideas except in the form of a separate treatise. The omission seemed all the more desirable, because my former work dealt only with Esthetics as an element of human psychology: while the materials here collected refer rather to the wider science which studies the phenomena of mind throughout the whole animal world. Accordingly, I deferred their publication for the time, only mentioning my original intention in a footnote on p. 156 of "Physiological Esthetics." But most of the critics who kindly noticed that little work were so unanimous in calling attention to the hints which I had thrown out with reference to the Colour-Sense, and the love for colour which forms such a striking characteristic of mankind, that I determined on following up the subject on a wider basis, and elucib

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dating my view by full inductive generalisations. The present volume is the result.

Meanwhile two works appeared, in Germany and in England, which necessitated considerable divergences from my original plan. The first was Dr. Hugo Magnus's "Geschichtliche Entwickelung des Farbensinnes;" the second Mr. A. R. Wallace's "Tropical Nature." Put shortly, the gist of my theory was this: that the taste for bright colours has been derived by man from his frugivorous ancestors, who acquired it by exercise of their sense of vision upon bright-coloured food-stuffs; that the same taste was shared by all flower-feeding or fruit-eating animals; and that it was manifested in the sexual selection of brilliant mates, as well as in other secondary modes, such as the various human arts. The two volumes mentioned above came like utterly destructive criticisms of any such belief. Dr. Magnus endeavoured to prove that the Colour-Sense of mankind was a late historical acquisition of the race, whose beginnings hardly dated back as far as the Homeric and Vaidik periods. Mr. Wallace controverted, with all his well-known vigour and ingenuity, the theory of sexual selection, first announced by Mr. Darwin, upon which rested almost the whole argument for a love of pure colour among the lower animals. Thus these two books between them cut away the whole ground from under my feet. It became necessary to go back over my materials afresh, and to seek for evidence against both anticipatory assailants. I have tried, therefore, to show, in opposition to Dr. Magnus, that the Colour-Sense of mankind dates back to the earliest appearance of our race

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