I ^4 Instincts, Habits, and Adaptations 



en\aronment carried to the brain and then unconsciously re- 

 flected back as motion. The impulse of fear is of the same 

 nature. Reflex action is in general unconscious, but with ani- 

 mals, as with man, it shades by degrees into conscious action, 

 and into volition or action "done on purpose." 



Instinct. — Dift'erent animals show differences in method or 

 degree of response to external influences. Fishes will pursue 

 their prev, flee from a threatening motion, or disgorge sand or 

 gravel swallowed with their food. Such peculiarities of dif- 

 ferent forms of life constitute the basis of instinct. 



Instinct is automatic obedience to the demands of conditions 

 external to the nervous system. As these conditions vary with 

 each kind of animal, so must the demands vary, and from this 

 arises the great variety actually seen in the instincts of different 

 animals. As the demands of life become complex, so do the in- 

 stincts. The greater the stress of environment, the more perfect 

 the automatism, for impulses to safe action are necessarily ade- 

 quate to the duty they have to perform. If the instinct were 

 inadequate, the species would have become extinct. The fact 

 that its individuals persist sliOAVS that they are provided with 

 the instincts necessary to that end. Instinct differs from other 

 allied forms of response to external condition in being hereditary, 

 continuous from generation to generation. This sufiicientlv dis- 

 tinguishes it from reason, but the line between instinct and reason 

 and other forms of reflex action cannot be sharply drawn. 



It is not necessary to consider here the question of the origin 

 of instincts. Some writers regard them as "inherited habits," 

 while others, with apparent justice, doubt if mere habits or 

 voluntary actions repeated till they become a "second nature" 

 ever leave a trace upon heredity. Such investigators regard 

 instinct as the natural survival of those methods of automatic 

 response which were most useful to the life of the animal, the 

 individual having less eft'ective methods of reflex action perish- 

 ing, leaving no posterity. 



Classification of Instincts. —The instincts of fishes may be 

 roughly classified as to their relation to the individual into 

 egoistic and altruistic instincts. 



Egoistic instincts are those which concern chiefly the indi- 

 vidual animal itself. To this class belong the instincts of feed- 



