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¡°Luck or Cunning as the Principal Means of Organic Transformation¡± is an essay written by Samuel Butler, first published in 1887. In this essay, Butler presents a critique of Charles Darwin's theory of natural selection and proposes an alternative mechanism for organic evolution.
Although Butler initially supported Darwin's ideas, he became increasingly critical of his emphasis on natural selection as the primary driver of evolution. In "Luck or Cunning," Butler argues that chance, or luck, combined with an organism's cunning or intelligence, plays a more important role in shaping evolutionary change than Darwin's natural selection suggests.
One of Butler's central claims is that organisms have some kind of intelligence or agency that allows them to adapt and evolve in response to their environment. He argues that rather than passively waiting for beneficial mutations to be selected by nature, organisms actively seek out advantageous mutations and exploit opportunities through cunning.
This essay reflects Butler's broader philosophical interests in evolution, psychology, and the nature of consciousness. His ideas challenged the prevailing scientific orthodoxy at the time and contributed to the ongoing debate about the mechanisms of evolution.

Summary
I shall perhaps best promote the acceptance of the two main points on which I have been insisting for some years past, I mean, the substantial identity between heredity and memory, and the reintroduction of design into organic development, by treating them as if they had something of that physical life with which they are so closely connected. Ideas are like plants and animals in this respect also, as in so many others, that they are more fully understood when their relations to other ideas of their time, and the history of their development are known and borne in mind. By development I do not merely mean their growth in the minds of those who first advanced them, but that larger development which consists in their subsequent good or evil fortunes?in their reception, favourable or otherwise, by those to whom they were presented.

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Contents
I. Introduction
II. Mr. Herbert Spencer
III. Mr. Herbert Spencer (continued)
IV. Mr. Romanes¡¯ ¡°Mental Evolution in Animals¡±
V. Statement of the Question at Issue
VI. Statement of the Question at Issue (continued)
VII. Mr. Spencer¡¯s ¡°The Factors of Organic Evolution¡±
VIII. Property, Common Sense, and Protoplasm
IX. Property, Common Sense, and Protoplasm (continued)
X. The Attempt to Eliminate Mind
XI. The Way of Escape
XII. Why Darwin¡¯s Variations were Accidental
XIII. Darwin¡¯s Claim to Descent with Modification
XIV. Darwin and Descent with Modification (continued)
XV. The Excised ¡°My¡¯s¡±
XVI. Mr. Grant Allen¡¯s ¡°Charles Darwin¡±
XVII. Professor Ray Lankester and Lamarck
XVIII. Per Contra
XIX. Conclusion