Transformism
Transformism is an umbrella term used in biology to denote the idea that organisms can change their form over time, giving rise to new species. It stands in contrast to the view that species are fixed and immutable and is associated with pre-Darwinian debates about origins of diversity. The term originated in European natural history and was widely used during the 18th and 19th centuries to describe theories of structural transformation in living beings.
Historical development: Early transformists argued that organisms transform in response to their environments or through internal
Relation to evolution: When Charles Darwin and Alfred Wallace proposed natural selection as the mechanism of
Modern usage: Today, transformism is largely a historical label in biology. Contemporary evolutionary theory describes common
See also: Evolution, Lamarckism, Natural selection, Common descent.