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Science Quote by Charles Darwin

"The mystery of the beginning of all things is insoluble by us; and I for one must be content to remain an agnostic"

About this Quote

Darwin isn’t shrugging; he’s drawing a hard border around what science can responsibly claim. The line lands with a quiet defiance because it refuses the two temptations of his era: the Victorian hunger for totalizing explanations and the religious demand that origins must terminate in certainty. By calling the “mystery” of beginnings “insoluble by us,” he makes ignorance sound less like failure and more like intellectual hygiene. The sting is in that small, almost domestic phrase: “I for one must be content.” It’s a scientist’s version of moral discipline, the choice to live without metaphysical closure.

The subtext is strategic humility. Darwin had already detonated a cultural bomb with natural selection; he knew that opponents would try to smuggle his work into a grand cosmological claim (either as atheistic proof or as a threat to faith). Agnosticism here functions as a pressure valve: evolution can explain how life diversifies without pretending to explain why existence exists. He’s defending the autonomy of empirical inquiry, keeping it from being conscripted into theology or anti-theology.

Context matters. Darwin wrote in a world where “origins” wasn’t an abstract puzzle but a political and social battleground: church authority, moral order, even the status hierarchy of humans versus animals. His choice of “content” signals a countercultural posture: modernity, he implies, may require adults to tolerate unanswered questions. It’s not resignation; it’s a recalibration of what counts as an honest answer.

Quote Details

TopicFaith
Source
Verified source: The Life and Letters of Charles Darwin (Vol. 1) (Charles Darwin, 1887)
Text match: 97.39%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
I cannot pretend to throw the least light on such abstruse problems. The mystery of the beginning of all things is insoluble by us; and I for one must be content to remain an Agnostic. (Vol. 1, Chapter VIII (“Religion”), p. 286 (in the 1887 John Murray edition as transcribed on Darwin Online)). This wording appears in the autobiographical chapter of Francis Darwin’s edited volume *The Life and Letters of Charles Darwin* (1887). The quote is frequently mis-copied online as “insoluble to us” or “insoluble by us” and with “agnostic” lowercased; in the 1887 printed context it is “insoluble by us” and “Agnostic.” Darwin wrote the autobiographical manuscript for his family later in life (commonly dated to 1876), but the first publication of this sentence in print is in Francis Darwin’s 1887 book.
Other candidates (1)
The Life and Letters of Charles Darwin (Charles Darwin, 1887)95.9%
... The mystery of the beginning of all things is insoluble by us ; and I for one must be content to remain an Agnost...
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Darwin, Charles. (2026, February 17). The mystery of the beginning of all things is insoluble by us; and I for one must be content to remain an agnostic. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-mystery-of-the-beginning-of-all-things-is-5478/

Chicago Style
Darwin, Charles. "The mystery of the beginning of all things is insoluble by us; and I for one must be content to remain an agnostic." FixQuotes. February 17, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-mystery-of-the-beginning-of-all-things-is-5478/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"The mystery of the beginning of all things is insoluble by us; and I for one must be content to remain an agnostic." FixQuotes, 17 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-mystery-of-the-beginning-of-all-things-is-5478/. Accessed 28 Feb. 2026.

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Charles Darwin

Charles Darwin (February 12, 1809 - April 19, 1882) was a Scientist from England.

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