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Darwin’s life & work

Darwin’s “big idea”

A revolution?
Charles Darwin
    1809 - 1882
Shrewsbury
Shrewsbury
Shrewsbury
Edinburgh
Edinburgh
Edinburgh
Cambridge
Cambridge
Cambridge
Cambridge
Cambridge
John Stevens Henslow   Adam Sedgwick
HMS Beagle, 1832 - 1836
HMS Beagle, 1832 - 1836
HMS Beagle, 1832 - 1836
HMS Beagle, 1832 - 1836
HMS Beagle, 1832 - 1836
HMS Beagle, 1832 - 1836
HMS Beagle, 1832 - 1836
The Zoology of the Voyage of
  H.M.S. Beagle (1838-’42)

Journal of Researches (1839)

Structure and Distribution of
     Coral Reefs (1842)

Geological Observations on
  Volcanic Islands (1844)

Geological Observations on
  South America (1846)
1837: Notebooks

1842: Pencil Sketch
(35 pp.)

1844: Essay (240 pp.)

1856 – 58: Natural
Selection (unfinished)

1858 ...
1862 - On the various contrivances by which British and foreign orchids are
fertilised by insects

1868 - Variation of Animals and Plants Under Domestication

1872 - Descent of Man and Selection in Relation to Sex

1872 - Expression of Emotions in Man and Animals

1875 - Insectivorous Plants

1875 – Movement and Habits of Climbing Plants (orig, 1865)

1876 - The Effects of Cross- and Self-Fertilization

1876 – Autobiography (pub. 1888)

1877 - The Different Forms of Flowers on Plants of the Same Species

1880 - Power of Movement in Plants

1881 - The Formation of Vegetable Mould through the Action of Worms
Implications

Mechanism

 Pathway

   Fact
Evolution
“Biological (or organic) evolution is change in the
properties of populations of organisms or groups of
such populations, over the course of generations. The
development, or ontogeny, of an individual organism is
not considered evolution: individual organisms do not
evolve. The changes in populations that are
considered evolutionary are those that are ‘heritable'
via the genetic material from one generation to the
next. Biological evolution may be slight or substantial”
                             Douglas J. Futuyma (1998) Evolutionary Biology
7mya!           6mya!               5mya!               4mya!              3mya!             2mya!                   1mya!        Now!




                                                                Kenyanthropus!
                                                                   platyops!                                 Homo erectus!

                                                                                                           Homo ergaster!


                                                                           A. garhi!                    Homo!                 “Archaic”!
                                                                                                      rudolfensis!              Homo!
                                                                                                                               sapiens!
                        Ardipithecus!   Ardipithecus!       Australopithecus!
                         kadabba!         ramidus!             afarensis!
  Sahelanthropus!
    tchadensis!                                                                              Homo!
                                                                                             habilis!
                                                                                                                               Modern!
                                                                                                                               Humans!
                                               Australopithecus!
                                                 anamensis!
                                                                             Australopithecus!
                     Orrorin!                                                   africanus!
                    tugenesis!

                                                                                                     Paranthropus!
                                                                                                       robustus!
                                                                                                                             Neandertals!

                                                                         Paranthropus!
                                                                          aethiopicus!
                                                                                                 Paranthropus!
                                                                                                    boisei!
Evolution as Path

     Degree of relatedness of
     modern species
     Timing of splits among lineages
     Characteristics of extinct
     ancestors
“Lawn of life”
“Orchard of Life”
Darwin’s Big Idea


     Descent with modification
     through natural selection
Darwin’s viewpoint
    Fact
    Pathway: Establishment of
    genealogical relationship (“tree
    thinking”) with common descent
    and multiplication of species via
    splitting or budding
    Mechanism: Natural selection
    and other mechanisms
Fact #1

Potential exponential
increase of populations
(“superfecundity”)


Source: Thomas Malthus
(1798), William Paley
(1802), observation
E. coli
Fact #2


   Steady-state stability of
   most populations


   Source: observation
Fact #3


Limitation of resources


Source: observation
Inference #1

Struggle for existence among
individuals


Author of inference:
Malthus (1798)
Linear Growth          Food Production

Exponential Growth   Population Growth




                           Malthusian
                           Catastrophe
Fact #4

Variation between individuals


Source: observation
Fact #5


   Heritability of much of this
   variation


   Source: animal breeders
Inference #2

Some of this variation is advantageous in certain
environments therefore differential survival, i.e. natural
selection, will occur.


Inference held by: Darwin, Alfred Russel Wallace, and
others
Inference #3

Over many generations, provided selection
pressure is maintained, evolution will occur


Inference unique to Darwin & Wallace
Fitness
Fitness is a measure of the reproductive output
of an organism with a particular genotype with
respect to that of other genotypes in a
particular environment.
For a trait to be evolutionarily relevant, it must
affect reproduction - it is not enough to affect
survival.
Analyzing Selection
Is the population variable?
Is some of the variation among individuals
within the population heritable?
Do individuals vary in their success as surviving
or reproducing?
Are survival and reproduction non-random?
Did the population change over time?
Alternatively
If there are variations in a replicating entity, and
If these are inherited, and
If one variant is more suited to some task than the
others, and
If that task directly affects survival and therefore
reproduction of the entities,
Then selection will result in evolutionary change in
the population of entities.
Non-
  Random
                 Random
  Variation
                 Selection




Natural Selection is not a
   Random Process
Non-
  Random
                 Random
  Variation
                 Selection




Natural Selection is not a
   Random Process
Non-
  Random
                 Random
  Variation
                 Selection




Natural Selection is not a
   Random Process
Predicting the Future
          No need to be able to
          predict long-term course of
          evolution.
          Evolution is analogous to a
          poker tournament.
Darwin

“I have just been writing an
audacious little discussion, to
show that organic beings are
not perfect, only perfect
enough to struggle with their
competitors.”
Letter to J.D. Hooker, 9/11/1857
Natural Selection
Nature “cares not for mere external
appearances; she may be said to scrutinize with a
severe eye, every nerve, vessel & muscle; every
habit, instinct, shade of constitution, - the whole
machinery of the organization. There will be here
no caprice, no favoring: the good will be
preserve[d] & the bad rigidly destroyed.”
“By nature, I mean the laws ordained by God to
govern the Universe.”
Origin, 2nd ed.
   “A celebrated author and divine has
   written to me that ‘he has gradually
   learnt to see that it is just as noble a
   conception of the Deity to believe
   that He created a few original forms
   capable of self-development into
   other and needful forms, as to believe
   that He required a fresh act of
   creation to supply the voids caused by
   the action of His laws.’”
Letter to Asa Gray
                 (1860)
“There seems to me too much misery in the world. I cannot
persuade myself that a beneficent and omnipotent God would
have designedly created the Ichneumonidae with the express
intention of their feeding within the living bodies of caterpillars
or that a cat should play with mice... On the other hand, I cannot
anyhow be contented to view this wonderful universe, and
especially the nature of man, and to conclude that everything is
the result of brute force. I am inclined to look at everything as
resulting from designed laws, with the details, whether good or
bad, left to the working out of what we may call chance.”
Darwin
“The old argument of design in nature, as given by
Paley, which formerly seemed to me to me so
conclusive, fails, now that the law of natural
selection has been discovered. We can no longer
argue that, for instance, the beautiful hinge of a
bivalve shell must have been made by an intelligent
being, like the hinge of a door by a man. There
seems to be no more design in the variability of
organic beings and in the action of natural
selection, than in the course which the wind
blows. Everything in nature is the result of fixed
laws.”
Paley

A: X is intricate and well suited to a task T
W1: X is a product of intelligent design
W2: X is a product of random physical forces
Paley claims that the likelihood of W1 given A
exceeds that of W2, i.e. P(A|W1) >> P(A|W2)
Darwin
A: X may or may not be intricate or well-suited
to a task T.
W1: X is a product of intelligent design
W2: X is a product of a non-random natural
mechanism
Darwin claims that the likelihood of W2 given A
exceeds that of W1, i.e. P(A|W2) >> P(A|W1)
12,%#'3(

! "#$%&'()*+,#$$((-(.%*/,0#(

9%'/0(

! 45*)+$#(6'+7'(3+(8#$%&'#*(
/0+1*.$(

! "#$%&#'()*'*+,-.(

31.#'(

! )%&212#'(
Sexual
     Selection


Inter-male competition
Female choice
1/2",%&,2,34'




  !)8"$&'                      5,67/8/09"'
>?#"89/0,%'                     :%/&,64'



               !"#$"%&'
                 ()&*'
              +,-).$/0,%'


5,67/8/09"'                   !"9"2,76"%&/2'
 ="%,6)$#'                       ;),2,34'



               +,2"$<2/8'
                ;),2,34'
1858 was not “marked by
     any of those striking
  discoveries which at once
  revolutionize, so to speak,
the department of science on
      which they bear.”
“When the ideas advanced
  by me in this volume, or
 when analogous views on
  the origin of species are
 generally admitted, we can
dimly foresee that there will
be a considerable revolution
     in natural history”
Some Questions

   What was before?
   What happened?
   What was after?
   How quickly did the change happen
Some Questions
   What was before?


   Transmutation of Species
   ‘Struggle’ with biosphere & other
   organisms
   Natural Selection
Classical
 Precursors
Anaximader (~600 BCE):
Humans from fish

Empedocles (~450 BCE):
Combination of parts

Lucretius (~75 BCE): From
atoms to humans
Buffon


              Limited
              Variation


Speciation
due to
Environment
Jean Baptiste Pierre Antoine de
Monet, le chevalier de Lamarck
           a believer in the great age of the
           Earth
           a gradualist
           a strong supporter of the
           importance of behavior and the
           environment
           a believer in branching evolution
           the first modern evolutionist
The “Escalator of Life”
Erasmus Darwin
Robert Chambers
The Struggle for Existence
Natural Selection
1818 - William Wells: Two essays: On Upon Single Vision
with Two Eyes;The Other on Dew…and An Account of a
Female of the White Race…Part of Whose Skin Resembles
That of a Negro…By the Late W.C. Wells…with a Memoir
of His Life,Written by Himself.
1831 - Patrick Matthew: Naval Timber and Arboriculture.
1835 - Edward Blyth: “An Attempt to Classify the
‘Varieties’ of Animals, with Observations on the Marked
Seasonal and Other Changes Which Naturally Take
Place in Various British Species, and Which Do Not
Constitute Varieties“ Magazine of Natural History
Alfred Russel Wallace
Some Questions
   What happened?


   Accumulation of evidence, but for
   what?
   Consilience of inductions
   (Whewell)
Instinct




Classification                  Fossil Record




                 Evolution



Embryology                      Morphology




                 Geographic
                 Distribution
Direct Evidence
Direct Evidence
Some Questions

   What was after?


   Acceptance of evolution and of
   naturalistic mechanism but
   rejection of natural selection
Cohen’s Stages
The “intellectual revolution” or “revolution-in-
itself” (private)
Written commitment to the new method,
concept or theory (private)
Dissemination of the ideas (public)
Adoption by a critical mass of individuals or
groups (public)
Alfred Russel Wallace
T.H. Huxley   Ernst Haeckel
Some Questions

   How quickly did the change?


   Not very!
A 75 Year “Revolution”
1859
- Origin of Species
1870’s -
Rise of Neo-Lamarckianism
1899 - Herman Bumpus’ evidence for natural
selection
1900 - Re-discovery of Mendel
1901- WFR Wheldon’s evidence for natural
selection.
1930’s - “The Modern Synthesis”
Darwin’s Legacy

   We have a professional,
   discipline and an entirely
   convincing, naturalistic
   explanation of the design-like
   appearance of the natural
   world.
Natural
                           Selection


              Economy of
                                       Tree Thinking
                Nature




 Gradual                                               Genealogical
 Change                                                Classification




                           Darwin


                                                       Biogeographic
Coevolution
                                                        Distribution




                Sexual                   Selective
               Selection                Extinction


                           Deep Time
“Darwinists” do not exist


Evolution ≠ “Darwinism”
No Revolution?
   “Evolution had become
   respectable. No revolution
   took place, no pyrotechnics,
   just a quiet change at the top –
   a palace coup. Society would
   never be the same.”
                      James Moore
Taking
 Darwin
Seriously
Taking
 Darwin
Seriously
Taking
 Darwin
Seriously
Taking
 Darwin
Seriously
Taking
 Darwin
Seriously
Taking
 Darwin
Seriously
Teleology & Design
Do you think that Darwin’s
 Theory of Evolution is ...

         1%

  29%
              35%
                    Suported by evidence
                    Not supported by evidence
                    Don’t know enough
                    No Opinion



        35%



                                Gallup 11/19/04
Theistic
                  Naturalistic
                  Non-Evolutionary




            38%

47%




      15%




                             2010
“America’s moral
   decline is a product of
   the Darwinian
   worldview - which, in
   turn, is a revival of
   ancient materialist
   philosophy.”




Nancy Pearcy, Discovery Institute
Darwin
“There is grandeur in this view of life, with its
several powers, having originally been breathed
into a few forms or into one; and that, whilst
this planet has gone cycling on according to the
fixed law of gravity, from so simple a beginning
endless forms most beautiful and most
wonderful have been, and are being, evolved.

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Darwin

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  • 11.
  • 12. Darwin’s life & work Darwin’s “big idea” A revolution?
  • 13. Charles Darwin 1809 - 1882
  • 25. John Stevens Henslow Adam Sedgwick
  • 33. The Zoology of the Voyage of H.M.S. Beagle (1838-’42) Journal of Researches (1839) Structure and Distribution of Coral Reefs (1842) Geological Observations on Volcanic Islands (1844) Geological Observations on South America (1846)
  • 34.
  • 35.
  • 36.
  • 37.
  • 38.
  • 39.
  • 40. 1837: Notebooks 1842: Pencil Sketch (35 pp.) 1844: Essay (240 pp.) 1856 – 58: Natural Selection (unfinished) 1858 ...
  • 41.
  • 42.
  • 43.
  • 44. 1862 - On the various contrivances by which British and foreign orchids are fertilised by insects 1868 - Variation of Animals and Plants Under Domestication 1872 - Descent of Man and Selection in Relation to Sex 1872 - Expression of Emotions in Man and Animals 1875 - Insectivorous Plants 1875 – Movement and Habits of Climbing Plants (orig, 1865) 1876 - The Effects of Cross- and Self-Fertilization 1876 – Autobiography (pub. 1888) 1877 - The Different Forms of Flowers on Plants of the Same Species 1880 - Power of Movement in Plants 1881 - The Formation of Vegetable Mould through the Action of Worms
  • 45.
  • 46.
  • 48. Evolution “Biological (or organic) evolution is change in the properties of populations of organisms or groups of such populations, over the course of generations. The development, or ontogeny, of an individual organism is not considered evolution: individual organisms do not evolve. The changes in populations that are considered evolutionary are those that are ‘heritable' via the genetic material from one generation to the next. Biological evolution may be slight or substantial” Douglas J. Futuyma (1998) Evolutionary Biology
  • 49.
  • 50.
  • 51. 7mya! 6mya! 5mya! 4mya! 3mya! 2mya! 1mya! Now! Kenyanthropus! platyops! Homo erectus! Homo ergaster! A. garhi! Homo! “Archaic”! rudolfensis! Homo! sapiens! Ardipithecus! Ardipithecus! Australopithecus! kadabba! ramidus! afarensis! Sahelanthropus! tchadensis! Homo! habilis! Modern! Humans! Australopithecus! anamensis! Australopithecus! Orrorin! africanus! tugenesis! Paranthropus! robustus! Neandertals! Paranthropus! aethiopicus! Paranthropus! boisei!
  • 52.
  • 53.
  • 54. Evolution as Path Degree of relatedness of modern species Timing of splits among lineages Characteristics of extinct ancestors
  • 57.
  • 58.
  • 59.
  • 60.
  • 61. Darwin’s Big Idea Descent with modification through natural selection
  • 62. Darwin’s viewpoint Fact Pathway: Establishment of genealogical relationship (“tree thinking”) with common descent and multiplication of species via splitting or budding Mechanism: Natural selection and other mechanisms
  • 63.
  • 64.
  • 65.
  • 66.
  • 67. Fact #1 Potential exponential increase of populations (“superfecundity”) Source: Thomas Malthus (1798), William Paley (1802), observation
  • 69. Fact #2 Steady-state stability of most populations Source: observation
  • 70. Fact #3 Limitation of resources Source: observation
  • 71. Inference #1 Struggle for existence among individuals Author of inference: Malthus (1798)
  • 72. Linear Growth Food Production Exponential Growth Population Growth Malthusian Catastrophe
  • 73. Fact #4 Variation between individuals Source: observation
  • 74. Fact #5 Heritability of much of this variation Source: animal breeders
  • 75. Inference #2 Some of this variation is advantageous in certain environments therefore differential survival, i.e. natural selection, will occur. Inference held by: Darwin, Alfred Russel Wallace, and others
  • 76. Inference #3 Over many generations, provided selection pressure is maintained, evolution will occur Inference unique to Darwin & Wallace
  • 77. Fitness Fitness is a measure of the reproductive output of an organism with a particular genotype with respect to that of other genotypes in a particular environment. For a trait to be evolutionarily relevant, it must affect reproduction - it is not enough to affect survival.
  • 78. Analyzing Selection Is the population variable? Is some of the variation among individuals within the population heritable? Do individuals vary in their success as surviving or reproducing? Are survival and reproduction non-random? Did the population change over time?
  • 79. Alternatively If there are variations in a replicating entity, and If these are inherited, and If one variant is more suited to some task than the others, and If that task directly affects survival and therefore reproduction of the entities, Then selection will result in evolutionary change in the population of entities.
  • 80. Non- Random Random Variation Selection Natural Selection is not a Random Process
  • 81. Non- Random Random Variation Selection Natural Selection is not a Random Process
  • 82. Non- Random Random Variation Selection Natural Selection is not a Random Process
  • 83.
  • 84.
  • 85. Predicting the Future No need to be able to predict long-term course of evolution. Evolution is analogous to a poker tournament.
  • 86. Darwin “I have just been writing an audacious little discussion, to show that organic beings are not perfect, only perfect enough to struggle with their competitors.” Letter to J.D. Hooker, 9/11/1857
  • 87.
  • 88.
  • 89. Natural Selection Nature “cares not for mere external appearances; she may be said to scrutinize with a severe eye, every nerve, vessel & muscle; every habit, instinct, shade of constitution, - the whole machinery of the organization. There will be here no caprice, no favoring: the good will be preserve[d] & the bad rigidly destroyed.” “By nature, I mean the laws ordained by God to govern the Universe.”
  • 90. Origin, 2nd ed. “A celebrated author and divine has written to me that ‘he has gradually learnt to see that it is just as noble a conception of the Deity to believe that He created a few original forms capable of self-development into other and needful forms, as to believe that He required a fresh act of creation to supply the voids caused by the action of His laws.’”
  • 91. Letter to Asa Gray (1860) “There seems to me too much misery in the world. I cannot persuade myself that a beneficent and omnipotent God would have designedly created the Ichneumonidae with the express intention of their feeding within the living bodies of caterpillars or that a cat should play with mice... On the other hand, I cannot anyhow be contented to view this wonderful universe, and especially the nature of man, and to conclude that everything is the result of brute force. I am inclined to look at everything as resulting from designed laws, with the details, whether good or bad, left to the working out of what we may call chance.”
  • 92.
  • 93. Darwin “The old argument of design in nature, as given by Paley, which formerly seemed to me to me so conclusive, fails, now that the law of natural selection has been discovered. We can no longer argue that, for instance, the beautiful hinge of a bivalve shell must have been made by an intelligent being, like the hinge of a door by a man. There seems to be no more design in the variability of organic beings and in the action of natural selection, than in the course which the wind blows. Everything in nature is the result of fixed laws.”
  • 94. Paley A: X is intricate and well suited to a task T W1: X is a product of intelligent design W2: X is a product of random physical forces Paley claims that the likelihood of W1 given A exceeds that of W2, i.e. P(A|W1) >> P(A|W2)
  • 95. Darwin A: X may or may not be intricate or well-suited to a task T. W1: X is a product of intelligent design W2: X is a product of a non-random natural mechanism Darwin claims that the likelihood of W2 given A exceeds that of W1, i.e. P(A|W2) >> P(A|W1)
  • 98.
  • 99. Sexual Selection Inter-male competition Female choice
  • 100.
  • 101.
  • 102. 1/2",%&,2,34' !)8"$&' 5,67/8/09"' >?#"89/0,%' :%/&,64' !"#$"%&' ()&*' +,-).$/0,%' 5,67/8/09"' !"9"2,76"%&/2' ="%,6)$#' ;),2,34' +,2"$<2/8' ;),2,34'
  • 103.
  • 104.
  • 105.
  • 106. 1858 was not “marked by any of those striking discoveries which at once revolutionize, so to speak, the department of science on which they bear.”
  • 107. “When the ideas advanced by me in this volume, or when analogous views on the origin of species are generally admitted, we can dimly foresee that there will be a considerable revolution in natural history”
  • 108.
  • 109.
  • 110.
  • 111.
  • 112.
  • 113. Some Questions What was before? What happened? What was after? How quickly did the change happen
  • 114. Some Questions What was before? Transmutation of Species ‘Struggle’ with biosphere & other organisms Natural Selection
  • 115. Classical Precursors Anaximader (~600 BCE): Humans from fish Empedocles (~450 BCE): Combination of parts Lucretius (~75 BCE): From atoms to humans
  • 116. Buffon Limited Variation Speciation due to Environment
  • 117. Jean Baptiste Pierre Antoine de Monet, le chevalier de Lamarck a believer in the great age of the Earth a gradualist a strong supporter of the importance of behavior and the environment a believer in branching evolution the first modern evolutionist
  • 121. The Struggle for Existence
  • 122.
  • 123.
  • 124. Natural Selection 1818 - William Wells: Two essays: On Upon Single Vision with Two Eyes;The Other on Dew…and An Account of a Female of the White Race…Part of Whose Skin Resembles That of a Negro…By the Late W.C. Wells…with a Memoir of His Life,Written by Himself. 1831 - Patrick Matthew: Naval Timber and Arboriculture. 1835 - Edward Blyth: “An Attempt to Classify the ‘Varieties’ of Animals, with Observations on the Marked Seasonal and Other Changes Which Naturally Take Place in Various British Species, and Which Do Not Constitute Varieties“ Magazine of Natural History
  • 126. Some Questions What happened? Accumulation of evidence, but for what? Consilience of inductions (Whewell)
  • 127. Instinct Classification Fossil Record Evolution Embryology Morphology Geographic Distribution
  • 130. Some Questions What was after? Acceptance of evolution and of naturalistic mechanism but rejection of natural selection
  • 131. Cohen’s Stages The “intellectual revolution” or “revolution-in- itself” (private) Written commitment to the new method, concept or theory (private) Dissemination of the ideas (public) Adoption by a critical mass of individuals or groups (public)
  • 133. T.H. Huxley Ernst Haeckel
  • 134. Some Questions How quickly did the change? Not very!
  • 135. A 75 Year “Revolution” 1859 - Origin of Species 1870’s - Rise of Neo-Lamarckianism 1899 - Herman Bumpus’ evidence for natural selection 1900 - Re-discovery of Mendel 1901- WFR Wheldon’s evidence for natural selection. 1930’s - “The Modern Synthesis”
  • 136.
  • 137. Darwin’s Legacy We have a professional, discipline and an entirely convincing, naturalistic explanation of the design-like appearance of the natural world.
  • 138. Natural Selection Economy of Tree Thinking Nature Gradual Genealogical Change Classification Darwin Biogeographic Coevolution Distribution Sexual Selective Selection Extinction Deep Time
  • 139. “Darwinists” do not exist Evolution ≠ “Darwinism”
  • 140.
  • 141.
  • 142.
  • 143. No Revolution? “Evolution had become respectable. No revolution took place, no pyrotechnics, just a quiet change at the top – a palace coup. Society would never be the same.” James Moore
  • 144.
  • 151.
  • 152.
  • 153.
  • 155. Do you think that Darwin’s Theory of Evolution is ... 1% 29% 35% Suported by evidence Not supported by evidence Don’t know enough No Opinion 35% Gallup 11/19/04
  • 156. Theistic Naturalistic Non-Evolutionary 38% 47% 15% 2010
  • 157.
  • 158.
  • 159. “America’s moral decline is a product of the Darwinian worldview - which, in turn, is a revival of ancient materialist philosophy.” Nancy Pearcy, Discovery Institute
  • 160. Darwin “There is grandeur in this view of life, with its several powers, having originally been breathed into a few forms or into one; and that, whilst this planet has gone cycling on according to the fixed law of gravity, from so simple a beginning endless forms most beautiful and most wonderful have been, and are being, evolved.

Notas del editor

  1. @ 7; born feb 12th / second son of Robert &amp; Susannah / mother died / father whig / doctor / investments
  2. Shrewsbury - wasted education - &amp;#x201C;You care for nothing but shooting, dogs, and rat-catching, and you will be a disgrace to yourself and all your family.&amp;#x201D;
  3. Shrewsbury - wasted education - &amp;#x201C;You care for nothing but shooting, dogs, and rat-catching, and you will be a disgrace to yourself and all your family.&amp;#x201D;
  4. Edinburgh 1825; Athens of the North
  5. Edinburgh 1825; Athens of the North
  6. Christ&amp;#x2019;s College Cambridge - 1827 - Paley&amp;#x2019;s rooms -
  7. Christ&amp;#x2019;s College Cambridge - 1827 - Paley&amp;#x2019;s rooms -
  8. Christ&amp;#x2019;s College Cambridge - 1827 - Paley&amp;#x2019;s rooms -
  9. Christ&amp;#x2019;s College Cambridge - 1827 - Paley&amp;#x2019;s rooms -
  10. BEagle - 1832 to 1836 - Harriet dies in 2006
  11. BEagle - 1832 to 1836 - Harriet dies in 2006
  12. BEagle - 1832 to 1836 - Harriet dies in 2006
  13. BEagle - 1832 to 1836 - Harriet dies in 2006
  14. BEagle - 1832 to 1836 - Harriet dies in 2006
  15. BEagle - 1832 to 1836 - Harriet dies in 2006
  16. Marriage - Geology - Elected GSL
  17. Downe House Kent - 43 to 51 BArnacles
  18. Downe House Kent - 43 to 51 BArnacles
  19. Downe House Kent - 43 to 51 BArnacles
  20. Shares essay with Joe Hooker
  21. An abstract ...
  22. NS as agent; Chapter 1; Appl to Humans; 1st bk to use photos
  23. 2) What is the big idea?
  24. Not &amp;#x201C;survival of the fittest&amp;#x201D;
  25. E. coli. with 30 minute division would weigh more than the earth in less than a week. Elephants ... 19 million in 750 years
  26. Fitness applies to the here-and-now, not the future.
  27. Evolution by natural selection need not occur.
  28. Natural selection acts on individuals but its consequence occur in populations. It does not, however, work for &amp;#x201C;the good of the species.&amp;#x201D;
  29. Natural selection is not forward looking and does not lead to perfection or necessarily progress. Adaptations need not be &amp;#x201C;perfect&amp;#x201D; in any sense.
  30. 3) Was there a Darwinian Revolution
  31. Charles Bell, Presidential Address, Linnaean Society
  32. Malthus / Paley
  33. So what did CD provide? A mechanism ... but that was ...
  34. Rej NS / Lamarckian
  35. London / Joyce / Wharton / Wells / Shaw / Hurston
  36. Common thread of replacing religion in public life with scientific rationalism. Science has somehow &amp;#x201C;disproved&amp;#x201D; religion.
  37. Carl Ackley&amp;#x2019;s &amp;#x201C;Chrysalis&amp;#x201D; - Human evolution
  38. Last decade